Tag: Parole
-
Process to Promote the Unity and Stability of Families (PIP Expansion)
USCIS sent out an email regarding the Biden Administrations recent executive action to allow the spouses of US citizens who have been living in the US for ten years and who entered without inspection to get parole in place in order to become eligible for adjustment of status allowing them to bypass the need of…
-
Biden Administration Expands Parole In Place to Spouse’s of US Citizens–Does NOT Extend Immigration Benefits to Any Immigrants Who Were not Already Eligible for a Green Card
What is Parole-in-Place? Parole-in-Place (PIP) is an immigration policy that grants temporary protected legal status to certain undocumented individuals who are already in the United States that are present without admission or parole. It is a sort of legal fiction in which the person will be “paroled” into the US without actually having to leave…
-
FRP Invitation Letter
Below is an example of a Family Reunification Parole invitation letter. If you receive this letter you are eligible to apply to bring your family member with an approved I-130 visa petition to the U.S. to wait for their visa in the U.S. See the Family Reunification Parole Post for more info.
-
FAQs: Family Reunification Parole
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS REGARDING Family Reunification Parole (FRP)
-
FAMILY REUNIFICATION PAROLE EMAIL INVITATIONS BEGIN GOING OUT TODAY
The family reunification parole (FRP) processes are available by invitation only to certain petitioners who filed an approved Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, on behalf of a principal beneficiary who is a national of Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, or Honduras, and their immediate family members. These processes allow an eligible beneficiary to be considered…
Recent Posts
- Process to Promote the Unity and Stability of Families (PIP Expansion)
- DHS Announced Extension and Redesignation of Haiti & Yemen for Temporary Protected Status (TPS)
- EOIR Launches Respondent Access Portal
- SCOTUS DISGARDS CHEVRON DOCTRINE
- Department of State v. Muñoz
Tags
2023 2024 asylum BIA Biden Bond Case Law CAT checklist citizenship court criminal DACA Data EAD ECAS FAQ fees FOIA guide how to I-751 inadmissibility interview marriage news NYC Parole Policy policy update Politics R SCOTUS SIJS Template TPS travel update USCIS U visa Video Visa waiver webex You Asked
Comments
At you inquisitive mind :)
In it something is. Thanks for the help in this question. I did not know it.