vikasgarg24
08-09 10:53 AM
Hi
This question is for my friend. he has a Bcom (3 years bachlors from India) with certification of chartered accountant and cost accountant. He has a 6 years of post qualification experience in india (after ca and ) and now he has 6.5 years of experience in US. (Total post qualification experience is 11-12 years)
His lawyer said as this is a 3 years degree you dont qualify for EB2. lawyer also send us a case where DOL denied CA plus 3 years of bcom under EB2.
Can you help us if he qualify for EB-2, what is the best way to file.
This question is for my friend. he has a Bcom (3 years bachlors from India) with certification of chartered accountant and cost accountant. He has a 6 years of post qualification experience in india (after ca and ) and now he has 6.5 years of experience in US. (Total post qualification experience is 11-12 years)
His lawyer said as this is a 3 years degree you dont qualify for EB2. lawyer also send us a case where DOL denied CA plus 3 years of bcom under EB2.
Can you help us if he qualify for EB-2, what is the best way to file.
wallpaper In the interview, Shia
gc_on_demand
12-04 12:48 PM
My Labor or I 140 I forgot but one of them says my salary should XXX. but I am on H1b and haven't filled 485 file yet and I am receiving lesser salary than XXX.
At what stage should I receive XXX salary ?
At what stage should I receive XXX salary ?
GrndMasterFlash
03-30 01:35 PM
swwwweeeeeeeeeeettttttttttttttttt
2011 shia labeouf gq 2010.
lord_labaku
04-12 02:42 PM
mergers and acquisitions come under successor of interest and GC process is usually status quo. at yous stage, M&A wouldnt need any inputs from ur side. Confirm with attorney.
Ofcourse you can also join company C, using AC21 with all the caveats that apply.
Ofcourse you can also join company C, using AC21 with all the caveats that apply.
more...
Ram_C
09-12 04:51 PM
Just saw this one:
http://travel.state.gov/visa/frvi/bulletin/bulletin_3800.html
Hope this helps.
Regards,
kamdard.
kamdard,
Thanks for your enthusiasm in sharing the Oct visa bulletin news, will you please consider contributing to Sep 18th DC Rally in any of following ways
1. Attend / Sponsor DC Rally and let your voice be heard.
2. spread the word about DC Rally http://immigrationvoice.org/forum/showthread.php?t=11694
3. collect signatures on petitions
4. Join your State Chapter and volunteer the efforts of IVhttp://immigrationvoice.org/forum/showthread.php?t=11684
5. make / collect Donations for the Rallyhttp://immigrationvoice.org/forum/showthread.php?t=11689
6 or in any other way you can think of
http://travel.state.gov/visa/frvi/bulletin/bulletin_3800.html
Hope this helps.
Regards,
kamdard.
kamdard,
Thanks for your enthusiasm in sharing the Oct visa bulletin news, will you please consider contributing to Sep 18th DC Rally in any of following ways
1. Attend / Sponsor DC Rally and let your voice be heard.
2. spread the word about DC Rally http://immigrationvoice.org/forum/showthread.php?t=11694
3. collect signatures on petitions
4. Join your State Chapter and volunteer the efforts of IVhttp://immigrationvoice.org/forum/showthread.php?t=11684
5. make / collect Donations for the Rallyhttp://immigrationvoice.org/forum/showthread.php?t=11689
6 or in any other way you can think of
myimmiv
02-25 02:50 PM
Note - This has been posted in the regular forum also. Re-posting it here to get an attorney perspective.
I just wanted to throw this out there, since I did not get any definite answer from any forums.
When in need for I-485 issues, who is better to contact - Congressman or Senator.
I just want to know the pros and cons of each and maybe this analysis will help others down the line.
Points to note are:
1. There are more congressman in a particular state than senators. There are only 2 senators in a state.
2. Senators are more powerful than congressman (not sure that this power applies for talking to USCIS or not)
3. Senators and congressman have different terms in office. Hence is it better to contact someone who is going to stay longer, or someone who is up for election soon and hence may help.
4. For a particular USCIS case, can we contact both congressman and senator at the same time. Is this good.
Can members throw some light on this based on their prior experience and based on their knowledge.
Thanks in advance.
I just wanted to throw this out there, since I did not get any definite answer from any forums.
When in need for I-485 issues, who is better to contact - Congressman or Senator.
I just want to know the pros and cons of each and maybe this analysis will help others down the line.
Points to note are:
1. There are more congressman in a particular state than senators. There are only 2 senators in a state.
2. Senators are more powerful than congressman (not sure that this power applies for talking to USCIS or not)
3. Senators and congressman have different terms in office. Hence is it better to contact someone who is going to stay longer, or someone who is up for election soon and hence may help.
4. For a particular USCIS case, can we contact both congressman and senator at the same time. Is this good.
Can members throw some light on this based on their prior experience and based on their knowledge.
Thanks in advance.
more...
DSLStart
01-08 10:51 AM
You can stay out of the US for up to 6 months with no consequence, as long as the person has a vaild green card and passport. Over 6 months contact with the US consulate is needed and the green card holder can stay out of the country for up to a year. Over a year the green card holder will forfeit their green card and not be allowed to re-enter the country.
The US permanent resident CAN stay out of the country for more than a year if they apply for and are granted a re-entry permit by USCIS prior to leaving the country. However, for a PR to become a citizen, he/she must have 5 years of continuous residency and staying abroad for more than a year will typically break it regardless of whether a re-entry permit is issued/used.
after all there is no departure date stamped in my passport? do the airlines inform INS of passenger departure dates? does INS keep a record of departure dates of green card holders in their computers?
i know that the immigration officer at the port of entry asks "How long have u been outside the US?" In my case it will be one year and one week so can i just say "about a year"
The US permanent resident CAN stay out of the country for more than a year if they apply for and are granted a re-entry permit by USCIS prior to leaving the country. However, for a PR to become a citizen, he/she must have 5 years of continuous residency and staying abroad for more than a year will typically break it regardless of whether a re-entry permit is issued/used.
after all there is no departure date stamped in my passport? do the airlines inform INS of passenger departure dates? does INS keep a record of departure dates of green card holders in their computers?
i know that the immigration officer at the port of entry asks "How long have u been outside the US?" In my case it will be one year and one week so can i just say "about a year"
2010 Shia LaBeouf, who in a couple
panky72
06-19 01:40 PM
Does anyone have a I-140 recepit # starting with "WAC" and know which Service center their I-140 is pending?
Thanks...:)
WAC stands for Western Adjudicating Center (California).
Thanks...:)
WAC stands for Western Adjudicating Center (California).
more...
sparky63
February 14th, 2005, 07:22 PM
Freddy, these shots look like something from the set of a horror movie. Hard to imagine they're real. Nice photos, in a somewhat disturbing way.