Hi everyone, these forums have been helpful for me as I am sponsoring my US partner through inland common law route and it has been a long and tough journey. We just received a letter from IRCC today that we did not provide "sufficient evidence of cohabitation". Advice would be greatly appreciated as we are terrified of being rejected.
In hindsight, we should have planned better to have more formal evidence of our cohabitation. Some facts...
In hindsight, we should have planned better to have more formal evidence of our cohabitation. Some facts...
- My partner moved here in Oct 2018 while awaiting his Working Holiday Visa. He is listed on our rental lease. We have been leasing together since then.
- He received his visa in April 2019
- We submitted our PR application in February 2020
- He has not worked in Canada so he does not have tax forms. He uses his US credit card as it has no foreign transaction fees so he has never opened a bank account. He wasn't working here so he didn't get a SIN until this year when we were filing his Canadian tax return (after submitting PR app). I generally handle all the bills and he pays me for rent and utilities through cheques. He is a co-user on our Bell bill but Bell says they cannot provide bills with two account holders listed. His US cell phone plan allows for Canada-US calling and texting so he never got a Canadian phone plan. No car insurance or drivers license as I only have a G1 as of April 2018 and he sold his car when he moved here since we use public transit/bike.
- We are both listed on our tenant insurance but we didn't have to get that until Nov 2019. The IRCC seems to want more proof that we were cohabitating in Feb 2019 - which makes sense.
- The period between Oct 2018 and Feb 2019 (1 year before we submitted our PR app) is when we have the least "official" evidence as he was settling into Canada. In retrospect we should have made more effort to establish official documents.
- Additional letters from coworkers and family/friends attesting to our cohabitation since Oct 2018
- Receipts of purchases such as Uber rides and Amazon purchase from Feb 2019 and prior
- Photos with date and location stamps (many of which were in our apartment)
- Bank statements of him making purchases in Toronto, such as our groceries
- Screenshots of conversations between us referencing our home together
- Photos of his cheques deposited into my bank account