I spoke last week with a man in Ontario whose wife arrived from the Phils this past Sunday. He said that the PPR letter advised that the CFO certificate was necessary in order to board the aircraft with a visa to Canada. He thought the CFO seminar was somewhat country-specific in content. But, in any event, required.
I had an email exchange with this gentleman in which I asked if his wife was required by the IRCC to provide an AOM certificate, since it gets asked for in some cases thus:
In order to continue processing your application, we require the following information and/ordocumentation:
Your Advisory on Marriages (AOM) certificate issued by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA)
Please note that this document is different from your marriage certificate.
In a June 13 email, my friend in Ontario provided the following advice:
We were not asked to provide that information. In fact, we were not asked to take a course prior to being married in Iloilo. [This refers to a half-day marriage counselling course couples are instructed (at least in some cases) to attend in order to get a marriage license. My wife and I had to take it, in Iloilo no less.]
I'm not sure if you are aware, after [My wife's name redacted]
receives her visa she will need to complete a course with the CFO Commission on Filipinos Overseas. https://cfo.gov.ph/about-us/ It can be taken online. The certificate is required by the Philippine Authorities prior to boarding the flight to Canada. The course consists of a zoom meeting with other applicants and the counselor. After that an appointment is scheduled between the applicant and the councilor. The course is free, but there is a charge for the certificate. I believe it was approx. 80 peso. A digital copy of the certificate is issued after payment.
There is a bit of a trick to booking the appointment. The booking site is open 7am Monday to Thursday. If you attempt to log on prior to 7am a message will display stating all spots are full. You must log on at precisely 7am. By 7:10 all spots are taken. It took us 3 attempts .
His tale about booking the appointment is sure familiar. Similar system to renew a passport. You must make an appointment online and appear in person at the appointed time. The competition for appointments is fierce and, when slots are opened up, the Department of Foreign Affairs servers get overloaded and, when you see and opening and try to book it, you get punted off the system and have to start all over again.
As an aside, it seems that, if a Filipina is flying out of the Phils to another country, not Canada with a Canada visa, she can leave with her husband or bf, with no CFO certificate. All the same, I can see the dreaded "offloading" occurring if you end up with the wrong immigration officer. Last November, we flew from Manila to Dubai and nothing was said.