USCIS Has Closed Offices to the Public from March 18 to June 4 but USCIS Service Centers Remain Operational (UPDATED APRIL 27, 2020)

UPDATE APRIL 27, 2020: USCIS has announced that they are planning to re-open offices for in-person services on June 4.

Effective March 18, 2020, US Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS) suspended in-person services at its field offices, asylum offices, and Application Support Centers (ASCs) to help prevent the spread of Coronavirus (COVID-19). The closure will be effective until at least May 3, but the closure date may be extended. Employees in these offices are continuing to perform mission-essential services not requiring face-to-face contact with the public and USCIS will still provide limited emergency services. USCIS Service Centers are operational at this time.

USCIS field offices will send notices to applicants and petitioners with scheduled appointments and naturalization ceremonies affected by the closure. USCIS states that asylum offices will send interview cancellation notices and automatically reschedule asylum interviews. When the interview is rescheduled, asylum applicants will receive a new interview notice with the new time, date, and location of the interview. When USCIS resumes normal operations, the agency will automatically reschedule the affected ASC appointments. Applicants will receive a new appointment letter in the mail and those who had InfoPass or other appointments must reschedule through the USCIS Contact Center after field offices are open again to the public. Individuals can check if their field office has been reopened online.

USCIS: “Changes to Direct Filing Addresses for Form I-129 Petitions”

Effective October 12, 2017, US Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS) has changed the direct filing addresses for certain petitioners submitting Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker. Petitioners must now file Form I-129 according to the “state where the company or organization’s primary office is located.” Petitioners previously filed Form I-129 based on where the beneficiary’s temporary employment or training was located. Additionally, petitioners located in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas will now file Form I-129 at the California Service Center. 

UCCIS publishes the list of direct filing addresses for Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, on their website. Beginning November 11, 2017, USCIS may reject Form I-129s that are filed at the incorrect service center, so it’s recommended to verify (and double-check) the correct address before submitting.

USCIS: Change of Filing Addresses and Workload Transfers

Every so often, US Citizenship & Immigration Service Centers—located in California, Nebraska, Texas, Vermont, and Virginia—experience lengthy backlogs and delays in processing cases. To balance workloads and “promote timely processing,” USCIS occasionally changes filing addresses for certain petitions to direct cases away from the service centers experiencing these significant delays, as well as transfers cases from center to center. USCIS announced this week they are doing both.  

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