ForumTitleContentMemberSexCountryDate/Time
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresCanceling K1 and going CR1 Question..
Thread closed due to multiple TOS violations. The OP has received advice to her question and this thread has degenerated into a series of personal attacks.

Posts containing multiple personal attacks and insults have been removed.

Edited by Kathryn41, 16 December 2009 - 07:57 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-16 16:12:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresCanceling K1 and going CR1 Question..
Disparaging comments that identify a specific culture or race, even if it is a statement of personal opinion, is considered a racist comment. Others see it as so even if you do not. Please do not repeat such comments, especially as they add nothing useful to this discussion.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-14 23:52:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresCanceling K1 and going CR1 Question..
Also,

duplicate thread from K-1 forum moved to CR-1 forum and merged with existing thread so all responses are in the same place. It isn't necessary to open more than one thread on the same topic.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-14 17:06:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresCanceling K1 and going CR1 Question..
Racist and derogatory comments are not acceptable - please keep such comments to yourself and do not post them here. VJ is a multi-cultural site and such comments insult our members.

Please return to the OP's topic and do not continue to derail this thread.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-14 16:58:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresRe. the closed thread
Sorry for the typo - obviously that should have been 'deleted'.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-17 07:32:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresRe. the closed thread
It was delighted about 40 minutes after the thread was closed.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-17 00:16:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresRe. the closed thread
If you will notice, that post was also removed.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-16 21:27:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Proceduresmedical
Moved from Citizenship forum to CR-1 forum - you'll get more responses here smile.gif .
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-10-02 20:53:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Proceduresi need help pleas
It is inappropriate to call someone who is offering you assistance and valid advice and provides you with links to the relevant information (the official government site) a liar. If you are not interested in learning what options you have and if you already Know" better, then why are you asking for help?
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-24 10:12:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresPlease advise return to Canada before filing I-130
Your son-in-law is allowed to remain in the US and apply to adjust status from non-immigrant visitor to permanent resident. While entering the US with the intention of marrying and staying in the US is illegal (visa fraud), entering the US then changing your mind due to changing circumstances so that you marry and now wish to remain in the US with your spouse is legal. What is important is the 'intent' upon entry.

Your daughter will file the I-130 petition to petition for a family member. There are a number of attachments that are required to be submitted with this form so pay careful attention to the instructions and to the form itself to make sure you get everything. This advice applies to all USCIS forms, btw - read over the forms and read over the instructions very carefully. The fee for the I-130 is $355.

Concurrently, your son-in-law will file an application to Adjust Status - also known as an AOS - with form I-485. Along with this form he is going to need to provide additional information. He needs to have an Immigration medical done by an authorized panel physician (a list of authorized physicians in each area is available at the USCIS website: http://www.uscis.gov ). He needs to have proof of his childhood vaccinations and may have to get additional vaccinations. Your daughter will have to provide an Affidavit of Support - I-864. Since she is so young it is unlikely she qualifies financially to sponsor her husband (needs to have an annual income at least 125% of the poverty level and provide proof) so she will need a co-sponsor. The co-sponsor has to provide the same documents as the sponsor and must make at least 125% of the poverty level for the size of their household (eg 4 people at home, then 4 + 1 = 5 people). Previous years tax returns, bank statements, etc. need to accompany this form. The fee for the I-485 is $1010. It can take anywhere from a few months to a few years for this form to be approved with most of them taking a little less than a year. He will get a green card good for 2 years when he is approved. If the application is denied, however, filing for AOS from a visitor status does not allow for an appeal. They would then have to restart the immigration process all over again with a CR-1 and him back in Canada. Don't worry too much about this - if they have sufficient documents and the marriage is valid they are likely to be approved without difficulties. You just need to be aware of this restriction.

Along with the I-485, your son in law should file for an I-131 (Travel document - this will give him permission to leave and return to the US while waiting for a decision on his green card. If he leaves the US without it then the whole immigration process has to start all over again from the beginning for a CR-1 application). This is also known as Advance Parole - AP. There is no additional fee - it is included in the AOS fee.

As well, your son in law should file an I-765 application for Employment Authorization. This fee is also included in with the AOS fee. The EAD will allow him to accept employment in the US and will also provide evidence of his legal status in the US. He will be able to use it to get a SSN and a Driver's License (although the Driver License requirements vary by state). The EAD and AP generally are issued within 3 months.

As part of the AOS process your son in law and daughter will almost definitely be interviewed at your local USCIS office to verify that this is a valid marriage and not one for the purposes of getting a green card. Your son-in-law will be required to have biometrics - fingerprints and photograph - taken at various stages of the process.

All forms need to be submitted together in the same envelope each with their separate, necessary fees and separate attachments. Treat each application as a separate attachment as they will be broken apart and processed in different locations so need to be complete in themselves. Checks are fine. Upon receipt of each form your daughter/son in law will receive an acknowledgment called an NOA (Notice of Action). Your son-in law will later receive Biometrics appointment letters for the applications requiring fingerprints and photographs. USCIS will set an appointment time and date for him at the local USCIS office. They might also receive an RFE - Request for Evidence - if there is anything missing. They will be given a deadline about when the missing information/document needs to be returned. All processing will stop until the missing information is returned.

This is the basic overview of what you can expect for the immigration process. One additional point to keep in mind. To combat marriage fraud, all marriages that are less than 2 years old when the green card is approved only receive a green card good for 2 years. Shortly before that 2 year card expires, your son in law and daughter need to submit another form I-751 - Application to Remove Conditions on Permanent Residency". This form will require all sorts of evidence showing how the two of them have co-mingled their personal, financial and social lives. If this application is approved, your son-in-law will obtain unconditional permanent residency and get a green card good for 10 years. If the application is not approve or if they miss the filing date then his status in the US expires and he would be told to leave the US.

After 3 years as a permanent resident, your son in law is allowed to apply for US citizenship as long as he and your daughter are still married and living together.

So, you have a lot of reading ahead of you. Make lists of the various forms required. Then under each form make lists of what documents and evidence you need. This can act as a check list for you to make sure you have everything requested. Your son in law is not able to leave the US right now so he will have to have family in Canada send him the documents he needs from home and tie up his loose ends (ie. terminate apartment lease, pay final utility bills, move belongings, etc.).

If your son in law must return to Canada then you need to read up on the CR-1 process. He cannot live in the US during that time nor can your daughter live with him in Canada. They should be able to visit back and forth as long as they can prove to the border guards each and every time that they have strong ties that will ensure their return to their home countries. When the CR-1 process is completed - about a year - your son-in-law will be allowed to move to the US and will get his green card when he officially crosses the border.

Edited by Kathryn41, 02 January 2010 - 01:15 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-02 13:05:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresInterview questions... Please help! What docs?
Judgmental and off topic types of comments are not acceptable in the Immigration forums. Insults and Personal attacks are a violation of the Terms of Service for this site. If you cannot say something useful, then do not say anything at all.

Edited by Kathryn41, 08 January 2010 - 05:39 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-08 17:39:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresCr-1 Canadian rmcp check.
Here is the information from the RCMP about how to get fingerprints done in the US: http://www.rcmp-grc....cj/c216-eng.htm

The process is currently taking 120 days http://www.rcmp-grc....ng-empr-eng.htm

If you return to Canada you can just go into any police station or a local RCMP office and apply for a Canada Wide Police Record check that does not require fingerprints unless you have a criminal record. If you have a criminal record you require a fingerprint search. If you don't, then a name check is sufficient as long as it is Canada wide. Some offices can issue them while you wait and others take a few days. It is much faster and much easier than going through the fingerprint process. There is a minimal charge for this, so you may wish to wait until you return to Canada to obtain your security clearance.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-06 19:30:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresBonafide marriage?
Bank of America will let you be added to someone's account without having a SSN. You are required to give them the number when you get it though. I used my Canadian passport and Driver's License as ID which they accepted until I got my SSN.

Edited by Kathryn41, 03 January 2010 - 07:59 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-03 19:58:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Procedureswhere i can get the packet now so that i can have my visa schedule soon.
moved from Removal of Conditions forum as it appears this is a CR-1 application (or a K-3 - uncertain from the posted info)
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-20 21:17:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Proceduresour visa isnt valid for 6 months
Duplicate threads moved and merged to the proper forum
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-22 22:30:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresCR1 interview documents
Moved from US Citizenship forum to CR-1 forum as more appropriate location to get answers
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-24 16:26:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresI-130 question
Post split away from separate thread in Moving Here and Your New Life in America forum, and triplicate copies of post removed. It is not necessary to post the same post more than once. Also, please start a new thread instead of trying to start a new topic in someone else's thread.

Edited by Kathryn41, 26 January 2010 - 08:13 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-26 20:13:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresNVC MISSING DOCUMENT
4 separate threads all discussing the same issue have been merged together into one post. Please do not start a new post each time you want to post some more information on an existing situation. Go back and add the information into the thread you have already started on this topic.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-26 20:28:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Procedureshelp
Orignal post with link to letter removed as all of the personal file information was displayed. Contents of letter with the personal information removed is returned below:

from poste6:

December 4, 2009


*CSBXXXXXXXXXXX
first name/last name
Address 1
Address 2
Address 3
Adress 4

Reference: NVC Case Number CSBXXXXXXXXXX

Dear Applicant:

We have received from the Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS-formerly known as the INS) the
immigrant visa petition that has been filed on your behalf. Before we can continue processing, you must
provide certain essential information.

1. Complete the Choice of Agent and Address form included with this message.
This form tells us how to contact you during your immigrant visa processing. Your agent can be your
petitioner, another relative, a friend, an attorney, or a charitable organization, such as a church or other
immigrant assistance organization. Mail delivery is often unreliable in many parts of the world, so we
strongly recommend that you choose someone who has an address in the United States.
* If you wish to name an agent to receive your mail, please give the name and address of that
person in the spaces provided on the form included.
* If you do not wish to name an agent and want us to contact you directly, please check the box that
says that you do not appoint an agent or attorney to receive letters on your behalf, and write your
own address on the lines below that box on the form.
* If your intention is to adjust status with Citizen and Immigration Services (CIS), please notify
this office before taking further action.

2. Send your Choice of Agent and Address form to the National Visa Center at this address:
National Visa Center
ATTN: ACL
31 Rochester Avenue, Suite 200
Portsmouth, NH 03801-2915
United States of America
Be sure the envelope has enough postage for delivery to the U.S.
Until we receive this form from you, we cannot process your case.
**
**
When we receive your completed Choice of Agent and Address form, we will send you or your agent
further instructions and forms to be completed and returned to the Department of State.
You or your agent should receive those forms and instructions four to six weeks after you return this
signed form. If neither you nor your agent receives the next forms and instructions within six weeks,
please notify the National Visa Center at the above address so that we can send you another packet.
Until we receive your completed Choice of Agent and Address form, we will not be able to forward
your file to the appropriate U.S. Embassy or Consulate for further processing.

You can obtain general information about the immigrant visa application process by visiting
www.travel.state.gov and clicking on the "Visas for Foreign Citizens" link.
You can also find out if the U.S. Embassy or Consulate in your area has a Website and further visa
processing information by visiting www.usembassy.state.gov.
When contacting the National Visa Center or any U.S. Embassy or Consulate about your case, please
include the following information:

Name of Visa Applicant: First name/Last name
Name of Petitioner Last Name/First Name/ Middle name
Case Number: CSBXXXXXXXXXX

Sincerely,
Director
National Visa Center


Edited by Kathryn41, 01 February 2010 - 05:23 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-02-01 17:21:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresSimple question...
You can write in that she is visiting the US right now, but not living here, and will be returning home to Canada on such and such a date. That way you avoid any ambiguity of whether she is 'here' or not. Technically, she is not 'living' in the US and I believe that the question is to determine if she is already in the US. You can address the issue by giving more than just a yes or no response. The I-130 form is used to address a variety of situations where the beneficiary may already be living in the US as well as those who are not yet living in the US. Good luck.

Edited by Kathryn41, 01 February 2010 - 07:16 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-02-01 19:14:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresSponsering to the US possible?
Post deleted at the poster's request :)
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-02-06 13:41:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresAfter the submission of the required papers to the Consulate, no reply since Dec., 2009.
moved from General Immigration forum to CR-IR1 forum as it relates to an IR-1 visa
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-02-06 12:31:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresLets start at step One :)
I am closing the topic at the OP's request but am not deleting it. The purpose of Visa Journey is to share useful information based upon personal experience and the questions asked here, along with the answers received, may be valuable information for someone else going through the same situation, so I am leaving the information posted.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-02-21 09:51:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Procedures.....
Do I remove all of the Off-Topic posts (11 so far) and leave a warning that this is the Upper Immigration Forums and Off Topic comments are not acceptable here, or do I take that the tone of the thread was set by the OP's first post and close it? Considering there is little of value to other members of VJ in this thread and it is more off-topic in nature than applicable to the immigration process, I am just going to close it.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-02-23 19:25:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Proceduresnervouse about interview ( venting and ranting forum )
moved from AOS forum to the more appropriate CR-1/IR-1 forum

To the OP, good luck to your husband at his interview. I hope all goes well and you are reunited soon in the US.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2009-12-01 23:39:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresWhere to begin - Need advice please
Moved from K-1 forum as OP indicates they will not be getting married in the US and is seeking to immigrate to the US after marriage
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-03-02 23:25:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresQuick Marriage in the United States
Moved from K-1 forum to CR-1 forum as applicant is not pursuing a fiancee visa
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-03-08 21:25:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresQuick Marriage in the United States
Just to clarify - you are allowed to 'visit' the US. You are not allowed to 'live' in the US and if the border authorities suspect this is the case you will be denied entry. While Canadians are technically allowed to spend up to 6 months in the US as a visitor, it is up to the border authorities when you cross the border to determine how long you are actually allowed to stay. If they say 1 month, then their decision overrides every other option. If they do not specify a time period, then you have up to 6 months - as long as it is a visit and not living in the US.

Be prepared to show evidence of your 'ties' to Canada during the processing of the CR-1. You need to reassure the border authorities when you cross that you have commitments in Canada that necessitate your return and will not be trying to evade the immigration process by remaining in the US. Letter/contract from your employer, lease/mortgage documents, ongoing utility payments all provide good evidence of ties to Canada. When you have filed for the CR-1 carrying a copy of the full petition and application is also good as it shows your intent of following the correct immigration process.

One other quick comment. You are not allowed to cross the border as a visitor with the intent of getting married AND remaining in the US to adjust status (get a green card). That is considered visa fraud and carries with it severe penalties if discovered. You are allowed to enter the US as a visitor with the intention of getting married, getting married, and then pursuing the immigration process from outside of the US (CR-1). It is the intent upon entry that is relevant on whether you can remain in the US to adjust status after marriage or not. Since you are already talking about entering the US to get married, you don't have that option available now - legally.

Be sure to drop by the Canada Regional Forum as well - there are many Canadian/American couples there who have gone or are going through the same process.

Edited by Kathryn41, 08 March 2010 - 09:29 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-03-08 21:23:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresLet me tell again
Moved from K-3 Forum to CR-1 forum as it relates to a CR-1 visa
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-01-25 20:38:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresAdopted
Moved from K-3 Forum to CR-1 forum as OP is pursuing a CR-1 visa
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-03-10 19:22:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresITIN for tax
duplicate thread moved from CR1 Case Filing and Progress Reports to CRI visa Process and procedures Forum and merged with existing thread, then duplicate post removed. There is no need to duplicate the same thread in two different forums.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-02-16 21:56:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresNeed a Divorce now.
Post containing inappropriate comments has been removed. It is not necessary to be insulting.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-03-15 16:20:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresI NEED HELP
Triplicate thread with same topic moved and merged with this one. A 4th thread requesting the same information in the Canada forum has been removed.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-03-20 21:28:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresI NEED HELP
Duplicate thread in Vietnam Regional Forum removed as information more likely to be found in this forum
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-03-20 15:51:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresI am Canadian my Spouse is from the USA
Hi,

The place to start is by actually researching the immigration process :). A good place to start that is at the USCIS website: http://www.uscis.gov and read on immigrating to the US as the Spouse of a US citizen. You will also find the guides here on VJ (at the top of every page) very useful. For your situation you will find the CR-1 guide of use: http://www.visajourn...tent/i130guide1 . The CR-1 visa is a spousal visa where your husband files an 1-130 petition to the US government requesting permission for his wife to apply for a spousal visa. When that permission is received, then the paperwork shifts to the National Visa Center http://www.visajourn...wchart_v1-2.pdf which will send information to your husband about what is needed next and then it shifts to the US Consulate in Canada based in Montreal (only Montreal handles immigration paperwork). There will be more paperwork submitted at that time and an interview scheduled in Montreal. If the interview is successful you will receive the visa in your passport which you have to use within 6 months. When you then enter the US, it 'activates' the visa and you become a permanent resident in the US and are issued your green card.

If your husband has legal status in Canada (eg work or student visa - being a visitor doesn't count) then you may be eligible for Direct Consular Filing which means that the I-130 is submitted in Canada not the US: http://www.visajourney.com/content/dcf .

The K-3 option is being phased out and is virtually obsolete. It was started at a time when the CR-1 visa was taking much longer than it is now and allowed the spouse to come to the US part way through the process and complete the process in the US, allowing the couple to be together instead of separated. Now, the first part of the K-3 process is taking about the same amount of time as the full CR-1 process, and then you still have to complete the immigration process when you arrive in the US. The K-3 turns out to be much longer and much more expensive than the CR-1 .

So, read over the above information, read through these forums, read the USCIS website, read through all of the forms and their instructions - and then start at the beginning and work your way through the process step by step. You don't need a lawyer to do this if you are good at following instructions. One thing you may need, however, since you mention your husband has no US based income for the last year, is a co-sponsor who will join with your husband and guarantee you will not become a financial liability on the US tax base. (This is called the Affidavit of Support).



Finally, I am moving this post out of the K-3 forum to the CR-1 forum as this would be the preferred method for immigrating to the US.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-04-14 10:03:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresPossible visa fraud... what now?
Mustafa,

Simply put, you are wrong. It is perfectly legal to enter the US with a B-2 visa (tourist/visitor), get married - whether you have declared that intention or not at the time of entry - and return home at the end of the visa. You have NOT violated the terms of the visa. You have not committed visa fraud. You will not have difficulties during the later immigration interview.

The correct information has been stated over and over and over and your refusal to see it does not change the truth. It is perfectly legal to enter the US with a B-2 visa, get married and leave the country in order to start the proper immigration process with a spousal sponsorship and spousal visa to immigrate to the US.




__________________________________________________________________

As this thread has become a stand-off between the correct information and someone who refuses to recognize they are wrong, I am now closing this thread to further discussion so as not to confuse other VJ members who are in this same situation.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-04-15 10:00:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresFILLED OUT WRONG DS-230!!!!
Duplicate threads moved from US Consulate forum and Removal of Conditions forum to CR-1 forum and duplicate post removed as issue relates to the CR-1 process before it reaches the Consulate

Edited by Kathryn41, 19 April 2010 - 10:05 PM.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-04-19 22:05:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresWhat if visa is refused at the embassy

Hi guys,

I was wondering if anybody has any ideas about what happens if you go to the interview at the embassy and the 2YHRR is not fully completed. I was told visa get refused. But what happens next? Do we have to start all over again with the USCIS and NVC and such or do we just wait for the 2 years to be over and then just go to the embassy with the same paperwork? (I have around half a year left, so I guess, we could reschedule to a later date just to make sure that it's a sure thing, but I just can't wait anymore :( )


If you are talking about the 2 year foreign residency requirement that is in place with some J-1 applications, then yes, the visa will be denied because the 2 year FRR has not yet been met so the beneficiary is ineligible to receive a visa. Since the application would have been processed from start to finish and a decision made, you would not be able to 'wait' until this condition is met and then have them consider the 'new evidence'. You would have to re-start the application process with a new application once the 2year RR has been met. If you are able to delay this current processing until after the 2 year time period has been satisfied, I believe the visa could be granted at that time. I don't think the whole application process must take place after the 2 year period has been met as long as the beneficiary has satisfied the 2 year Foreign Residency Requirement by the time the visa processing has reached the stage for approval - although I may be mistaken on that.

There is a waiver possible under certain conditions, although if you are within 6 months of completing the FRR it may be a moot point for you - and if you are in a medical field, you may not even be eligible. Here is the information, however, so you can review it: http://travel.state..../info_1296.html . Check out the various links included on that page as they will provide additional useful information.

Unfortunately, as hard as it is to wait, it looks like your best bet would be to try and delay the current application until the 2 year Foreign Residency Requirement has been met. If you are not able to do that, then yes, you will have to start the application over again from the beginning unless you can get a waiver, although it might be faster at this stage of the game to restart (although not cheaper).

Good luck.

Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-05-16 10:15:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & ProceduresWhat are biometrics?
Post containing inappropriate comment has been removed. Comments that might be allowed in Off Topic are not allowed in the Immigration related forums and will be removed.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-06-14 21:14:00
IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Proceduresaccepting child care payments while CR1
Topic moved from Removal of Conditions Forum to CR-1 forum as it relates to a CR-1 concern.
Kathryn41FemaleCanada2010-05-22 10:09:00