
i 800a or i 600 forms.?
i adopted 2 kids from Panama. I didn’t fill the form I 800 A (Application for Determination of Suitability to Adopt a Child from a Convention Country) , which I should have. I didn’t know.
Can I just fill the I 600 ( Petition to Classify Orphan as an Immediate Relative) to bring the kids to the US?
Any information about how can I bring them here is helpful. I didn’t fill any U.S. forms. I have dual citizenship, Panama and US, it wasn’t a problem to adopt them. But now I’m afraid I messed up because I didn’t do the necessary steps, you know I 800 A, then adoption then I 800 and then citizenship.
What can I do now so I can bring them to live here with me legally with their permanent residence?
DHS regulations allow only one “extension” of the approval of a Form I-600A. If that extension is also scheduled to expire, the only alternative is to file a new Form I-600A, with a new filing fee. Generally, a Form I-600A may not be filed after April 1, 2008, for the adoption of a child from a Hague Convention country. Under 8 CFR 204.300(b), however, a case may continue as an orphan case if a Form I-600A was filed before April 1, 2008. USCIS interprets this provision as permitting prospective adoptive parents whose Form I-600A approval is still in effect, but is about to expire, to file a new Form I-600A, as long as they file the new Form I-600A before the current approval expires.
A new Form I-600A that is filed after April 1, 2008, will be considered “grandfathered” only if:
(a) the new Form I-600A is filed before expiration of a previous Form I-600A AND
(b) the previous Form I-600A that is about to expire was itself filed before April 1, 2008; AND
(c) no Form I-600 has been filed on the basis of the previous Form I-600A.
What is the USCIS?
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), a federal agency. The USCIS along with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) are components within the Department of Homeland Security, USCIS oversees lawful immigration to the United States.
USCIS was formed to enhance the security and efficiency of national immigration services by focusing only on the administration of benefit applications. It has the advantage of a legacy of more than 100 years of federal immigration and naturalization administration.
The USCIS also tackles illegal entrance into the United States, preventing receipt of benefits such as social security or unemployment by those ineligible to receive them and investigating, detaining, and deporting those illegally living in the United States.
USCIS has 18,000 employees working at 250 offices across the world and according to USCIS, their goals include:
• Strengthening the security and integrity of the immigration system.
• Providing effective customer-oriented immigration benefit and information services.
Supporting immigrants’ integration and participation in American civic culture.
Promoting flexible and sound immigration policies and programs.
Strengthening the infrastructure supporting the USCIS mission.
• Operating as a high-performance organization that promotes a highly talented workforce and a dynamic work culture.
The services provided by the USCIS include:
Citizenship (Includes the Related Naturalization Process): Individuals who wish to become US citizens through naturalization submit their applications to USCIS. US Citizenship and Immigration Service determine eligibility, process the applications and, if approved, schedule the applicant for a ceremony to take the Oath of Allegiance. USCIS also determines eligibility and provides documentation of US citizenship for people who acquired or derived US citizenship through their parents.
Immigration of Family Members: USCIS manages the process that allows current permanent residents and US citizens to bring close relatives to live and work in the United States.
Working in the US: USCIS manages the process that allows individuals from other countries to work in the United States. Some of the opportunities are temporary, and some provide a path to a green card (permanent residence).
Verifying an Individual’s Legal Right to Work in the United States (E-Verify): USCIS manages the system that allows participating employers to electronically verify the employment eligibility of their newly hired employees.
Humanitarian Programs: USCIS administers humanitarian programs that provide protection to individuals inside and outside the United States who are displaced by war, famine and civil and political unrest, and those who are forced to flee their countries to escape the risk of death and torture at the hands of persecutors.
Adoptions: USCIS manages the first step in the process for US citizens to adopt children from other countries.
Civic Integration: USCIS promotes instruction and training on citizenship rights and responsibilities and provides immigrants with the information and tools necessary to successfully integrate into American civic culture.
Genealogy: The USCIS Genealogy Program is a fee-for-service program providing family historians and other researchers with timely access to historical immigration and naturalization records.
About the Author
To get help with your lost green card Visit http://www.ImmigrationDirect.com/
Q 576. What is form N-600? (Certificate of US Citizenship)