Hey Canuck,
Took your advice. We paid for the sponsorship application and have the receipt. We have:
-Return flight (refundable, six months from Jan 10th)
-Flying in with her for support
-Medical Insurance (until May)
-Receipt of PR application fee along with our application we are almost done with, including our original marriage certificate
-Wife has 5k Canadian dollars cash (she sold her car)
-Rewritten letter from Consultant taking out all the stuff as per suggested, stating we are going to be filing the paperwork before the end of January and we have retained her to do so
-Letter from my mother stating we will be living with her rent free while the application is in process and IF needed, provide financial assistance (wont be needed).
-Employment letter from my job
I was unemployed for two months (career change) so my bank records will not look great lol, my wife actually helped me out from Mexico during that period. But I will have a paystub from December 30th.
The ties back home are tricky. My wife has been to Canada numerous times, without problems and has flown back on time. She did have to leave her job to get herself paid out (she tried to take a leave of absence to no avail) but has her entire family (lots of them) all back home. She is most certainly not a rule breaker and will truly leave Canada if it does not work out.
Otherwise, we will simply tell the guard my wife is here as a visitor while I apply to be her sponsor when asked what our purpose is.
I think I am good to go. Any other suggestions?
You are overthinking this and would actually get rid of all the letters. Not sure why your wife needs support to fly into Canada as well. She will be going through a different customs line. She should arrive and say she is here to visit her husband no more no less. IF she asked she can say she has a return ticket on ...... IF asked she should say she purchased travel health insurance. She should say she has $5000 in cash with her DON'T say she sold her car. Get rid of the letter from your mother. Throw it out don't take it. I would recommend getting rid of the consultant's letter as well. Hopefully you didn't get billed for it. IF THEY ASK if you plan on filing for inland sponsorship I would say yes and say that you have already paid and have the receipt if they want to see it. If you are asked about your husband's employment you should say: "He works in... or he is an ... . Really this is not a huge deal but I fear that you will get so stressed and nervous you will attract attention by CBSA and they might get concerned that you are actually trying to do something bad.