H1B Double Nightmare: RFE Right Job Title, Wrong Education
ccifree.com. We will get back to you in 48 hours or less. ]]>
H1B Double Nightmare: RFE Right Job Title, Wrong Education Read More »
ccifree.com. We will get back to you in 48 hours or less. ]]>
H1B Double Nightmare: RFE Right Job Title, Wrong Education Read More »
Case Study: EB-2 Education RFE – Overturned! Read More »
ccifree.com/. We will get back to you in 48 hours or less. ]]>
Case Study: Specialty Occupation H1B RFE for Engineer – Overturned! Read More »
ccifree.com/. We offer expert opinion letters, credential evaluations, and consulting services tailored to the individual needs of each client, their education, their job, and their visa.]]>
Case Study: Software Developer H1B RFE Overturned Read More »
ccifree.com/ and we will get back to you in 48 hours or less.]]>
What You Need to Know About Changes to H1B Visa Adjudication Read More »
If you, or if your client or employee is planning to file for H1-B status for FY2020, the process has changed. This coming season, you will still file the first week of April as always. The good news is no paperwork must be submitted until AFTER your employee or client is selected in the H-1B lottery. The troubling news is that CIS will now be denying petitions outright without issuing RFEs. Denials are much more difficult to overturn than RFEs. This change has lawyers talking about submitting the specialty occupation expert opinion letter right away with the rest of the paperwork to avoid an RFE that won’t come anymore. While every year at TheDegreePeople we urge H1-B hopefuls and their teams that the best answer to an RFE is to avoid it in the first place. This coming season it’s more important than ever to identify where your employee or client’s case is likely to run into trouble and include any additional evidence and documentation in the initial petition. The past two years, the rate of specialty occupation RFEs has made a sharp rise. If you hold, or if your employee or client holds a job that does not require a US Bachelor’s degree or its equivalent or higher in all cases as an industry standard, you need to include an expert opinion letter that clearly shows why the job in question meets H1-B standards for what qualifies as a specialty occupation. Don’t take any chances this year. If you are selected, or if your employee or client is selected in the H-1B lottery, you need to include any credential evaluations, supporting evidence, and expert opinion letters needed in the first paperwork filing because you will not get a second chance anymore. At TheDegreePeople we have experts on hand 24/7 to write the letter you need, or your employee or client needs to get that H1-B petition approved. We work with difficult RFEs every year and we know what tends to trigger an RFE and how to prevent them. Don’t file without a specialty occupation letter. Visit ccifree.com/ for a free consultation on your case, or your employee or client’s case. We will get back to you in 48 hours or less. ]]>
H1B Changes in Adjudication Means Getting the Initial Filing Correct Read More »
In light of the new USCIS policy memorandum, adjudicators now have the discretion to deny a petition without first issuing and RFE or NOID for all visas, and this includes visas that require a Form I-140.
While the new memorandum can feel like a reason to be nervous because we don’t know how this law on the books will play out in practice, it actually changes very little in how beneficiaries and their teams should approach the process. That means looking at common places where applicants run into problems and then taking steps to prevent running into them.
If you or your employee or client’s education or job don’t clearly meet the educational standards of the classification chosen in Part 2 of Form I-140, you need to make sure to provide the evidence and documentation you need to fill in the gaps between the requirements and you or your employee or client’s situation. Incomplete college, education attained outside of the United States, or no formal education are all situations that require a detailed credential evaluation that takes the specific educational requirements of the visa and the classification into consideration. If an evaluation agency does not ask about the job or the visa before you order, look elsewhere.
Before you file, make sure all answers on the PERM and on Form I-140 are consistent. Inconsistencies will trigger an RFE, even if it is just a spelling error. If there are changes needed, make sure to check yes for Part 4 Item 7 on the Form I-140. Place a bright sheet of paper directly beneath Form I-140 that states this is an amended petition and the PERM has already been submitted and include the receipt number for the PERM. This way, inconsistencies will be accompanied with a clear explanation. CIS may inquire anyway – there are never any guarantees with CIS – but this will be much less likely and if you do receive an RFE you will be ready.
At TheDegreePeople we work with I-140 RFEs every year and understand CIS approval trends and what triggers RFEs. This year, you may not get a chance to fortify your case with an RFE. Before you file, let us review your case and identify where in the petition an RFE is likely to be triggered so you can accommodate accordingly. For a free review of your case visit ccifree.com/. We will get back to you in 48 hours or less.
]]>
I-140 Problems: Common RFE Triggers and their Solutions Read More »
th, 2018. This memorandum allows adjudicators to deny incomplete applications, requests, and petitions without first issuing an NOID and RFE. Before the memorandum, adjudicators were required to issue an RFE or NOID instead of outright Denials unless there was absolutely no possibility that the case would be approved. Now, adjudicators have broader discretion to flat out deny petitions. CIS says that the purpose of this memorandum is to deter “placeholder” petitions, which are incomplete petitions with vague answers that are later clarified in RFE responses. Adjudicators can now deny these cases flat out. Some examples include petitions submitted without supporting evidence or severely lacking in supporting evidence, petitions submitted with questions left unanswered, and petitions that require additional official documents or evidence but are submitted without them. While this amendment sounds alarming, in theory it really doesn’t change much for petitioners. From what we can tell at TheDegreePeople, reports of issue have been exaggerated. It has always been generally advised for petitioners of all visas to submit complete petitions, on time, with all supporting evidence and documentation included. In this sense, nothing has actually changed when it comes to optimizing your chances of visa approval. However, laws on the books are different from laws in action. To see the full scope of how this new memorandum will change visa approval, we will have to wait and see how it all plays out with USCIS. In the meantime, it’s now more important than ever that you get the petition right the first time. That means identifying where CIS is likely to have questions about your case and providing any additional evidence they will need before they have to ask for it. At TheDegreePeople, we have been working with RFEs for years and follow CIS approval trends. The best way to answer an RFE now, as it has always been, is to prevent it in the first place. Visit TheDegreePeople.com to chat with us about your case. Have you encountered issues with this new memorandum? We want to hear about it! Comment here to post your opinions and experiences regarding this matter. ]]>
Effective Now: Memorandum Lets Adjudicators Deny Petitions without NOID or RFE Read More »