mention any limit on time. The following is what I found from USCIS:
Following-to-Join Benefits
Please note: This section is only applicable to lawful permanent residents who did not gain their LPR status as the immediate relative of a U.S. citizen.
If you had children before you became a lawful permanent resident, and your children did not physically accompany you to the United States, and you would now like your children to join you in the United States, your children may be eligible for following-to-join benefits. This means that you do not have to a separate Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, for your children, and your children will not have to wait any extra time for a visa number to become available. In this case, you can simply notify a U.S. consulate that you are a lawful permanent resident so that your children can apply for immigrant visas. If, however, you immigrated to the U.S. as an immediate relative of a U.S. citizen who did not or could not petition for your children, you will need to file a separate I-130, Petition for Alien Relative. In this case, see How Do I Bring My Child, Son or Daughter to Live in the U.S.?
Your children may be eligible for following-to-join benefits if:
* You immigrated on the basis of a fiancé(e) petition
* You immigrated on the basis of a diversity immigrant application
* You immigrated on the basis of an employment-based petition
* You immigrated on the basis of a petition filed by your brother or sister
* You immigrated on the basis of an immigrant petition filed by your U.S. citizen parent(s) when you were married or when you were unmarried and over 21 years of age
* You immigrated on the basis of your relationship with your lawful permanent resident parents when you were unmarried
Also, for your child to be eligible for following-to-join benefits, he or she must:
* Be unmarried and
* Be under 21 years of age and
* Have been a child from a marriage of yours (the marriage must have existed at the time of your admission to the U.S.) or
* Have been a stepchild from a marriage of yours (the marriage must have existed at the time of your admission to the U.S.) or
* Have been legally adopted prior to your admission to the U.S., and otherwise qualify as an adopted child under the immigration law.
The link is http://www.uscis.gov/graphics/howdoi/childproc.htm
and your GC does not have to be EB based.
Should be ok, I guess since they do not
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• Thanks for everybody's help -minirock- ♀ (0 bytes) () 10/17/2006 postreply 19:43:54