Can I apply for a Green Card while on H-2B status? Yes, you may apply for Green Card while on H-2B visa. You may attain an immigrant status in the U.S. through the Family Based Immigration. If you have close relatives who are U.S. citizens or U.S. permanent residents, the relatives may file an immigration petition for you as the beneficiary. Close relatives, as defined by immigration law, include parents, unmarried minor children and spouses.
The U.S. citizen can sponsor the wife and her unmarried kids. When she will become a citizen (3 year) she can sponsor:Unmarried child under 21 years of ageUnmarried son or daughter over 21Married son or daughter of any ageBrother or sister, if the sponsor is at least 21 years old, orParent, if the sponsor is at least 21 years old.
Well it depends. If she is a half-sister, a step-sister, Y E S
Yes, she can.
no she does not have a sister but BRANDON LAMAR is her half brother hope i help ya yes she does her name is casandra holder
No, he has one holder sister.
Yes. Victor Chang migrated to Australia in 1953 on the 7th of July with his sister to get an education.
If you are over the age of 21
I am also wondering about this question. someone please help. answer is yes. If you go to www.immigrationdirect.com it'll explain everything. There is also currently something called a touchback. If an immigrant from Mexico comes here undocumented and has children and a wife here they have to gol back to Mexico but they'll be granted a greencard and eventually a residence. Hope this helps !
The fact that you are asking about marrying a U.S. citizen leads me to think that YOU are NOT a U.S. citizen. If that is the case, then there is nothing you can do
My sister is a diploma holder from Senford High School she works in wallmart.
No. Only is she became a joint account holder, then both persons credit would be affected if any default occurred.
Step One. Determine your relationship to a Qualifying US RelativeIf you do not fit in to one of the following categories you will not be able to apply for Permanent Residence (the "Green Card") through a family member. The wait times for these categories increases as you move down the list. The approximate waiting time for an Immigrant Visa time is in parentheses next to each category.Immediate Relative - (No wait for a Visa, about 5 months to process application) The US Citizen is your spouse.You are under 21, unmarried, and the US Citizen is your parent.You are the parent of a US Citizen who is 21 or older.First Preference (6 years except for Mexico (18 years) and Philippines (17 years)) You are over 21, unmarried, and the US Citizen is your parent.Second PreferenceYour spouse is a Permanent Resident (4 years except for Mexico (6 years))You are under 21, unmarried, and your parent is a Permanent Resident (4 years except for Mexico (6 years))You are over 21, unmarried, and your parent is a Permanent Resident (8 years except for Mexico (18 years) and Philippines (11 years))Third PreferenceYou are married and your parent is a US Citizen. (8 years except for Mexico (18 years) and Philippines (19 years))Fourth PreferenceYour brother or sister is over 21 and a US Citizen. (10 years except for except Mexico (14 years) and Philippines (22 years))Step Two. Apply for your Immigrant VisaThis procedure is based on the location of the intending immigrant. This is a very broad overview of this procedure.Applying from the United States: The US relative will file an I-130 Petition for their alien relative who is in the United States. Best practice is to complete the rest of the Green Card Application at the same time when the relative has immediate priority, and the following forms are required; I-485, I-864, I-693, G-325A (for the US relative and for each intending immigrant), and a corresponding G-28 form when you use an Attorney to help you complete your forms. Additional forms may be filed currently to save US fees.Applying from outside the United States: The US relative will file an I-130 Petition for their alien relative who is not in the United States.When the I-130 is approved by the department of state the intending immigrant has one year to apply for an Immigrant Visa.