NIU最近连续发信给奥本敦促其尽快给EB2C防水,收到回信如下。NIU准备继续跟进催促
其防水。
From: Oppenheim, Charlie W
Date: Thu, Jan 22, 2015 at 2:02 PM
Subject: RE: EB2 China demand and cutoff date questions
To: Executive Team /* */>
See item D in the attached Visa Bulletin. Occasionally the projected
movements which are listed (in the bulletin) are intentionally less than
what is expected to occur. That is done on the assumption that people
would rather be pleasantly surprised should the projected movement be
surpassed, rather than be disappointed should unforeseen changes in demand
result in the movement being less than originally projected.
I am in regular contact with USCIS regarding these issue, and just returned
from such a meeting. There are numerous variables which must be taken
into consideration during the determination of the monthly cut-off dates,
and I always do so based on the best information available at the time. I
have no concerns regarding demand in relation to the annual limit. In
fact, if China EB-2 number use were to continue at the current pace, at some
point I would be required to take corrective action to limit number use
under the annual limit.
From: Executive Team [mailto:[email protected]
/* */]
Sent: Thursday, January 22, 2015 1:03 PM
To: Oppenheim, Charlie W
Subject: Re: EB2 China demand and cutoff date questions
Dear Mr. Oppenheim,
We sent you the email below on Tuesday regarding EB2 China cutoff dates and
are still waiting for your reply.
We noticed in the recent Visa Bulletin, you estimated EB2 China movement to
be 3-6 weeks in coming months. We think this will result in little EB2 China
visa approvals in Q3 FY2015.
INA201 (a)(2) defines the ceiling for the first three quarters as 27% of the
annual quota, which implies that visa numbers allocated in any single
quarter should not be significantly lower than other quarters, or in other
words, should be distributed evenly in 4 quarters.
As 2nd quarter of FY 2015 ends in March, there will be little demand in EB2
China category. If the movement continued to be 3-6 weeks per month as
indicated in Visa Bulletin, there will be far less demand (pre-adjudicated
cases) than available Q3 EB2 China quota. Even if there was rapid movement
between April and June, most of these new I-485 submissions won't be able to
get their I-485s approved until Q4 considering minimum 3-5 months of USCIS
I-485 processing time from submission to approval. This means Q3 approval
numbers will be substantially lower than the 27% limit.
We urge you to generate new EB2 China demand as soon as possible by rapidly
advancing the March cutoff dates, so EB2 China can get a fair amount of
approvals in Q3 FY2015.
Sincerely,
Executive Team
New Immigrants United
On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 1:41 PM, Executive Team /* */>
wrote:
Dear Mr. Oppenheim,
As you know, while the EB2 China cutoff date approaching May 2010, the visa
demand in this category is going to exhaust soon and it is necessary to
generate new demand by rapidly advancing the cutoff dates.
Could you let us know the remaining estimated demand (also known as pre-
adjudicated cases) of EB2 China by the end of next month? (Assuming next
month's allocated visa numbers are reasonably used.)
Also could you let us know when you plan to start to build up new demand for
EB2 China?
Sincerely,
Executive Team
New Immigrants United