How you can avoid getting a Blue Sheet
Ask the US Embassy
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Q: My cousin's father has filed for him to immigrate to America, but he's returned from two interviews at the embassy with blue papers, and he has to go back a third time. Why don't the officers just give him his visa?
A: While some immigrant-visa applicants are granted visas on their first visit to the embassy, most applicants come to the first interview with incomplete files, so they are given a Blue Sheet, a blue-coloured paper listing the documents they need to complete their files before their visas can be issued. Because applicants may have to wait a month or more for follow-up appointments, this significantly delays the processing of their applications.
To avoid getting a Blue Sheet, applicants should prepare for interviews by making sure they have turned in all required documents and forms. These include:
Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...#ixzz1Apvdb6nr
Ask the US Embassy
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Q: My cousin's father has filed for him to immigrate to America, but he's returned from two interviews at the embassy with blue papers, and he has to go back a third time. Why don't the officers just give him his visa?
A: While some immigrant-visa applicants are granted visas on their first visit to the embassy, most applicants come to the first interview with incomplete files, so they are given a Blue Sheet, a blue-coloured paper listing the documents they need to complete their files before their visas can be issued. Because applicants may have to wait a month or more for follow-up appointments, this significantly delays the processing of their applications.
To avoid getting a Blue Sheet, applicants should prepare for interviews by making sure they have turned in all required documents and forms. These include:
Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...#ixzz1Apvdb6nr
Comment