Mixed Insurance Banners Health Insurance for Visitors to USA

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Parallel green card processing

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Parallel green card processing

    Hi all,

    Both my wife and I are under L1 visa and each of us has started the green card process in his own workplace.
    What is the milestone that needs to be reached in order for the other one to stop the process in his workplace?

    Thanks!!

  • #2
    Originally posted by rusl View Post
    Hi all,

    Both my wife and I are under L1 visa and each of us has started the green card process in his own workplace.
    What is the milestone that needs to be reached in order for the other one to stop the process in his workplace?

    Thanks!!
    one of you would need to be an L2 and have filed for a joint AOS application.
    This is strictly an opinion and should not be misconstrued as legal advice. The use of this information is strictly at your own risk.

    -Krypton9591

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by krypton9591 View Post
      one of you would need to be an L2 and have filed for a joint AOS application.
      We're both on L1. The processes are seperate.

      Comment


      • #4
        right but if you are wanting to stop the process for one, but have both of you obtain a green card, either you will need to continue with the process separately, or have started a joint application as an L1 and L2 originally.
        This is strictly an opinion and should not be misconstrued as legal advice. The use of this information is strictly at your own risk.

        -Krypton9591

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by krypton9591 View Post
          right but if you are wanting to stop the process for one, but have both of you obtain a green card, either you will need to continue with the process separately, or have started a joint application as an L1 and L2 originally.
          up until now no one asked us what's the spouse's visa - L1, L2 or something else. Dependant information request will come next and does not seem to matter for PERM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by krypton9591 View Post
            right but if you are wanting to stop the process for one, but have both of you obtain a green card, either you will need to continue with the process separately, or have started a joint application as an L1 and L2 originally.
            I think this is incorrect. As far as I know, for AOS, the spouse need not be on a dependent visa. So, you need not discontinue either of your processes just yet. However, once one of the petitions reaches the AOS stage, AOS on the other petition can be held off.
            Just an opinion; Not legal advice.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by scientist2016 View Post
              I think this is incorrect. As far as I know, for AOS, the spouse need not be on a dependent visa. So, you need not discontinue either of your processes just yet. However, once one of the petitions reaches the AOS stage, AOS on the other petition can be held off.
              I believe you're right. The spouse's visa makes no difference as long as he's legal.
              The right way moving FWD seems to be: wait for one of us to get the I-140 approved (expedited processing shouldn't take long) and only then continue with the AOS, while stopping the second, parallel process.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by rusl View Post
                I believe you're right. The spouse's visa makes no difference as long as he's legal.
                The right way moving FWD seems to be: wait for one of us to get the I-140 approved (expedited processing shouldn't take long) and only then continue with the AOS, while stopping the second, parallel process.
                Stop the second one only after it too reaches the I485 stage. The parallel processing of I140 can continue unhindered.
                Just an opinion; Not legal advice.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by scientist2016 View Post
                  Stop the second one only after it too reaches the I485 stage. The parallel processing of I140 can continue unhindered.
                  Can you explain why I should even start the second I-140 if the first one was already approved? What risk am I mitigating?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by rusl View Post
                    Can you explain why I should even start the second I-140 if the first one was already approved? What risk am I mitigating?
                    A potential case could be: Say you would like to move away from your current employer before the completion of the whole I485 process. In that case the second I140 would be an insurance, and would allow you to get a GC. Since I140 often does not involve any burden, financial or otherwise on your part, my opinion was that there is no harm in letting the process play out.
                    Just an opinion; Not legal advice.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by scientist2016 View Post
                      A potential case could be: Say you would like to move away from your current employer before the completion of the whole I485 process. In that case the second I140 would be an insurance, and would allow you to get a GC. Since I140 often does not involve any burden, financial or otherwise on your part, my opinion was that there is no harm in letting the process play out.
                      Thanks. My concern was that having both I-485 (submitted as a dependant) and I-140 (submitted as a primary) in-flight could cause some confusion/contention/delay. Is it safe?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by rusl View Post
                        Thanks. My concern was that having both I-485 (submitted as a dependant) and I-140 (submitted as a primary) in-flight could cause some confusion/contention/delay. Is it safe?
                        I140 & I485 processing are two completely different/independent processes. In fact you can have multiple I140s filed in your name at any time. There is no confusion there.
                        Just an opinion; Not legal advice.

                        Comment

                        {{modal[0].title}}

                        X

                        {{modal[0].content}}

                        {{promo.content}}

                        Working...
                        X