We want to move to Canada together. I have a Canadian Citizenship. Can I show up to Canada with my Canadian Citizenship Certificate paperwork, with my family, and move into Canada? I have read some on Settlement assistance, but not sure if all that is done after arrival. Most of my family members are Canadian and reside closer to Toronto, but we want to live in BC province. Thank you.
-In terms of priority, I'd focus on the settlement assistance later - but be aware, what assistance there is mostly is not monetary.
A few concepts to get you started:
-as I wrote separately, for the most part your citizenship paperwork is enough - since you happen to hold a US passport as well.
-you cannot 'show up' with your spouse and child without them holding visas. But if they do, you can basically arrive. [There's a separate topic - don't worry about this for now - that they can't too obviously be 'moving' as they would be showing up with visitor visas at this point.]
-You would have the right to work as a citizen, access to health care, etc. Your spouse and her child would not immediately. How long those might take - can depend somewhat on province and whatnot, so put that question aside for the time being (unless they already have visas). You will have to be prepared for those periods and the related costs (eg need for traveller's insurance).
-There is a distinction in the application process that mostly does not matter at this stage - applying 'outland' (from abroad) vs 'inland'. Inland means spouse has to already be in Canada. Outland - open to all whether in Canada or not. To keep things simple, let's say you apply 'outland' - probably from abroad, but if in Canada - fine. (I'm saying this now because you'll see the term thrown around - for your purposes, stick with outland - you'll know later if there's any sense in doing it differently [and there won't be, I think]). Important to remember: outland does NOT mean your spouse can't be in Canada at any point during the process; she'll just need a visa.
-The process is you will sponsor your spouse as principal applicant and her dependents - ie. her child. This is fine and routine, lots of mixed marriages here, not an issue. You were asked above about custody - important here that she can prove the father is deceased because that means the mother does not need permission from another parent.
-Look through the application packages. They will need passports, and your spouse will need a police clearance certificate, translated copies of things like your marriage certificate, death certificate of deceased spouse, birth certificates, etc. You will probably not need passport to apply but should get it anyway. They will need to do medicals and biometrics (after the application, IRCC will send instructions). [Ah correction: kid may not need biometrics depending on age - it's in the instructions.]
-As a citizen abroad, you will need to show 'evidence of intent to return to Canada.' Basically this means some evidence of plans and preparations to move to Canada. Don't stress too much about this now, but take it seriously - you will need to provide info during the process AND later.
-Your spouse and her child can apply for visitor visas. Hard for us to say if they will be granted.
-The process will seem intimidating with forms and requirements. You don't have to understand everything at once. Go through the packages, noting a) what you need (eg documents and dates etc), and b) what you didn't understand. Then iterate - go through again, look here for stuff you didn't understand, etc. These forums are helpful.
-Do the application package carefully - applicants have the packages returned as incomplete all the time, and you lose several months. (That said - do it carefully, and you shouldn't have trouble).
-On a personal note: don't delay. From personal experience, leaving a place that was going in the wrong direction, we should have started earlier. We should have left earlier.