Asivad Anac said:
Because funds aren't part of the MEC (minimum eligibility criteria) for FSW. Foreign work experience, language skills and ECA are.
I totally agree. I believe this is one place where CIC's regulations have overstepped their bounds in deciding the criteria by which financial stability are to be assessed. The point of the law is that the applicant should show that s/he will not become a public burden in Canada, by having sufficient funds to establish him- or herself while finding a job. It makes no sense, then, that regulations say that a CEC applicant outside Canada, who will have to quit a job to return to Canada and find a new one does not have to show settlement funds, while an FSW applicant who has a current, permanent job in Canada does. Doesn't an ongoing salary prove one's ability to support oneself? I think it does - and therefore the regulation is too narrow in carrying out the intent of the law.
Regulations and law are not the same thing, and it would be great if someone had the funds to challenge this regulation as being ultra vires - without authority in the law.
Failing that, and in the OP's position, I would write a CSE stating two things: 1) that in addition to the bank account, the OP provided evidence of an ongoing Canadian salary in excess of the required funds as proof of his/her ability to support him- or herself, and 2) that the OP stated s/he had funds of $2000 on the EE application and was offered an FSW ITA instead of a CEC one, for which s/he was also eligible.
It's a long shot, though. The OP should also make a new profile, doing whatever has to be done to qualify for CEC only.