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Father's visa for Admin Processing

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  • Father's visa for Admin Processing

    When my parents were interviewed for visitor's visa, my mother got her visa but they put my father's case under Administrative Processing in Chennai, India. They said it might take from 4-8 weeks.

    If anyone has any information about this scenario, could you please give me an estimate as to how long might take before the visa is issued ?

    Your help is greatly appreciated.

  • #2
    Hi there,

    It happened the same way to my grandfather's Visitor Visa and its been over 8months now havent heard any news from consulate.

    So, Good luck to u.

    Comment


    • #3
      Thank you Hajera. I did hear from some of my friends that it might take as long as 12-14 months. Thank you for your prompt reply and I wish you good luck as well.

      Comment


      • #4
        What is his name? Might be a name check.

        I am not a lawyer and you need to consult with one to validate any info posted on the forum and discuss your case specifics. H1b Question? Read the FAQ first.

        Comment


        • #5
          That is what I think txh1b. It is an Islamic name. I guess he too has to get used to it the way I got used to it.

          Comment


          • #6
            My father got lucky and got his visa issued in 5 weeks. hajera, I wish you too good luck for your grand father. Also, I found this article:

            USCIS Meets Another Milestone in Eliminating FBI Name Check Backlogs
            Name Checks Pending More Than Six Months Now Completed


            WASHINGTON—U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced today that, working in close partnership with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the backlog for FBI name checks pending more than six months has been eliminated. This is the fourth milestone met by the agency as part of its joint plan with the FBI to completely eliminate the backlog of pending name checks.
            Just 16 months ago, more than 349,000 name checks were pending; of that, nearly 150,000 had been pending for more than six months. All USCIS requests pending for six months or more as of February 28, 2009, have now been responded to by the FBI’s National Name Check Program (NNCP).
            In April 2008, USCIS and the FBI established milestones prioritizing work based on the age of the pending name check. Priorities included processing all name checks pending more than three years by May 2008 (the FBI had already eliminated all cases pending more than four years); those pending more than two years by July 2008; and those pending more than one year by November 2008.
            USCIS and FBI are on schedule to meet the next two goals: all name checks requests pending longer than 90 days to be completed by May 30, 2009 and, by the end of June 2009, the FBI will complete 98 percent of USCIS name check requests within 30 days and process the remaining two percent within three months. USCIS and the FBI will continue to focus on sustaining a rigorous and efficient screening of each name check request.
            Elimination of the name check backlog is an example of USCIS’ commitment to making timely decisions about immigration applications and petitions, while maintaining the security and integrity of America’s immigration system.

            This page can be found:
            http://www.uscis. gov/pressroom

            http://www.uscis. gov/portal/ site/uscis/ menuitem. 5af9bb95919f35e6 6f614176543f6d1a /?vgnextoid= 54f2733a74ecf110 VgnVCM1000004718 190aRCRD&vgnextchannel= 68439c7755cb9010 VgnVCM10000045f3 d6a1RCRD


            USCIS and FBI Release Joint Plan to Eliminate Backlog of FBI Name Checks
            Partnership Establishes Series of Milestones To Complete Checks


            WASHINGTON – U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) today announced a joint plan to eliminate the backlog of name checks pending with the FBI.
            USCIS and the FBI established a series of milestones prioritizing work based on the age of the pending name check. The FBI has already eliminated all name check cases pending more than four years.
            “This plan of action is the product of a strong partnership between USCIS and the FBI to eliminate the backlogs and to strengthen national security,” said USCIS Director Emilio Gonzalez.
            By increasing staff, expanding resources, and applying new business processes, the goal is to complete 98 percent of all name checks within 30 days. USCIS and the FBI intend to resolve the remaining two percent, which represent the most difficult name checks and require additional time to complete, within 90 days or less. The goal is to achieve and sustain these processing times by June 2009.
            The joint plan will focus on resolving the oldest pending FBI name checks first. USCIS has also requested that the FBI prioritize resolution of approximately 29,800 pending name checks from naturalization applicants submitted to the FBI before May 2006 where the naturalization applicant was already interviewed.
            The target milestones for processing name checks are:

            Completion Goal


            Category
            May 2008 Process all name checks pending more than three years
            July 2008 Process all name checks pending more than two years
            November 2008 Process all name checks pending more than one year
            February 2009 Process all name checks pending more than 180 days
            June 2009 Process 98 percent of all name checks within 30 days and process the remaining two percent within 90 days

            http://www.uscis. gov/pressroom

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