GeoCanadian, congratulations
! I think at this point, you can be pretty sure that your work experience descriptions have been accepted.
ppb12 said:
For me I proved the job experience which I am claiming, it is a job as I am paid taxable money. I provided them my tax return and TA T4A and some pay slips. It is not mendatory, but it is better to give them.
I agree with most of what you said, but I would like to comment regarding taxable vs. non-taxable incomes. I personally know two persons, both claimed under CEC last year (applied after me), and the majority of their 'work' experience was paid through NON-taxable RA. They had very strong reference letters (I used similar template to these guys for my own reference letter), and they both already landed as PRs.
While it would be much easier if HR or payroll can attest to your number of hours, there has never been a requirement that your letter needs to come from HR or payroll or any other authorities that be. There is never a requirement that the income needs to be taxable as well. It's just that you need to have work experience in skill level A, B, or O, and that you need the equivalent of at least 1 continuous year of work experience for minimum requirements. If your letters contain ALL information they require from the checklist, and if your letters contain descriptions that match substantially the lead statement and the main duties under the corresponding NOC, then I think you should be fine.
The_Prince said:
Although I have got many good suggestions about what to include in my supplementary reference letter, however I became more frustrated from the big deal of non-sense rejections and I became even discouraged to e-mail them any supplementary letter, I got the feeling that whatever I include in the letter and however perfect I write it, they will always find a reason to reject it if they want to. I think if they were serious about that, they would have contacted the professors or whoever wrote those letters to ask for more details not to just make a final rejection decision, that is what I know they used to do before, I mean before that stream !
It may or may not work, but at this point, if you are sure that your letter was too brief, about the only way we can do is to send them additional non-contradictory information. Try quoting OP6B that states that officers must
take into account any years of experience that occur between application and assessment, and for which the applicant has submitted the necessary documentation (R77)
This pursuant to R77 part can be a bit tricky though. R77 goes as follows
77. For the purposes of Part 5, the requirements and criteria set out in sections 75 and 76 must be met at the time an application for a permanent resident visa is made as well as at the time the visa is issued.
And if we look at R75 and R76 as instructed,
(a) within the 10 years preceding the date of their application for a permanent resident visa, they have at least one year of continuous full-time employment experience, as described in subsection 80(7), or the equivalent in continuous part-time employment in one or more occupations, other than a restricted occupation, that are listed in Skill Type 0 Management Occupations or Skill Level A or B of the National Occupational Classification matrix;
(b) during that period of employment they performed the actions described in the lead statement for the occupation as set out in the occupational descriptions of the National Occupational Classification; and
(c) during that period of employment they performed a substantial number of the main duties of the occupation as set out in the occupational descriptions of the National Occupational Classification, including all of the essential duties.
Now, we can always argue that, even though we submit the additional documentation later, it only explains work experience that has already happened by the time of application, so therefore, officers must consider the additional letter we submit that provides extra information. Whether or not they have the same interpretation is, obviously, a different story