There are two methods
of securing permanent residence in the US once a person is approved
for immigration. One is
called consular processing; the other is adjustment of status.
As the name implies, consular processing applicants apply for
and process an immigrant visa at a US consulate abroad, most often in
their home country. Adjustment
of status is the process by which a person already in the US has their
immigration status adjusted to that of a permanent resident.
The applicant determines the desired method of processing at
the time the initial petition for classification as an immigrant is
filed.
Consular processing
was once the only way to obtain an immigrant visa.
When adjustment of status was created, it became highly popular
and that attraction only increased after reentry bars were created in
1996. Those bars prevent certain people who leave the US after
overstaying a visa from reentering the US.
CONSULAR PROCESSING
How does one apply to consular process?
USCIS forwards the
approved immigrant petition to the National Visa Center (NVC), which
is part of the State Department.
When an immigrant visa number becomes available, the NVC will
send a barcode sheet to the applicant, which must then be returned to
the NVC with the appropriate fees (one check or money order per family
member). Once payment has
been received, the NVC will send form DS-230 Part I to the applicant
for completion. Once that
form has been returned to the NVC, the NVC will send form DS-230 Part
II along with a list of documents that should be brought to the
consular appointment.
Are any other
forms required?
Applicants will have
to submit an Affidavit of Support (Form I-864) along with their
complete federal tax returns.
Where do I send
the forms?
The
address for the NVC is:
National
Visa Center
32
Rochester Avenue
Portsmouth,
New Hampshire 03801-2909
All
correspondence with the NVC for a particular case should include the
applicant’s case number in the upper right hand corner.
After
the paperwork and interview are completed, what is the next step?
If the application is approved, the person will be issued an immigrant
visa, which is good for only six months.
If the person does not enter the US within that period of time,
the visa will expire and the opportunity to immigrate will be lost.
If the application is denied, the principle consular officer at the
post reviews it. If the
officer desires, he can get a second opinion from the State
Department. However, if,
after this point, the denial is upheld, there is no appeal available
to the applicant.
ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS
How does one apply through adjustment of status?
A person applies for
adjustment of status with the USCIS from within the US. Family-based
adjustment applications are generally filed with a local USCIS office
and employment-based applications are generally filed with a USCIS
regional service center. However, there are exceptions to this basic
rule so be sure to check at uscis.gov before a case is filed. Along
with the adjustment form, results of a medical examination, an
affidavit of support, if required, evidence of the approval for
immigration and a copy of the applicant’s passport must be
submitted. Evidence of
any familial relationships must also be submitted, if family members
are seeking to adjust their status with the principle applicant.
The adjustment of status application may be filed together with
the immigrant visa petition.
Are any other
forms required?
If the applicant wishes to work or travel abroad while the adjustment
of status application is pending, additional forms must be filed.
A person can receive work and travel authorization for only one
year at a time, so in many cases, because of USCIS processing delays,
the applicant must renew these documents.
Do adjustment of status applicants have to appear for an interview?
Not all adjustment of
status applicants are interviewed, although the law provides that any
adjustment applicant may be interviewed.
Interviews are always conducted in marriage cases, but are less
frequent in other family relationships.
Interviews are much less typical in employment-based cases.
After
the forms and interview are completed, what is the next step?
After approval for
adjustment of status, it takes some months before the physical green
card is obtained. If the
approval follows an interview, the USCIS will stamp the applicant’s
passport with an indication that they are a US permanent resident.
If there is no interview, the applicant will receive a notice
that the application has been approved, which they can take to a local
USCIS office and obtain the stamp.
A few months later, they will receive the green card.
If the decision takes
longer than 180 days, because of portability, an employment-based
applicant may change employers.
Applicants should
note that even without the physical card, once adjustment has been
granted, the applicant IS a permanent resident. The stamp in the
passport is legally equivalent to the actual green card.
CHOOSING BETWEEN
CONSULAR PROCESSING & ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS
Deciding whether to
pursue consular processing or adjusting status can be a difficult
choice. The chief advantage of consular processing is speed. Consular
processing is generally much faster than adjusting status. Six to
eight months is not unusual compared to one to three years at various
USCIS offices around the US.
Adjusting status has
several advantages. First, processing can take place with no traveling
abroad. Also, the applicant can work while waiting for processing to
take place. Additionally, if the decision takes longer than 180 days,
because of portability, an employment-based applicant may change
employers. Finally,
processing in the US sometimes means that potential bars on reentry
can be avoided that would keep an applicant outside the US for several
years.
Another key advantage
of adjusting status is that an I-140 employment based immigrant
application and I-130 petitions for immediate relatives can be filed
simultaneously with an adjustment of status application. This has
helped to cut down the time advantage of consular processing.
Recently, the USCIS has announced it will begin testing pilot programs
for speedy processing of simultaneously filed petitions.
The question often
arises over whether it is possible to pursue BOTH consular processing
and adjustment of status simultaneously. The question is
controversial. There is no statutory bar to processing both ways, but
the USCIS takes the position that if it learns that one is pursuing
both consular processing and adjustment of status at the same time, it
will consider an adjustment application abandoned. This would
typically arise when someone is in the process of adjusting status and
files a request with the USCIS to cable an approval notice to a
consulate to initiate consular processing. However, the issue will
typically not arise in the reverse circumstances – when one begins
with consular processing and then decides to pursue adjustment of
status.