U.S. Immigration Tracker
the hottest immigration tracker
Andrew Wilson, Immigration Attorney Fredrick Voigtmann, Immigration Attorney James Mayock, Immigration Attorney
Got questions on U.S. immigration? Ask an immigration lawyer
The Waiting Lounge | RSS Feeds for Discussions | Home | Add My Case | Sign Up | Log In
USA
Canada
UK
India
Discussion
Online Chat
News!
Resources
 
Member Profile: myjourney2us (2 posts)
 
Hello, I'm myjourney2us
My nationality is China
I last logged in on 14 Dec 2008
I have been a member since 20 Jul 2008
I have added 2 posts in trackitt forums
I added my last post on 28 Jul 2008
A few words about me 
I have nothing to say about myself.
myjourney2us's Immigration Cases
 
I-140 case: Approved in 328 days (33 days more than average*)  (0 comments)  (View approval trend)
User: myjourney2us Labor Filing Date: 07 Jan 2007
Service Center: Nebraska Processing Type: regular
Category: EB2 Filing Type: non-concurrent
Application Mailed: 29 Oct 2007 USCIS Received Date: 30 Oct 2007
USCIS Notice Date: 05 Dec 2007 RFE: yes
RFE Reply Date: 10 Sep 2008 I-140 Status: approved
Approval Date: 22 Sep 2008 Nationality: China
Last Updated: 22 Sep 2008
Notes:

*This is the average approval time in the last one year for cases with no RFE. (RFE = Request For Evidence)

myjourney2us's Posts

Posted in I-140 Forum on 28 Jul 2008
Topic: Re: adjucation steps of I-140

Thanks for the link. I feel that my case is in the step 5 - Adjucation, where the case is to be examined for the final approval or denial.
Posted in I-140 Forum on 27 Jul 2008
Topic: Re: adjucation steps of I-140

Last week I scheduled an INFOPASS appointment with local USCIS office. The immigration officer told me that my I-140 is still pending with examination department; also she gave me my A#.

Does anybody know how many steps that I-140 adjucation consists of?

Since my case is pending with examiniation department, does that mean my case is in the final step to be approved or denied?

What is the implication of having A#? I did research that my A# is really meant for permanent residency, not for other purposes (e.g. EAD or etc). Does this mean my case has actually passed the examination?

Thanks a lot!