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New immigration policy in the United States: applicants must submit all evidence at one time.

On July 13, local time, the Immigration Bureau issued a memorandum saying that due to the preliminary suspension orders issued by the courts in New York and California earlier, this measure does not apply to the cases of deferred deportation plan for children's entry (DACA), and the scale of all other types of immigration applications, petitions and requests will be adjusted.

Officials pointed out that if anyone who intends to immigrate to his country fails to provide sufficient evidence or information during the application period, immigration officials can issue REF or NOID to the applicants and ask them to supplement the evidence.

The premise of issuing REF is that the official believes that the applicant has failed to provide sufficient information, but after the missing information is supplemented, the application may still be approved, and the document will set a time limit and list the supplementary evidence or information that the applicant needs to supplement.

As for the intention of NOID, immigration officials thought that the applicant had insufficient information and deliberately refused to apply. NOID will list the reasons why officials deliberately refused the application. The person who obtained the NOID needs to submit the data before the deadline or try to prove that the previous evidence is true, otherwise the application will be rejected.

Although the contents of REF and NOID are similar, applicants who receive REF have a higher probability of successful immigration, and the time limit for REF to ask applicants to reply is longer than NOID.

USCIS issued a guide in June 20 13, pointing out that when officials issue REF and NOID, officials still have to issue REF, unless the applicant submits additional data, but it is still "impossible" to fully explain the reasons. Under such regulations, it also means that the immigration bureau loses its power and cannot decide whether to accept the application immediately after the people apply for it for the first time and submit evidence.

The bureau believes that this new measure will enable officials to regain their power and make an immediate decision on the evidence submitted, help eliminate a large number of applications with insufficient reasons and "seat occupation", and encourage applicants to provide all evidence and data at one time.

FrancisCissna, director of USCIS, said that there were too many unnecessary complaints in the immigration system in the past, which led to a backlog of cases and affected well-founded applications. * efforts to correct it should have been made long ago. The new measures will help reduce unreasonable applications, make better use of resources and improve work efficiency.