Form I-90 Instructions
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1
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Form. General Comment
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Comment: it is tyime to cuyt down the number of those who
immigfrate to the usa. this countgry is flooded with tens of
milliosn of foreigners, who come here to commity crimee, leach
onw elfare, sell drugs, prostituion and be terrorists.
we are flooded with foreigners. it
is time to cut the number allow=ed here. it is time to make sure
visitors leave when they say they are going to leave and charge
tghem with cdriminality when they overstay so that they never get
back here again. and we need to charge visitors enough to pay for
the costs of deporting them. we need ot increase fees to
realistic numbers instead of americans being the fall guy for all
these foreign leaches.
this agency is doing a lousy job of
keeping out of this coiuntry the bad guys who are all over
comnmiting endless crimes against america and americans.
americans are victims of an evil govt intent on flooding america
and harming every american citizern here. this comment is for the
ublic record. please receipt. jean publee jeanpublic1@gmail.com
USCIS Response: The comment received was not germane to
the subject of this information collection.
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2
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Form. General Comment
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Comment: Comment Submitted by Cynthia Escobedo
HI...I LOVE TO HAVE YOU AS ONE OF
MY CONTACTS..OR AT LEAST IN MY E-MAIL DELIVERERS MAILS...I
RECENTLY RECEIVE MY NEW GREEN CARD...AS I NEED IT TO FIND A
JOB...IT WAS A REPLACEMENT I REALLY WANT TO BECOME A U.S.A.
CITIZEN I AM MEXICAN FROM GUADALAJARA,JALISCO AND LIKE I SAID I,D
LIKE TO BECAME AN AMERICAN CITIZEN....I RECENTLY REVIEW A VIDEO
FROM IT...LIKE THE QUESTIONNAIRE FOR GET A GOOD TEST "RTERSULTS"
THANK YOU U.S.C.I.S. TO HAVE MY DOCUMENTS COMPLETE..I ONLY NEED
MY SOC.SEC.CARD...AS I LOST BOTH, MY COLORADO I.D. AND MY SOCIAL
SEC. CARD. I HAVEN'T HAVE GOOD LUCK IN DENVER, COL. RIGHT NOW, I
AM WRITING YOU FROM HULL,IOWA...THANKS.CYNTHIA E.
USCIS Response: The comment
received was not germane to the subject of this information
collection.
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3
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Form. General Comment
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Comment: Comment Submitted by Michele Carnduff
I am us citizen born abroad to
military father now deceased. I have a set of documents for my
proof of citizenship due to the residence of parents at time of
birth and a certificate which is birth cert. For foreign country.
They have been stolen I am without a y proof other than a
California ID and am on ssi I will need these documents in order
to get a residence again I am currently staying with parent but
is temp I do not make any extra income at this time and the
urgency for replacement of documents and my current income have
put me in a urgent need situation where I cannot financially
afford these necessary documents and considering the state the
world is in with the terrorist threats posed the urgency is
crucial that I get this resolved and document replaced asap. Plea
USCIS Response: The comment
received was not germane to the subject of this information
collection.
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4
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Form. General Comment
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Comment: Comment Submitted by Rahmath Kamal
The I-90 instruction says "If
a question does not apply to you type or print N/A". "If
your answer to a question which requires a numeric response is
zero or none type or print none" However when the i-90 form
is opened in adobe (which also enables the 2d bar code) -None of
the text fields in the form accept the character " / "
to type N/A. -ARN, Telephone, ELIS number fields does not
Alphabetic characters to type None.
USCIS Response: The back
slash will be removed. The language” type or print zero”
will be added in the example after “How many children do
you have”.
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5
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Form. General Comment
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Comment: Comment Submitted by AILA
On page 2 of the proposed Form I-90
Instructions, USCIS has added language indicating that original
documents not required or requested by USCIS will be “immediately
destroyed upon receipt.” Applicants, especially pro se
applicants, may not realize that original documents should not be
submitted, and may accidentally include them in the Form I-90
application package. It seems drastic to immediately destroy
documents that the applicant may need later for another purpose.
AILA suggests that USCIS consider other alternatives, such as
mailing the documents back to the applicant, sending the
applicant an RFE for a Form G-884 Return of Original Documents,
or sending the documents to the National Records Center to
combine with the A file so that the applicant can later file a
Form G-884.
USCIS Response: Consistent
with the Transformation initiative, USCIS is moving away from
paper-based filing and record-keeping to an electronic format.
Form I-90 currently may be filed electronically or in paper form.
Paper-based Form I-90s are scanned and converted into electronic
format upon receipt and the original paper filing is then
destroyed. To facilitate this process, applicants are explicitly
instructed against submitting original documents unless originals
are specifically required or requested by USCIS.
USCIS, however, will return all
original U.S. and foreign passports, and any other original
document that appears to be foreign or issued by a foreign
government. We have updated the form instructions to reflect this
policy.
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6
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Form. General Comment
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Comment: Comment Submitted by AILA
On page 4 of both the proposed and
current Form I-90, the Applicant’s Statement includes an
introductory statement with a note that says: “You must
file Form I-90 while in the United States.” There are many
reasons why an applicant may file Form I-90 while temporarily
outside the United States. In fact, the form instructions
contemplate that commuters who file Form I-90 may not actually
reside in the United States. This language adds a substantive
requirement that is not supported by the statute or regulations,
and should be removed.
USCIS
Response: USCIS policy has been to accept Form I-90 filings
made from within the United States. This requirement is
consistent with other policies, such as requiring Form I-90
biometrics capture from within the United States. USCIS mails a
Permanent Resident Card under its secured mailing initiative
using the US Postal Service, Certified Mail, Return Receipt
Requested, so we are certain that the card is delivered to the
proper owner of the card and that cards do not fall into the
wrong hands. The US Postal Service does not deliver Certified
Mail to a foreign mailing address. Aliens in commuter status
must maintain U.S. employment and a foreign residence in a
contiguous territory. No changes to the form have been made
based on this comment.
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7
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Form. General Comment
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Comment: Comment Submitted by AILA
On August 17, 2015, USCIS released
a revised Form I-129 with a new Preparer’s Declaration that
reads:
By my signature, I certify,
swear, or affirm, under penalty of perjury, that I prepared this
petition on behalf of, at the request of, and with the express
consent of the petitioner or authorized signatory. The petitioner
has reviewed this completed petition as prepared by me and
informed me that all of the information in the form and in the
supporting documents, is complete, true, and correct.
USCIS has also taken steps to
implement this language on Form I-129S, Nonimmigrant Petition
Based on Blanket L Petition. We applaud USCIS for amending the
Preparer’s Declaration on Form I-129 and I-129S and urge
the Service to implement similar, simplified language across all
forms, including the Form I-90 moving forward.
As AILA has noted in previous
discussions and form comments, it is almost never the case that
an attorney preparer completes an application or petition based
solely on responses from the applicant or petitioner. Counsel
consults a variety of sources, including the beneficiary, family
members of the applicant, public records, and other sources to
ensure that the information contained on the forms is accurate
and complete. Moreover, any concerns about fraud detection and
prevention are more than adequately covered in the existing
regulations. Preparers are already required to attest to the
veracity and truth of what is submitted under 8 CFR §103.2(a)(2)
which states: “[b]y signing the benefit request, the …
petitioner … certifies under penalty of perjury that the
benefit request, and all evidence submitted with it, either at
the time of filing or thereafter, is true and correct.”
Under 8 CFR §1003.102(j)(1), “[t]he signature of a
practitioner on any filing [or] application … constitutes
certification by the signer that the signer has read the filing
[or] application … and that, to the best of the signer’s
knowledge, information, and belief, formed after inquiry
reasonable under the circumstances, the document is well-grounded
in fact ….” Finally, an attorney who engages in
frivolous behavior or who knowingly or with reckless disregard
makes a false statement of material fact or law is subject to
disciplinary sanctions including disbarment or suspension. See
generally 8 CFR §1003.101−108.
USCIS should remove the preparer’s
certification on proposed Form I-90 and replace it with the
simple, direct, and effective language found on Form I-129.
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USCIS Response: We are updating our forms to incorporate
standard certification language, including language for petitions
prepared for and filed on behalf of entities and by individuals.
The new language is simplified and addresses the commenter’s
concerns
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8
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Form. General Comment
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Comment: Comment Submitted by Family Equality Counsel
The “Mother’s Name”
and “Father’s Name” fields on Form I-90 can
easily be changed without undermining or compromising the
information gained from this form, namely the ability to
distinguish between requesters with similar names, by changing
the fields to read “Parent 1” and “Parent 2.”
In fact, altering the question as recommended would allow
requesters to complete the form more fully and truthfully, and
more accurately match any previous records with which Form I-90
is being compared.
While the form’s governing
statute includes and defines “mother” and “father”
as gender-specific terms, it also includes and defines “parent,”
a gender non-specific designation.4 Because the term “parent”
is already included in the governing statute, altering Form
I-190’s fields in the recommended fashion does not require
statutory or regulatory changes. Thus, these recommended changes
are solely of internal government policy and can be made by the
Director of United States Citizenship and Immigration Services,
through power granted him by the Secretary of Homeland Security
as established by 8 U.S.C. § 1103.
The federal government’s
hundreds of programs, services, and benefits are intended to be
accessible to all who qualify. Changing Form I-90 to read
“Parent” rather than “Mother” and
“Father” will be a cost-neutral change to more
accurately reflect the varied composition of today’s
families. It will also increase governmental efficiency by
alleviating the needless delays and denials caused by confusion
and incorrect completion of the outdated form.
We respectfully recommend that
USCIS include children of LGBT parents in its information
gathering, and modernize the “Mother” and “Father”
fields on their forms to read “Parent” to better
reflect and serve contemporary American families. We commend
USCIS and the Department of Homeland Security for their work, and
look forward to the final draft of this form.
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USCIS Response: USCIS policy
is to use gender neutral terms when the gender of the applicant
is not relevant to the applicable immigration benefit request.
You are correct that the gender of the parents is not relevant to
request a replacement green card. However, because the
intake of the Form I-90, like most USCIS forms, is automated,
changing the wording for these data elements would require
re-programming that would be costly and time consuming. The
scope of this I-90 revision project was simply to change the form
instructions to provide applicants notice that unrequested
original documents may be destroyed after they are scanned into
ELIS, and not re-program any automated intake functions.
The Form I-90 instructions still provide the option of providing
the names of same gender mothers or fathers regardless of the
title of the data element. We will consider changing the form as
you suggest in a future revision.
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9
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Page 1 General Instructions
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Comment:
COMMENTS ON FORM I-90 INSTRUCTIONS submitted by ILRC
1.
Page 1. What Is the Purpose of This Application? Make the
following changes:
“Upon
receipt of your properly filed Forms I-797 . . . permanent
resident status.
NOTE:
You may be able to apply for naturalization if you are at least
18 years of age and have been a lawful permanent resident of the
United States:
1.
For at least five years;
2.
For at least three years during which you have been, and continue
to be, married to and living in a marriage relationship with your
U.S. citizen husband or wife; or
3.
Have honorable service in the U.S. military. For more information
on eligibility to naturalize, visit USCIS’s website at:
http://www.uscis.gov/n-400.”
The
proposed language is virtually identical to the language USCIS
provides in its How Do I Apply for U.S. Citizenship public
guidance.7 As the Task Force concluded, there are over 8.8
million LPRs who are eligible to naturalize but, due to a variety
of obstacles, have not.8 Part of the Task Force’s
recommendations were for USCIS to engage in vigorous outreach to
identify this population and provide the information needed for
them to naturalize. Providing general guidance within Form I-90
Instructions regarding the ability to naturalize for LPRs who
file to replace their LPR card aligns clearly with the
Administration’s goal to increase the rates of
naturalization.
The
naturalization process is often confusing and complicated and
many LPRs may not know that they may naturalize after holding LPR
status for a specific period. Providing information regarding the
naturalization process and a link to USCIS’s website for
LPRs to conduct additional research on their eligibility and/or
consult a licensed attorney, would be a very effective strategy
to increase the rates of naturalization without a corresponding
monetary or resource expenditure. Moreover, by encouraging LPRs
to naturalize, USCIS reduces its future adjudication burden
because fewer LPRs will have to replace their LPR cards. Such
reference to naturalization would also align with USCIS’
efforts to inform online I-90 requestors about the potential to
naturalize:
Pop-up
that displays when online requestors attempt to file an I-90
through my.uscis.gov
If
USCIS decides not to incorporate the above suggested language, it
should at least adopt some language or direction that encourages
LPRs to verify whether they are eligible to naturalize by
consulting USCIS’s public facing guidance. To refrain from
having any reference to naturalization in Form I-90 Instructions
would run counter to the Administration’s stated goal to
increase naturalization rates.
USCIS Response: Your request
was taken into consideration, however, the Form I-90 is an
information collection instrument used for the replacement of the
Permanent Resident Card, and not an advertisement about
naturalization.
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10
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Page 1 General Instructions
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Comment: 2. Page 1. General Instructions. Make the
following changes:
“Signature. Each application
must be . . . A legal guardian may also sign for a mentally
incompetent person. A designated representative may sign if the
requestor is unable to sign due to a physical or developmental
disability or mental impairment.”
The proposed Form I-90 Instructions
only allows a legal guardian to sign on behalf of a mentally
incompetent person, but does not provide a similar allowance for
individuals with a physical or developmental disability that
interferes with the requestor to sign. The proposed language
mirrors the language present in Form I-821D Instructions which
makes allowances for these additional categories of disability.
USCIS Response: The
Department believes that current regulations are sufficient to
address the commenter’s concerns. First, current
regulations provide that a legal guardian may sign for an
individual who is mentally incompetent. See 8 CFR
103.2(a)(2). Second, even if no legal guardianship has been
established, applicants with disabilities have various options
for affecting signatures. Under USCIS policy, a valid signature
does not need to be legible or in English, and it may be
abbreviated provided it is consistent with the manner in which
the individual normally signs his or her name. An individual who
is unable to write in any language may place an “X”
or similar mark in lieu of a signature. DHS believes
existing regulations already address the commenters concern and
did not adopt the suggestion. The only time a designated
representative may act on behalf of an alien is when the alien
qualifies for an oath waiver under section 337(a) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. 1448(a). Form
I-821D, Consideration of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals,
is unique as it relates to cases involving the exercise of
prosecutorial discretion and it is not a request to receive a
legal status under the INA.
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11
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Page 1 General Instructions
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Comment: 3. Page 1. General Instructions. Make the
following changes:
“Filing Fee. Each application
must . . . fee (if applicable) or fee waiver.”
For many, filing Form I-90 without
a fee waiver is economically impossible. While USCIS provides
some guidance for fee waivers, that guidance is located deep
within the instructions on page 11. Individuals seeking to apply
for Form I-90 would greatly benefit from having some reference to
the availability of fee waivers on page 1 of the instructions.
Furthermore, individuals may interpret the current language to
indicate that no fee waivers are available for Form I-90,
discouraging them from reading the entirety of the instructions
or completing Form I-90 altogether.
USCIS Response: Your
comment was taken into consideration however the fee waiver
language will remain on page 11. USCIS encourages applicant’s
to read of all
of the instructions prior to filling out the form.
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