Home Forums Green Card & Citizen 영주권 인터뷰에 관하여 This topic has [1] reply, 0 voices, and was last updated 5 years ago by 두둥. Now Editing “영주권 인터뷰에 관하여” Name * Password * Email Topic Title (Maximum Length 80) 2월에 콤보카드 나왔고 인터뷰 기다리고 있었습니다. 가끔 여기 와서 정보 얻어가곤 했었는데요. 인터뷰가 언제쯤 일지 기약 없이 기다리다가 오늘도 둘러보고 가나했는데.. 항상 스팸 전화가 많이 와서 음성 메세지가 있어도 잘 안 듣곤하는데, 저장된 번호도 아니라서 일 끝나고 집에와서 들었는데요. .. 변호사 사무실에서 영주권 승인 났다는 메세지였어요.. 그래서.. Status 확인 해보니까.. New Card Is Being Produced이라고 뜨네요.. 꿈만 같네요.. 그래서 인터넷 뒤져서 아래에 정보 핵심만 올려 봅니다. 참고 하세요. Unprecedented times call for unusual measures. Recently USCIS announced the closure of field offices nationwide—until May 3rd–to help slow the spread of COVID-19. This announcement was immediately concerning given that green card applicants (family and employment-based) must attend in-person interviews at USCIS field offices to establish green card eligibility before their green cards can be approved. USCIS indicated in their announcement that all impacted interviews would be rescheduled at a future time when offices re-open to the public. Of course, the decision to reschedule interviews at a future time would create a backlog, delaying the adjudication of thousands of green cards. As it appears, to avoid a drastic backlog, USCIS is relaxing the green card interview requirement for employment-based green card applicants during the COVID-19 pandemic. While there is no official policy or memorandum waiving the interview requirement for employment-based green card applicants, USCIS has been doing just that. We can report that certain employment-based green card applicants who had their interviews canceled as a result of the COVID-19 office closures, have seen their green card “case status” change to “approved” and have received their green cards in the mail shortly thereafter. While we have heard that some marriage-based green card applicants have also experienced this phenomenon, we believe that for the most part green card interviews will not be waived for marriage-based green card applicants because these cases must be vetted for fraud, which can only occur at the green card interview. Instead, we believe that interviews will be waived primarily for employment-based green card applicants. Of course, we cannot guarantee that this will be the case since no official policy exists authorizing such a waiver, but it appears that this has been the case for at least some employment-based green card applicants. Readers may find it interesting to know that USCIS has also discontinued their normal practice of issuing courtesy notices asking green-card applicants to provide their medical examination forms at the time of their interview. Now, USCIS has been issuing requests for evidence asking green card applicants to mail their medical examination forms to USCIS directly. This move may indicate the very real possibility that USCIS is considering waiving the interview requirement for other green card applicants (such as marriage-based applicants), at least on a case-by-case basis. I agree to the terms of service Update List