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wonderbly

VIP Member
Aug 26, 2020
3,875
3,087
Question 1:
In the personal history section, there are two questions:
1. Has ___________ been refused refugee status, or an immigrant or permanent resident visa (including a Certificat de sélection du Québec (CSQ) or application to the Provincial nominee Program) or visitor or temporary resident visa, to Canada or any other country?
2. Has ___________ ever been refused a visa or permit, denied entry or ordered to leave Canada or any other country?


In 2020, I was stranded in the US with no flights back to my home country, so I applied for a transition to a B2 visitor visa to maintain legal status in the country. I then managed to catch a flight back before my original visa expired, so the transition visa was denied by default.

Question is, does this fall under question 1 or 2? To me it seems it can fall under either (i have bolded the relevant parts).


Question 2:
For personal history is it fine to have overlapping months? Like I leave job on september 15, and join a new one september 16, so the section would have one job ending as 09-2019 and the next starting 09-2019.

Question 3:
Have you listed all of ____________'s periods of military service or government positions (if any), and all of the organizations that _________ belongs to (if any)?

Should I answer this 'yes' or 'not applicable' if I don't have military/government positions, and haven't listed any organizations?
Question 1: If I were you, I would answer 'Yes' and then give the same explanation you just did. Better to err on the side of caution (also, if you answer yes here, make sure you also complete and submit a Schedule A upfront, cos they will definitely send you an ADR for it before your application is finalised).

Question 2: Yes,overlap is fine and expected.

Question 3: Don't answer Yes here. Just leave it blank.
 
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Deleted member 1006777

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Question 1: If I were you, I would answer 'Yes' and then give the same explanation you just did. Better to err on the side of caution (also, if you answer yes here, make sure you also complete and submit a Schedule A upfront, cos they will definitely send you an ADR for it before your application is finalised).

Question 2: Yes,overlap is fine and expected.

Question 3: Don't answer Yes here. Just leave it blank.
Appreciate the response. Of course I will answer yes, and I have the explanation written out too. The question is though, which one of those two questions do I answer yes for?

I had no idea about the Schedule A. Looked it up after you mentioned it, and the language there is a lot clearer, so I think I need to answer yes for the first one.

Also, the Schedule A looks scary. It's like I'm asking to be rejected lol.

Edit: Wtf Schedule A is literally a repeat of everything they have you fill in the application anyway. What's the damn point of having us do it twice.
 

wonderbly

VIP Member
Aug 26, 2020
3,875
3,087
Appreciate the response. Of course I will answer yes, and I have the explanation written out too. The question is though, which one of those two questions do I answer yes for?

I had no idea about the Schedule A. Looked it up after you mentioned it, and the language there is a lot clearer, so I think I need to answer yes for the first one.

Also, the Schedule A looks scary. It's like I'm asking to be rejected lol.

Edit: Wtf Schedule A is literally a repeat of everything they have you fill in the application anyway. What's the damn point of having us do it twice.
For the eAPR, I think I have read that people answer Yes to both questions and just provide the same explanation on both. But the question is clearer in Schedule A, so you just need to answer Yes for the first one there.

Yeah, Schedule A is exactly same questions on the form you are filling, so don't be scared of it :D . I am not sure why they request it again, but they always do if you answer yes to any of the statutory questions.
 
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hamhk202

Star Member
Apr 29, 2018
117
57
Appreciate the response. Of course I will answer yes, and I have the explanation written out too. The question is though, which one of those two questions do I answer yes for?

I had no idea about the Schedule A. Looked it up after you mentioned it, and the language there is a lot clearer, so I think I need to answer yes for the first one.

Also, the Schedule A looks scary. It's like I'm asking to be rejected lol.

Edit: Wtf Schedule A is literally a repeat of everything they have you fill in the application anyway. What's the damn point of having us do it twice.
Nothing! I just answered yes to both and copied and pasted the same explanations!
 

kaashi14

Star Member
Jun 17, 2022
62
18
One possibly useful piece of info. Australian immigration scores are going down and they are releasing more visa. Those who are frustrated with speed of Canadian immigration and want to give that country a shot, might want to take a look there too.


@RSub you might be interested.
Is it the same points based system like Canadian PR? How to check points and eligibility for it?
 

GandiBaat

VIP Member
Dec 23, 2014
3,704
2,990
NOC Code......
2173
App. Filed.......
26th September 2021
Doc's Request.
Old Medical
Nomination.....
None
AOR Received.
26th September 2021
IELTS Request
Sent with application
File Transfer...
11-01-2022
Med's Request
Not Applicable, Old Meds
Med's Done....
Old Medical
Interview........
Not Applicable
Passport Req..
22-02-2022
VISA ISSUED...
22-02-2022
LANDED..........
24-02-2022
Is it the same points based system like Canadian PR? How to check points and eligibility for it?
https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/visas/working-in-australia/skillselect
https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/visas/working-in-australia/skillselect/invitation-rounds

https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/help-support/tools/points-calculator

(Try looking for 189 independent visa) which is PR of Australia.
There is a more combursome 190 visa, which is equivalent of PNP in Australia.

Another difference is the years of overseas experience. Its determined via a WES-like agency according to your profession. They also vet your degrees etc.

Lastly, all draws in Australia PR are NOC-specific draws with cutoff on a per-NOC basis. NOC equivalent in australia is called ANZSCO code. very similar.
 
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SatNight

Hero Member
Dec 2, 2017
797
387
I hope not, I see no reason why that would be a major problem to halt the draws.

Curious to see the new immigration plan in November though and the backlog statistics around 20-21 October.
Wasn't one draw skipped in 2017 when they were changing NOC codes (?) However, at that time, there were also changes to Express Entry (giving more points for French, siblings, etc.) so it required more tweaking, I assume.

I hope they won't skip any draws before C-19. It is best to give people a fair chance before these changes, and 500+ point candidates are not the only ones who deserve not to be caught in the mess caused by COVID pause (I mean, more than they are affected already). At least people in the 490s and 480s should be invited before C-19, imo. Not that those in 470s or lower are not deserving, but there are just much more people. However, I doubt IRCC thinks like this or cares about it (though I did Sean say something along the lines of "we will continue to invite the highest scoring candidates" even after C-19 so no idea).

I do expect a pause around the implementation of C-19, though.
 

Economist9

Star Member
Dec 3, 2021
89
13
They started the draws in July with 8,700 people having a CRS 501+ and it took more than 16,000 ITAs to invite all of them.

I would suggest everyone waiting to be cautiosly optimistic for the future draws. I don't know where this 4,250 comes from but it doesnt make any sense in their immigration plan up to now. 5,000 ITA draws seem a possibility but where is the quota available to accommodate them ?

Something is off here, but I can't point the finger where exactly. Perhaphs it has to do also with the 30,000 quota allocated for 2023 to international students and temporary workers which they didn't create a stream as of yet, likely never will, so that might be an answer.

Congrats to the ones who got an ITA.
@ bold:

Hello! Could you please provide any link or reference to where this information about 30,000 spots for students and temporary workers was mentioned? Thank you.
 

raghavgrover

Star Member
Jul 26, 2019
186
57
Guys a question-
Once I submit my PR application and receive AOR, is it mandatory to apply for BOWP or can I just go with the regular work permit extension from my current employer? My permit is valid till Feb 2023 and my employer is ready to file for extension and I am leaning towards filing for work permit extension vs filing for BOWP. Any issues with this or one has to only file for BOWP if AOR is received?
 

scylla

VIP Member
Jun 8, 2010
95,834
22,109
Toronto
Category........
Visa Office......
Buffalo
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
28-05-2010
AOR Received.
19-08-2010
File Transfer...
28-06-2010
Passport Req..
01-10-2010
VISA ISSUED...
05-10-2010
LANDED..........
05-10-2010
Guys a question-
Once I submit my PR application and receive AOR, is it mandatory to apply for BOWP or can I just go with the regular work permit extension from my current employer? My permit is valid till Feb 2023 and my employer is ready to file for extension and I am leaning towards filing for work permit extension vs filing for BOWP. Any issues with this or one has to only file for BOWP if AOR is received?
It is not mandatory.
 

raghavgrover

Star Member
Jul 26, 2019
186
57
It is not mandatory.
Alright, thanks. !! It may as well work in my favor since my company is filing for 2 years extension for ICT work permit and in that process would have to submit an offer of employment in IRCC portal. Just wanted to be sure if BOWP was'nt mandatory
 

raghavgrover

Star Member
Jul 26, 2019
186
57
When can we apply for BOWP - after AOR or after R10?
I think one can apply for BOWP after AOR and I think IRCC will only process it once completeness check had completed.

In website it says you are eligible for BOWP -
have submitted a complete application for permanent residence and passed the completeness check ( how will we know if passed this check?)

However in the AOR letter it usually says-

Bridging open work permit
If you are currently working in Canada on a work permit that is about to expire, and you meet all other requirements, you may use this letter to apply for a bridging open work permit. For more information, visit our
our website.
You are cautioned that if we reject your application for permanent residence as incomplete:
• we will refuse your completed application for a bridging open work permit; and
• your processing fees for a bridging open work permit will not be refunded
 
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Deleted member 1006777

Guest
For the eAPR, I think I have read that people answer Yes to both questions and just provide the same explanation on both. But the question is clearer in Schedule A, so you just need to answer Yes for the first one there.

Yeah, Schedule A is exactly same questions on the form you are filling, so don't be scared of it :D . I am not sure why they request it again, but they always do if you answer yes to any of the statutory questions.
Sweet I'll take that into account and turn in the Schedule A upfront. Problem is, there aren't enough rows to add 10 years worth of personal and address history...

Also, the education section in the application only has the ECA degree, and the rest were added to personal history. However, schedule A says to list "ALL" education. How do they still have this kind of inconsistency throughout?
 
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