I applied online with the Global Talent Stream Pilot for a job under NOC 5241 for a temporary work permit.
Yesterday my visa has been refused under 2 concerns listed by the immigration officer:
1) You have not demonstrated that you come within the exceptions under section 186 of the IRPR exempting you from the requirement to obtain a work permit or that your employment in Canada comes within the exceptions to section 203 of the IRPR. As a result, your offer of employment must be the subject of an economic effect determination before a work permit can be issued to you. Your employer in Canada should contact the local office of the Department of Employment and Social Development Canada to begin this process.
2) You have not provided sufficient evidence to show that you meet the minimum education requirements as indicated by the employer on the electronic offer of employment.
1) The thing is, I submitted the LMIA document with a positive assessment from ESDC with my online application!
2) I provided my high school diploma (translated from court translator to vocational school, both original and translations) which I uploaded as a proof that I meet the job requirements.
In the LMIA document it states the following about the job position:
Education requirements: No formal education requirements.
I have also uploaded my employment records (Dated from 2016) I also provided a reference letter that is singed and sealed from the CEO of my previous employer that states that I worked from 2013 till present.
(both concerns listed from the immigration officer make no sense - I have a positive LMIA as well as high school diploma...)
Today my Canadian employer emailed me with a supporting letter, suggesting that I should re-apply with it.
In the letter they included that I am vital to their ongoing project and that they are already facing delivery bottlenecks to their clients because of labor shortage in their department.
They also included that they already received the positive LMIA assessment. They also included that I meet the minimum job requirements (and listed them) with my 4 year secondary vocational school (high school).
And more.. the supporting letter is 2 pages long and indeed it looks promising (at least to me) - but I am wondering is this enough to change an immigration officer decision to the above "concerns"? I suggested that my employer included a immigration lawyer in the process (twice or trice) but they ignored this.
Should I re-apply is there no other way that I update my refused application?
(I don't want to have a stain in my record that I have been refused visa once - I will have to mention this everywhere in the future, plus I will have to pay the fees again $510 this time...)
I thought maybe I can I raise a CSE through the web form to provide the supporting letter https://secure.cic.gc.ca/enquiries-renseignements/canada-case-cas-eng.aspx?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1
If so - under what type of application/enquiry I should submit my supporting letter?
I can't begin to describe what kind of emotional roller coaster this has been for me and my spouse.
Thank you in advance,
Kindly
Yesterday my visa has been refused under 2 concerns listed by the immigration officer:
1) You have not demonstrated that you come within the exceptions under section 186 of the IRPR exempting you from the requirement to obtain a work permit or that your employment in Canada comes within the exceptions to section 203 of the IRPR. As a result, your offer of employment must be the subject of an economic effect determination before a work permit can be issued to you. Your employer in Canada should contact the local office of the Department of Employment and Social Development Canada to begin this process.
2) You have not provided sufficient evidence to show that you meet the minimum education requirements as indicated by the employer on the electronic offer of employment.
1) The thing is, I submitted the LMIA document with a positive assessment from ESDC with my online application!
2) I provided my high school diploma (translated from court translator to vocational school, both original and translations) which I uploaded as a proof that I meet the job requirements.
In the LMIA document it states the following about the job position:
Education requirements: No formal education requirements.
I have also uploaded my employment records (Dated from 2016) I also provided a reference letter that is singed and sealed from the CEO of my previous employer that states that I worked from 2013 till present.
(both concerns listed from the immigration officer make no sense - I have a positive LMIA as well as high school diploma...)
Today my Canadian employer emailed me with a supporting letter, suggesting that I should re-apply with it.
In the letter they included that I am vital to their ongoing project and that they are already facing delivery bottlenecks to their clients because of labor shortage in their department.
They also included that they already received the positive LMIA assessment. They also included that I meet the minimum job requirements (and listed them) with my 4 year secondary vocational school (high school).
And more.. the supporting letter is 2 pages long and indeed it looks promising (at least to me) - but I am wondering is this enough to change an immigration officer decision to the above "concerns"? I suggested that my employer included a immigration lawyer in the process (twice or trice) but they ignored this.
Should I re-apply is there no other way that I update my refused application?
(I don't want to have a stain in my record that I have been refused visa once - I will have to mention this everywhere in the future, plus I will have to pay the fees again $510 this time...)
I thought maybe I can I raise a CSE through the web form to provide the supporting letter https://secure.cic.gc.ca/enquiries-renseignements/canada-case-cas-eng.aspx?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1
If so - under what type of application/enquiry I should submit my supporting letter?
I can't begin to describe what kind of emotional roller coaster this has been for me and my spouse.
Thank you in advance,
Kindly