My pregnant daughter and her husband are moving to Vancouver in one month on a work visa for my son-in-law. I desperately want to be a part of their lives and be a help to them as mom and grandmom. I retired this month from a career as a school principal in Arizona and don't plan to continue working full time. I am healthy and very financially sound.
Does it seem like my best, and maybe only, option is to move close to Vancouver on Washington side and get a visitor visa that I keep extending? If so, does that mean that I stay for 6 months then leave and return? If so, how long do I stay away and how often can I do this? Or do I start by requesting a longer visitor visa? What criteria is important to that approval?
I also read about a Super Visa as famly but I understand that my daughter's status has to be citizenship and that won't happen for at least a year. Since the baby will be born in Canada, I think I can qualify for Super Visa as her grandmother but it seems like we have to prove financial hardship, which won't be the case. Is that right?
Finally, is there way I can qualify for a visa as the caregiver for my granddaughter?
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My daughter and I are in Vancouver for a few days to look at rentals for her and her husband. I tried to make an appointment with the Canadian immigration office but they don't take walk-ins. Should I get an immigration attorney?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I am very grateful for this forum.
Does it seem like my best, and maybe only, option is to move close to Vancouver on Washington side and get a visitor visa that I keep extending? If so, does that mean that I stay for 6 months then leave and return? If so, how long do I stay away and how often can I do this? Or do I start by requesting a longer visitor visa? What criteria is important to that approval?
I also read about a Super Visa as famly but I understand that my daughter's status has to be citizenship and that won't happen for at least a year. Since the baby will be born in Canada, I think I can qualify for Super Visa as her grandmother but it seems like we have to prove financial hardship, which won't be the case. Is that right?
Finally, is there way I can qualify for a visa as the caregiver for my granddaughter?
.
My daughter and I are in Vancouver for a few days to look at rentals for her and her husband. I tried to make an appointment with the Canadian immigration office but they don't take walk-ins. Should I get an immigration attorney?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I am very grateful for this forum.