This morning we received notice that the National Visa Center forwarded our I800 visa information to the US Consulate in China. The Consulate will review the visa application, and then issue a document that states that everything is in order for the adoption to be completed. This document is called the Article 5.
It takes 10 business days for the Article 5 to be completed. Therefore, since our information will be dropped off tomorrow, it will be picked up on Wednesday, August 15, and then forwarded to Beijing. After that, we wait for travel approval!
One step closer...
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Thursday, July 26, 2012
I800 Provisional Approval
One more step down! We received our I800 (visa for L) provisional approval today--phew!
The next step in the process is to have the National Visa Center cable this information to China to begin paperwork processing there. While the term "cable" has an official ring to it, this is basically an emailed PDF with a hard copy to follow.
In the next 1-2 weeks, we should receive a copy of the letter that is sent to China, and have chosen to receive it via email rather than waiting for the hard copy. We still get a hard copy, but an email will shave a few days off, and the faster this can happen, the better.
In the meantime, we are prepping away, trying to view our home through the eyes of a 2-year-old, which means things like moving medications to high, locked areas, reorganizing our pantry to get rid of rickety, old shelves, etc. We're trying to spend lots of time with the furballs, whose lives are about to go to hell in a handbasket. And, of course, enjoying summer, as the sun is slowly deciding that maybe we are worthy here inNarnia the Pacific Northwest.
The next step in the process is to have the National Visa Center cable this information to China to begin paperwork processing there. While the term "cable" has an official ring to it, this is basically an emailed PDF with a hard copy to follow.
In the next 1-2 weeks, we should receive a copy of the letter that is sent to China, and have chosen to receive it via email rather than waiting for the hard copy. We still get a hard copy, but an email will shave a few days off, and the faster this can happen, the better.
In the meantime, we are prepping away, trying to view our home through the eyes of a 2-year-old, which means things like moving medications to high, locked areas, reorganizing our pantry to get rid of rickety, old shelves, etc. We're trying to spend lots of time with the furballs, whose lives are about to go to hell in a handbasket. And, of course, enjoying summer, as the sun is slowly deciding that maybe we are worthy here in
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
What Now?
We are ready to hop aboard a plane for Xi’an right now, but there is still a lot that needs to happen. The next step in the process is our I800 approval. Back in March we were fingerprinted for a general I800A, which is essentially the immigrant visa that brings L home (he travels home on a Chinese passport, and becomes a US citizen when he crosses through Customs in the US). The original approval was for a child between ages 1 and 5. Now that we have approval from China for a specific child, we need the US to approve a visa for him in particular. This should take 3-5 weeks at current timeframes. Our paperwork was submitted on 7/10.
Most likely we will travel in October. L’s birthday is 10/15, and I admit I’m pretty fixated on being there by that date, if not sooner. We’re not sure that will happen, but have hope.
So, we’re good. Waiting is hard, but at this point everyone who got to have an opinion on our ability to parent little L (our agency, the Dept of Homeland Security, and the Chinese government) have made their decisions. The rest is just processing, and so far seems to be a bit easier to take than will they or won’t they question.
In the meantime, we are re-motivated to finish our library of parenting and adoption-related books, getting our condo ready for a toddler, and figuring out leave/work issues for when the time comes (we both work for teensy companies, so don’t qualify for any leave time per FMLA. Tricky stuff.)
Thank you all for your kind words and emails. It means so much to know we have folks in our corner.
J
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
El Oh Aye
LOA.
Letter of Approval.
We got The Call yesterday, and are officially approved to adopt our little boy. I left work for the day--it's hard to type when your hands won't stop shaking and your brain has turned off.
Then we were emailed this form:
which makes it all very, very official. His name and birthdate are on it, as are ours.
It's hard to wrap our minds around, really. After the road we have been on, to actually think about planning for him...it's wonderful and amazing. I really don't know what to say beyond that.
Fortune has smiled upon us.
We are so, so very lucky.
Letter of Approval.
We got The Call yesterday, and are officially approved to adopt our little boy. I left work for the day--it's hard to type when your hands won't stop shaking and your brain has turned off.
Then we were emailed this form:
| (Identifying info removed as this is on the internet 'nstuff) |
which makes it all very, very official. His name and birthdate are on it, as are ours.
It's hard to wrap our minds around, really. After the road we have been on, to actually think about planning for him...it's wonderful and amazing. I really don't know what to say beyond that.
Fortune has smiled upon us.
We are so, so very lucky.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Out of translation
We are officially out of translation. We are now waiting on our letter of acceptance, or LOA, which can take 1-8 weeks. The LOA document will mean that in the eyes of the Chinese government, we will be Little Guys parents.
So, you know, kind of a big deal.
We're waiting on tenterhooks over here. It's scary. And wonderful. And scary.
But wonderful.
So, you know, kind of a big deal.
We're waiting on tenterhooks over here. It's scary. And wonderful. And scary.
But wonderful.
Thursday, June 7, 2012
A Quick Update (of pretty much nuthin')
I’ve had a few emails, etc, so just an update to say we are still waiting, waiting, waiting. There are two steps to this particular part of the Great Wait for Approval: translation and LOA. We are currently in translation, which means our dossier is, well, being translated into Mandarin. Once that is done, our agency will notify us, and I will begin biting my fingernails again, because that is the actual LOA (Letter of Approval) wait. The time between translation and LOA is usually 3-4 weeks—could be more, could be less.
So, for now, we are doing our best to keep as busy as possible, and honestly are doing all right with this part of the wait. So far. Don’t get me wrong, I’d hop on a plane tomorrow if I could, but ‘tis not an option. Another month and I’ll be climbing the walls, but for now, just hanging in there.
So…how’s that for a boring update?
J
Monday, May 21, 2012
The Finding Ad
We received something truly amazing in the mail yesterday.
Virtually all adoptions in China are abandonments, so “finding ads”, or ads placed in newspapers that identify found children, are required before a child is placed for adoption. This should give families a chance to find their children if indeed a child was lost or taken. Of course, as with many aspects of adoption, the horror stories of finding ads being placed far away from a child’s hometown or after a child has been adopted out of the country are forefront in everyone’s minds.
We hired a researcher to look for Little Guys finding ad, and he found it fairly quickly. We received it in the mail yesterday, with a translation. A few things stood out:
*We received the actual newspaper containing his finding ad. The actual newspaper, not a copy. And it’s a national paper, from his hometown, and printed about 3 months after he was found. Holy cow.
*The story in the ad absolutely matches up to what we were told.
And the big one. Huge. Enormous.
It contains a picture of him as an infant.
Be still, my heart.
We now have an infant picture. We never thought we would have something this important.
We are so, so happy and so, so fortunate.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
LID
We are officially logged in! Our LID (Logged In Date) is today!
Next steps? In the next 2-4 months we will (hopefully!) get our LOA, or Letter of Approval. I can't think much beyond that.
Until then? We have lots of money to save, lots of things to get ready, and lots of books to read on toddlers, adoption, special needs and all things pertinent to Little Guy. We will continue to spend inordinate amounts of time talking about him, wondering about him, and planning for him.
And, of course, hoping for fast and careful bureaucratic processes.
Next steps? In the next 2-4 months we will (hopefully!) get our LOA, or Letter of Approval. I can't think much beyond that.
Until then? We have lots of money to save, lots of things to get ready, and lots of books to read on toddlers, adoption, special needs and all things pertinent to Little Guy. We will continue to spend inordinate amounts of time talking about him, wondering about him, and planning for him.
And, of course, hoping for fast and careful bureaucratic processes.
Friday, April 13, 2012
DTC
We are officially Dossier-To-China today. This means that our paperwork was approved by the powers-that-be in the US and was re-approved by various Chinese Embassies here in the States. We are taking this as a good sign.
Next step: our paperwork is “logged in”, meaning that it is officially there and the officials in charge of adoptions are starting to work on it—getting it translated, etc. After that, we hope for an approval notice. This will likely take 3-6 months.
And so we wait.
And, just a little bit, to hope.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Fingerprint Approval (Updated-yay hand surgeon!)
Our immigration approval came today--phew!! One more thing to check off our list.
Next?
Tomorrow our dossier documents from Washington, including a "true and exact" copy of our immigration approval letter, go to the Secretary of State in Olympia to be "verified". This means that they have the seal of the Secretary of State attached to prove their authenticity.
When those documents are received back, we send the WA and CA documents to the Emba.ssy of the PRC in San Francisco to be authenticated there.
After this, the entire kit and kaboodle will go to China, where it will be (eventually) logged in, and a final decision about our case will be made (this also takes quite a while).
I was going to drive our docs down to Olympia myself, but my darling hubs had a bit of an incident at work wherein part of his ring finger got chopped off (well, it's dangling). So he's off for a fairly disgusting surgery tomorrow wherein they will sew two fingers together for a while to try to save the ring finger--something about blood flow to the cut-off portion. (Note: When we got married, my father-in-law said to me, "Welcome to the family. It'll never be dull." He was absolutely, totally and completely correct!) We have a lot of faith in the hand surgeon, so hopefully all will go well.
Happy Friday!
(Update: Surprisingly, the hand surgeon was able to reassemble Cory's finger without using skin from another finger, and he is on the mend. YAY!)
Next?
Tomorrow our dossier documents from Washington, including a "true and exact" copy of our immigration approval letter, go to the Secretary of State in Olympia to be "verified". This means that they have the seal of the Secretary of State attached to prove their authenticity.
When those documents are received back, we send the WA and CA documents to the Emba.ssy of the PRC in San Francisco to be authenticated there.
After this, the entire kit and kaboodle will go to China, where it will be (eventually) logged in, and a final decision about our case will be made (this also takes quite a while).
I was going to drive our docs down to Olympia myself, but my darling hubs had a bit of an incident at work wherein part of his ring finger got chopped off (well, it's dangling). So he's off for a fairly disgusting surgery tomorrow wherein they will sew two fingers together for a while to try to save the ring finger--something about blood flow to the cut-off portion. (Note: When we got married, my father-in-law said to me, "Welcome to the family. It'll never be dull." He was absolutely, totally and completely correct!) We have a lot of faith in the hand surgeon, so hopefully all will go well.
Happy Friday!
(Update: Surprisingly, the hand surgeon was able to reassemble Cory's finger without using skin from another finger, and he is on the mend. YAY!)
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