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PCC said ineligible for Permanent Residency

Mar 9, 2024
3
1
Hello all,
I submitted my parents forms on 6 Dec 2021, still the application is in process from Vancouver office.
I got the request for Medical and it was in Feb 2024.
I then applied on my own for their PCC by selecting option Permanent Residency for Canada on Passport.gov.in website. We got the PCC today and it said "there is no adverse information against the applicant, so he or she is INELIGIBLE for permanent residency of canada"
Did anyone got the similar language in the PCC ?
 

Miss bee

VIP Member
Mar 24, 2020
4,959
1,644
Hello all,
I submitted my parents forms on 6 Dec 2021, still the application is in process from Vancouver office.
I got the request for Medical and it was in Feb 2024.
I then applied on my own for their PCC by selecting option Permanent Residency for Canada on Passport.gov.in website. We got the PCC today and it said "there is no adverse information against the applicant, so he or she is INELIGIBLE for permanent residency of canada"
Did anyone got the similar language in the PCC ?
Yes this is wording which should he on PCC and that’s correct PCC .
 

armoured

VIP Member
Feb 1, 2015
17,247
8,862
We got the PCC today and it said "there is no adverse information against the applicant, so he or she is INELIGIBLE for permanent residency of canada"
Did anyone got the similar language in the PCC ?
It means that there is no information which would render you (make you) ineligible.

That said: did you quote the text in the letter EXACTLY? If that's what they're issuing, I agree with you that it is poorly written.
 
Mar 9, 2024
3
1
It means that there is no information which would render you (make you) ineligible.

That said: did you quote the text in the letter EXACTLY? If that's what they're issuing, I agree with you that it is poorly written.
no, the exact wording is "which would render him or her ineligible for RESIDENCE PERMIT for CANADA."

But I get your point, basically the letter content is one big sentence, which could have been much simpler had it been 2 sentences.
 
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armoured

VIP Member
Feb 1, 2015
17,247
8,862
no, the exact wording is "which would render him or her ineligible for RESIDENCE PERMIT for CANADA."

But I get your point, basically the letter content is one big sentence, which could have been much simpler had it been 2 sentences.
If the original wording is "there is no adverse information against the applicant, which would render him or her INELIGIBLE" then I have no criticisms whatsoever, the letter is quite clear. It's your paraphrasing of it that's unclear.
 
Last edited:

Kananaskis

Star Member
Oct 4, 2023
132
59
"so he or she is INELIGIBLE for permanent residency of canada" is VERY different than "which would render him or her ineligible for RESIDENCE PERMIT for CANADA."

The poor wording is on your end.
 
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