After 50 days Precaria Still Stuck? – Supervisor Not Signing??

January was vacations plus the President sent a project of new immigration & citizenship law to the Congress so, it is natural that all is frozen.
Thanks, it's interesting how things here are so slow, as if nothing can be done.
 
Thanks, it's interesting how things here are so slow, as if nothing can be done.
Its much better now than it was before the pandamia, when everything was on paper and had to be done in person. Many more things are online and much easier now. But Argentina is different than many places.
 
My attorney has gotten my precaria issued at immigration when I was there...the same day! Three times in a row. I had my approval the first time in under 2 weeks...the 2nd time in 4.5 months and this time in 2.5 months... that's approval time!
He is expensive but I don't care...he gets it done.
 
My attorney has gotten my precaria issued at immigration when I was there...the same day! Three times in a row. I had my approval the first time in under 2 weeks...the 2nd time in 4.5 months and this time in 2.5 months... that's approval time!
He is expensive but I don't care...he gets it done.
Would you mind to DM me the attorney? Much appreciated.
 
My attorney has gotten my precaria issued at immigration when I was there...the same day! Three times in a row. I had my approval the first time in under 2 weeks...the 2nd time in 4.5 months and this time in 2.5 months... that's approval time!
He is expensive but I don't care...he gets it done.
would you share with me the contact of your attorney? I want to travel soon and want to have a good one to help me
 
I had the same experience as the OP while waiting for my permanent residence/DNI. Every few months I'd go in for a renewal where they said all was fine and then one day they gave me a paper stating I had permanent legal residence. Great. But no one accepted it. They needed to see a DNI, or at least have a number. Migraciones told me to wait and my DNI would be mailed to me. Every few months when I was in the city I'd go and check on the status and always got the same friendly 'don't worry, s'all good' response followed by 'it's on it's way in the mail.' Several months later after checking again (thinking that it may have been lost in the mail) I was allowed to go upstairs where someone who was higher up told me the same. One day my DNI showed up in the mail. The whole process took around a year and a half. Others in the family went through the same thing. Some got their DNI in a couple/few months, others took the same amount of time as mine. Since then I've come to use "Argentina" (with a 'whadya gonna do?' shrug of the shoulders) as a one-size-fits-all excuse/reason for why things are the way they are here.
 
I had the same experience as the OP while waiting for my permanent residence/DNI. Every few months I'd go in for a renewal where they said all was fine and then one day they gave me a paper stating I had permanent legal residence. Great. But no one accepted it. They needed to see a DNI, or at least have a number. Migraciones told me to wait and my DNI would be mailed to me. Every few months when I was in the city I'd go and check on the status and always got the same friendly 'don't worry, s'all good' response followed by 'it's on it's way in the mail.' Several months later after checking again (thinking that it may have been lost in the mail) I was allowed to go upstairs where someone who was higher up told me the same. One day my DNI showed up in the mail. The whole process took around a year and a half. Others in the family went through the same thing. Some got their DNI in a couple/few months, others took the same amount of time as mine. Since then I've come to use "Argentina" (with a 'whadya gonna do?' shrug of the shoulders) as a one-size-fits-all excuse/reason for why things are the way they are here.
Thanks for sharing. The update: I went to Migracion again with my Argentine gf, and she did the talk and it was very persuasive that I had the chance to actually talk to the supervisor on site. As the supervisor look into my file and details, she told me nothing was wrong, she would sign and let me have the precaria in 5 minutes, but the system would not allow her to do so, which is bizzard and she had never encountered so. The solution is she sent a formal complaint to a higher body, in hope to fix this problem soon...but obviously we don't even know what it is. Well, she asked me to come back again on April 18th...hoping to giving me the new precaria.
 
I had the same experience as the OP while waiting for my permanent residence/DNI. Every few months I'd go in for a renewal where they said all was fine and then one day they gave me a paper stating I had permanent legal residence. Great. But no one accepted it. They needed to see a DNI, or at least have a number. Migraciones told me to wait and my DNI would be mailed to me. Every few months when I was in the city I'd go and check on the status and always got the same friendly 'don't worry, s'all good' response followed by 'it's on it's way in the mail.' Several months later after checking again (thinking that it may have been lost in the mail) I was allowed to go upstairs where someone who was higher up told me the same. One day my DNI showed up in the mail. The whole process took around a year and a half. Others in the family went through the same thing. Some got their DNI in a couple/few months, others took the same amount of time as mine. Since then I've come to use "Argentina" (with a 'whadya gonna do?' shrug of the shoulders) as a one-size-fits-all excuse/reason for why things are the way they are here.
Yeah, this is my exact situation. My residency went pretty quickly (Started in Jan, permanent granted in March). I was even able to open an account in both pesos and dollars at Banco Cuidad with the precaria, but now they may close my accounts as I don't have what they consider proof of legal residency. The letter, unlike the precaria, has no photo and therefore is not ID. RENAPER still has the last day of movement on my DNI showing as the date I was granted residency. They tell me 30 days. It's past that. Perhaps they meant dias habiles. I made an appointment at the RENAPER center and they told me to go back to migraciones if I had any questions as they cannot help until I have my 1st ejemplar. Oh well. Que sera...
 
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