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  • Success Stories

  • Post image for I-130 and I-485 Marriage Based Petition and Adjustment of Status Approval for Filipina Client in Sidney Montana

    CASE: I-130 / I-485 Adjustment of Status

    NATIONALITY: Philippines

    LOCATION: Sidney, Montana

    Our client came from the Philippines on a J-1 in August 2015 to work as a teacher. According to her DS-2019, she was subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement.

    In February 2018, she got married to her U.S. citizen husband and later on consulted with our firm for her J-1 visa waiver prior to applying for adjustment of status. If someone is subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement, he or she cannot get a green card in the United States until he or she fulfills the requirement or obtains a waiver.

    Upon retention, our office promptly prepared a waiver request through a No Objection Statement (NOS) from the Philippine Embassy in the United States and eventually the EVP in the Philippines.

    On March 8, 2018, the J-1 Waiver Application (Form DS-3035) was filed to the Department of State.  We also sent a request to the Montana State Government to get authentication for the necessary documents.  Later, these authenticated documents and No Objection Application (for the Philippines Government) were sent to the Philippines Consulate General in Chicago for further authentication.  On April 11, 2018, our office sent our client’s materials to the Waiver Review Committee in Manila, Philippines. Then, the Waiver Review Committee forwarded the materials and favorable recommendation to the Philippine Embassy in D.C. who eventually issued a No Objection Statement.

    On August 6, 2018, the Waiver Review Division issued a favorable recommendation based on the No Objection statement.  Eventually, on September 29, 2018, the USCIS issued an I-612 approval notice for the waiver.

    Once her J-1 waiver was approved, our client retained our office again for her adjustment of status application. Our firm prepared and filed the I-130 Petition and Adjustment of Status Application on November 16, 2018.  Everything went smoothly and the receipt notices, fingerprint appointment, and work permits all came on time. Prior to the interview, we thoroughly prepared our clients through conference calls. On June 20, 2019, our client was interviewed at the Helena, Montana USCIS office.  The interview went well, and eventually, on the same day of the interview, her green card application was approved.

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    Post image for I-130 and I-485 Marriage Based Petition and Adjustment of Status Approval for Filipina Client in Great Falls Montana

    CASE: I-130 / I-485 Adjustment of Status

    NATIONALITY: Philippines

    LOCATION: Great Falls, Montana

    Our client came from the Philippines on a J-1 in August 2016 to work as a teacher. She was subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement.

    In May 2018, she got married to her U.S. citizen husband and later on consulted with our firm for her J-1 visa waiver prior to applying for adjustment of status. If someone is subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement, he or she cannot get a green card in the United States until he or she fulfills the requirement or obtains a waiver.

    Upon retention, our office promptly prepared a waiver request through a No Objection Statement (NOS) from the Philippine Embassy in the United States and eventually the EVP in the Philippines.

    On June 19, 2018, the J-1 Waiver Application (Form DS-3035) was filed to the Department of State.  We also sent a request to the Montana State Government to get authentication for the necessary documents.  Later, these authenticated documents and No Objection Application (for the Philippines Government) were sent to the Philippines Consulate General in Chicago for further authentication.  On August 8, 2018, our office sent our client’s materials to the Waiver Review Committee in Manila, Philippines. Then, the Waiver Review Committee forwarded the materials and favorable recommendation to the Philippine Embassy in D.C. who eventually issued a No Objection Statement.

    On December 11, 2018, the Waiver Review Division issued a favorable recommendation based on the No Objection statement.  Eventually, on February 22, 2019, the USCIS issued an I-612 approval notice for the waiver.

    Once her J-1 waiver was approved, our client retained our office again for her adjustment of status application. Our firm prepared and filed the I-130 Petition and Adjustment of Status Application on January 29, 2019.  Everything went smoothly and the receipt notices, fingerprint appointment, and work permits all came on time. Prior to the interview, we thoroughly prepared our clients through conference calls. On June 7, 2019, our client was interviewed at the Helena, Montana USCIS office.  The interview went well, and eventually, on the same day of the interview, her green card application was approved.

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    Post image for Cap Exempt H-1B Approval for School District Petitioner (Nonprofit Organization Affiliated with an Institution of Higher Education) in Mohave Valley Arizona and Filipina Elementary Education Teacher

    CASE: H-1B Visa Petition

    PETITIONER: School District in Mohave Valley, AZ

    BENEFICIARY: Filipina Elementary Education Teacher

    ISSUES: Cap-Exempt, Research Organization

    Our client is a public school district affiliated with several institutions of higher education. They contacted our office in March 2019 to seek legal assistance from our office for their foreign employee. The beneficiary is an Elementary Education Teacher from the Philippines who has been working for this employer for last 5 years under J-1 status. Though she was subject to INA 212(e), two-year foreign residency requirement, she already obtained a J-1 waiver from the USCIS.

    The proffered position for the Beneficiary is an Elementary Education Teacher. We showed that this is a “specialty occupation” because the minimum requirement for this position is a Bachelor’s Degree in Education or its equivalent.

    In the first week of April, the numerical cap of H-1B visas for fiscal year 2020 was already reached. However, our client is qualified for cap-exempt petitions since it is a non-profit organization affiliated with an Institution of Higher Education as defined in 8 C.F.R. 214.2(h)(19)(iii)(B).

    Once retained, our office filed the H-1B visa petition with various supporting documents on April 29, 2019, via premium processing. However, the USCIS issued the Request for Evidence (RFE) and requested our client to submit her I-612 J-1 waiver approval notice once again. Our office filed the Response to RFE on May 14, 2019. Eventually, our client’s H-1B application was approved on May 23, 2019.  She can now work for her employer for three years on an H-1B status.

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    Post image for Cap Exempt H-1B Approval for School Petitioner – Nonprofit Affiliated with Institution of Higher Education- in Mohave Valley Arizona and Filipina Elementary Special Education Teacher

    CASE: H-1B Visa Petition

    PETITIONER: School District in Mohave Valley, AZ

    BENEFICIARY: Filipina Elementary Special Education Teacher

    ISSUES: Cap-Exempt, Research Organization

    Our client is a public school district affiliated with several institutions of higher education. They contacted our office in March 2019 to seek legal assistance from our office for their foreign employee. The beneficiary is an Elementary Special Education Teacher from the Philippines who has been working for this employer for the last 4 years under J-1 status. Though she was subject to INA 212(e), two-year foreign residency requirement, she already obtained a J-1 waiver from the USCIS.

    The proffered position for the Beneficiary is an Elementary Special Education Teacher. We showed that this is a “specialty occupation” because the minimum requirement for this position is a Bachelor’s Degree in Education or its equivalent.

    In the first week of April, the numerical cap of H-1B visas for fiscal year 2020 was already reached. However, our client is qualified for cap-exempt petitions since it is a non-profit organization affiliated with an Institution of Higher Education as defined in 8 C.F.R. 214.2(h)(19)(iii)(B).

    Once retained, our office filed the H-1B visa petition with various supporting documents on April 19, 2019, via premium processing. There were no Requests for Evidence during the processing of the H-1B. Eventually, our client’s H-1B application was approved on May 1, 2019.  She can now work for her employer for three years on an H-1B status.

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    Post image for H-1B Extension Approval (Extension) for Elementary School Petitioner and Filipina Elementary School Teacher Beneficiary in Crownpoint New Mexico

    CASE: H-1B Extension

    PETITIONER: Elementary School

    BENEFICIARY: Filipina Elementary School Teacher

    LOCATION: Crownpoint, New Mexico

    Our client is a public grant elementary school for Native Indians in New Mexico. They contacted our office to seek assistance from our office for their foreign employee. The beneficiary is from the Philippines and she obtained her Bachelor’s degree in English. The proffered position for the Beneficiary is an elementary school teacher which we argued qualifies as a specialty occupation

    The foreign beneficiary in this case already had her H-1B from our client last year.  She also has an approved I-140 petition which allows her to get three year extension. Her H-1B status was not yet expired, and she wanted to extend her H-1B status.

    After retention, our office promptly filed the H-1B visa petition with various supporting documents on December 3, 2018 via regular processing.  Since this petition was based on an extension, this petition was exempt from the annual cap of the H-1B. Thus, we could file prior to April 1, 2019.  Eventually, our client’s H-1B Petition was approved on April 9, 2019 without any RFE. Now the Beneficiary can work for her Petitioner-Employer as an H-1B visa holder and she can continuously work there.

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    Post image for J-1 No Objection Statement Waiver (Philippines) of Two-Year Foreign Residency Requirement Approved for Filipina Client in Montana

    CASE: J-1 Waiver (No Objection Statement)

    NATIONALITY: Philippines

    LOCATION: Montana

    Our client came from the Philippines on a J-1 visa in August 2016 to work as a teacher. According to her DS-2019, she was subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement.

    In May 2018, she got married to her U.S. citizen husband and later on consulted with our firm for her J-1 visa waiver prior to applying for adjustment of status. If someone is subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement, he or she cannot get a green card in the United States until he or she fulfills the requirement or obtains a waiver.

    Upon retention, our office promptly prepared a waiver request through a No Objection Statement (NOS) from the Philippine Embassy in the United States and eventually the EVP in the Philippines.

    On June 19, 2018, the J-1 Waiver Application (Form DS-3035) was filed to the Department of State.  We also sent a request to the Montana State Government to get authentication for the necessary documents.  Later, these authenticated documents and No Objection Application (for the Philippines Government) were sent to the Philippines Consulate General in Chicago for further authentication.  On August 8, 2018, our office sent our client’s materials to the Waiver Review Committee in Manila, Philippines. Then, the Waiver Review Committee forwarded the materials and favorable recommendation to the Philippine Embassy in D.C. who eventually issued a No Objection Statement.

    On December 11, 2018, the Waiver Review Division issued a favorable recommendation based on the No Objection statement.  Eventually, on February 22, 2019, the USCIS issued an I-612 approval notice for the waiver. Now, our client can file for her adjustment status application along with her U.S. Citizen husband’s I-130 petition for her.

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    Post image for Marriage-Based Green Card Approval for Filipina Client in Indianapolis Indiana

    CASE: Marriage-Based Green Card (I-130 / I-485)

    NATIONALITY: Philippines

    LOCATION: Indianapolis, IN

    Our client came from the Philippines on a J-1 visa in August 2016 to work as a teacher. According to her DS-2019, she was subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement.

    In August 2017, she got married to her U.S. citizen husband and later on consulted with our firm for her J-1 visa waiver prior to applying for adjustment of status. If someone is subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement, he or she cannot get a green card in the United States until he or she fulfills the requirement or obtains a waiver.

    Upon retention, our office promptly prepared a waiver request through a No Objection Statement (NOS) from the Philippine Embassy in the United States and eventually the EVP in the Philippines.

    On February 14, 2018, the J-1 Waiver Application (Form DS-3035) was filed to the Department of State.  We also sent a request to the Montana State Government to get authentication for the necessary documents.  Later, these authenticated documents and No Objection Application (for the Philippines Government) were sent to the Philippines Consulate General in Chicago for further authentication.  On April 2, 2018, our office sent our client’s materials to the Waiver Review Committee in Manila, Philippines. Then, the Waiver Review Committee forwarded the materials and favorable recommendation to the Philippine Embassy in D.C. who eventually issued a No Objection Statement.

    On July 23, 2018, the Waiver Review Division issued a favorable recommendation based on the No Objection statement.  Eventually, on August 7, 2018, the USCIS issued an I-612 approval notice for the waiver.

    Once her J-1 waiver was approved, our client retained our office again for her adjustment of status application. Our firm prepared and filed the I-130 Petition and Adjustment of Status Application on September 4, 2018.  Everything went smoothly and the receipt notices, fingerprint appointment, and work permits all came on time. Prior to the interview, we thoroughly prepared our clients through conference calls. On January 31, 2019, our client was interviewed at the Indianapolis, Indiana USCIS office.  The interview went well, and eventually, on February 11, 2019, her green card application was approved.

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    Post image for I140 Priority Date Retention (EB3) Approval for Filipina Elementary School Teacher Beneficiary and Public School Petitioner in New Mexico

    CASE: I-140 / Old Priority Date Retention

    EMPLOYER: Public School

    BENEFICIARY: Filipina Elementary School Teacher

    LOCATION: New Mexico

    Our client had an employer willing to petition her for a third-preference petition (I-140).  Our client has a Bachelor’s degree in English, a valid New Mexico Teaching license, and has worked for her current employer since 2016. Based on our client’s school and work background, our office determined that she is eligible for EB-3 classification.  Our client eventually retained us in June 2017.

    Prior to filing PERM, our firm prepared the prevailing wage request, job order, advertisements, internal job posting, recruitment report, and all other steps which are important pre-PERM filing. Take note that the PERM application could be filed at least 60 days from the job posting date or 30 days from the last ad. Within a week from our retention, the prevailing wage request was filed.  After we obtained the PW determination, our office filed the job order on November 1, 2017. On April 13, 2018, we promptly filed PERM.

    However, on August 13, 2018, the Department of Labor issued a request for audit. The DOL requested documents from Petitioner to determine whether the recruitment process was done properly. In response to the Audit request, our office prepared the response to Audit brief along with Employer’s declaration, notice of filing, and recruitment documentation on August 22, 2018.  Eventually, on October 23, 2018, the PERM Labor Certification was approved – an EB3 position for the Filipina beneficiary.

    We then proceeded with the I-140 Petition filing. Our client already had her approved I-140 from her old employer with priority date of October 2010.

    Under 8 CFR 204.5(e):

    “Retention of section 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) priority date. A petition approved on behalf of an alien under sections 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of the Act accords the alien the priority date of the approved petition for any subsequently filed petition for any classification under sections 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of the Act for which the alien may qualify. In the event that the alien is the beneficiary of multiple petitions under sections 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of the Act, the alien shall be entitled to the earliest priority date. A petition revoked under sections 204(e) or 205 of the Act will not confer a priority date, nor will any priority date be established as a result of a denied petition. A priority date is not transferable to another alien.”

    As mentioned above, our client’s approved I-140 petition was not denied, was actually approved, and was never revoked at any point. Thus, by virtue of 8 CFR 204.5(e), this succeeding I-140 Petition by our client’s current employer for our client is entitled to the previous priority date.

    We submitted the “ability to pay” letter for the I-140 petition application. We included the job offer letter, employer’s tax records, her previous I-140 approval notice and other necessary supporting documents.

    The I-140 Petition was filed on November 1, 2018 via premium processing service. Eventually, on November 6, 2018, the I-140 EB3 Petition for our Filipina client was approved without any Request for Evidence (RFE). Also, the approved I-140 retained our client’s old priority date. She can file an I-485 adjustment of status application for her green card now.

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    Post image for EB3 PERM Labor Certification Approved for Filipina Elementary School Teacher Beneficiary and Public School Petitioner in New Mexico

    CASE: PERM Labor Certification

    EMPLOYER: Public School

    BENEFICIARY: Filipina Elementary School Teacher

    LOCATION: New Mexico

    Our client has a current employer that was willing to petition her for a third-preference petition (I-140).  Our client has a Bachelor’s degree in English, a valid New Mexico Teaching license, and has worked for her current employer since 2016. Based on our client’s education and work background, our office determined that she is eligible for EB-3 classification for her I-140 petition.  Our client eventually retained us in June 2017.

    Prior to filing PERM, our firm prepared the prevailing wage request, job order, advertisements, internal job posting, recruitment report, and all other steps which are important pre-PERM filing. Take note that the PERM application could be filed at least 60 days from the job posting date or 30 days from the last ad. Within a week from our retention, the prevailing wage request was filed.  After we obtained the PW determination, our office filed the job order on November 1, 2017. On April 13, 2018, we promptly filed PERM.

    However, on August 13, 2018, the Department of Labor issued a request for audit. The DOL requested documents from Petitioner to determine whether the recruitment process was done properly. In response to the Audit request, our office prepared the response to Audit brief along with Employer’s declaration, notice of filing, and recruitment documentation on August 22, 2018.  

    Eventually, on October 23, 2018, the PERM Labor Certification was approved – an EB3 position for the Filipina beneficiary. Our client can file the I-140 petition at any time.

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    Post image for I-130 and I-485 Marriage-Based Petition and Adjustment of Status Approval for Filipina Client in South Carolina

    CASE: I-130 / I-485 Adjustment of Status

    NATIONALITY: Philippines

    LOCATION: South Carolina

    Our client came from the Philippines on a J-1 in September 2015 to work as a teacher. According to her DS-2019, she was subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement.

    In November 2017, she got married to her U.S. citizen husband and later on consulted with our firm for her J-1 visa waiver prior to applying for adjustment of status. If someone is subject to the two-year foreign residency requirement, he or she cannot get a green card in the United States until he or she fulfills the requirement or obtains a waiver.

    Upon retention, our office promptly prepared a waiver request through a No Objection Statement (NOS) from the Philippine Embassy in the United States and eventually the EVP in the Philippines.

    On December 5, 2017, the J-1 Waiver Application (Form DS-3035) was filed to the Department of State.  We also sent a request to the Montana State Government to get authentication for the necessary documents.  Later, these authenticated documents and No Objection Application (for the Philippines Government) were sent to the Philippines Embassy in D.C. for further authentication.  On January 22, 2018, our office sent our client’s materials to the Waiver Review Committee in Manila, Philippines. Then, the Waiver Review Committee forwarded the materials and favorable recommendation to the Philippine Embassy in D.C. who eventually issued a No Objection Statement.

    On April 2, 2018, the Waiver Review Division issued a favorable recommendation based on the No Objection statement.  Eventually, on June 28, 2018, the USCIS issued an I-612 approval notice for the waiver.

    Once her J-1 waiver was approved, our client retained our office again for her adjustment of status application. Our firm prepared and filed the I-130 Petition and Adjustment of Status Application on July 31, 2018.  Everything went smoothly and the receipt notices, fingerprint appointment, and work permits all came on time. Prior to the interview, we thoroughly prepared our clients through conference calls. On October 30, 2018, our client was interviewed at the Greer, South Carolina USCIS office.  The interview went well, and eventually, on the same day of the interview, her green card application was approved.

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