I am confused too.Siouxie said:I was an inland applicant, my dependant son an outland applicant.
He received his medical request directly from London CIC and was not required to submit it in advance.
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I am confused too.Siouxie said:I was an inland applicant, my dependant son an outland applicant.
He received his medical request directly from London CIC and was not required to submit it in advance.
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I applied for permanant resident (spouse) as an Inland applicant and was processed through Vegreville. My son was under 22 and my accompanying dependant. He lived in England and therefore his application was processed by London (classified as outland).arron said:Sorry I'm a little confused still... Do you mean you applied for permanent residence inland, but your dependant son was non-accompanying? Or did he have a seperate application for permanent residence?
better? no...sorry....it added more to the confusion. Are you talking about one Inland application or about two separate applications, one inland (yours) and one outland (your son)? If your son was included in your inland application as your dependent then your son's application can NOT be processed in London separately.Siouxie said:I applied for permanant resident (spouse) as an Inland applicant and was processed through Vegreville. My son was under 22 and my accompanying dependant. He lived in England and therefore his application was processed by London (classified as outland).
Better?
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My final understanding, right now, is as follows:eyeoftheocean said:I applied inland in 2009 as a sponsered spouse I did not add my dependants which are living in England and do not want to move here , I recieved AIP in June last year , My childrens medicals were requested in August this year (outland) as they are in England . My IO advised me , 'if you cannot get you children to do the medical there are ways around it , My oldest Daughter recieved a letter from London UK to make arrangements for the medical and if no medical has been done in 40 days their application will be classed as abondened and I will NOT be able to sponser them in the future! (THIS was done on the same application .)
Hope this makes more sense !
YES you are correct , we finally got there ;D good luckKimJuliBC said:My final understanding, right now, is as follows:
1) The inland application can be submitted WITH NO NEED to include the medical exam of the dependent children. The medical exam with be requested later and will be added to the file after AIP.
2) Probably, the Embassy, where the dependents live, can deal with and process the medical exam of the dependent; but as a separate application but within the same inland application. The embassy where the dependents live will verify the medical test and feed it to the original Inland file in Vegreville.
Am I correct?
I may ask about the same to you !!! Inlanders who apply with dependants outside of Canada have their dependants medicals done in THAT Country they are living in TOWARDS THE END OF THE PR APPLICATION ! The LONDON EMBASSY contacts the dependant by mail or email to book an appointment with a DMP and if THAT dependant DOES NOT COMPLY their application WILL be classed as abandoned and the SPONSER may NOT sponser the dependant in the future !!! DO YOUR HOME WORK ! WE ARE NOT TALKING ABOUT EASTERN EURPOE ..GET IT !!!rjessome said:Where are you coming up with this stuff? You are quoting the wrong information. The requirement for the medical of dependent children in an FC spousal case is at the BEGINNING of the process.
From Region Specific Guide for Western Europe
PROOF OF MEDICAL EXAMINATION
Include for yourself and each of your family members Copy 2 of the Medical Report-Section A that the DMP will sign and give to you when you undergo the medical examination. See Appendix C for additional information.
I just pulled this one from the Western Europe Guide so to the OP, you need to check the instructions in your guide. If you cannot obtain it, provide a very detailed explaination to CIC of your attempts to obtain it and ask for more time. They WILL request it again at some point before they make a decision on the file. Hopefully, by that time you will be able to convice your ex to comply. Good luck.
To KimJuliBC, I apologize because I read your post quickly and did not see that you were an inland applicant. Sorry if this caused you confusion.eyeoftheocean said:I may ask about the same to you !!! Inlanders who apply with dependants outside of Canada have their dependants medicals done in THAT Country they are living in TOWARDS THE END OF THE PR APPLICATION ! The LONDON EMBASSY contacts the dependant by mail or email to book an appointment with a DMP and if THAT dependant DOES NOT COMPLY their application WILL be classed as abandoned and the SPONSER may NOT sponser the dependant in the future !!! DO YOUR HOME WORK ! WE ARE NOT TALKING ABOUT EASTERN EURPOE ..GET IT !!!
Excellent post arron ..well said !arron said:Honestly, from where I am sitting there is absolutely nothing 'obvious' about any canadian immigration process, inland or outland. The online guides tell you one thing, the OP manuals tell you another thing, call center agents tell you something completely different depending on whom you talk to, and it seems like everyones personal stories and experiences vary. I don't think any of us took a first glance at the application forms and knew exactly what to do, they are worded terribly and leave too much room for interpretation.
So I really would like to thank everyone for sharing their experiences and knowledge, it all helps very much when trying to come to an understanding, and I think the tone on this forum is one of people who are all going through the same experiences and trying to be genuine and share information with other people who might be having trouble.
No! That is completely incorrect. You need to send proof of a medical examination WITH your outland application. For inland applicants, it is recommended that you do the medical ahead of time and send the receipt with your application. From the instruction guide for inland applicants (pg. 23 ): "Your spouse or common-law partner and his or her dependent children in Canada must undergo a medical examination. When medical results are submitted up-front, routine cases benefit from faster processing because we do not have to request them at a later date."angelbrat said:Inland you have to have medicals done before application is sent and send in the medical exam receipt. Outland, you wait for CIC to request the medical.
Same medical exam, different times to be sent.