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You should have first found a friend and then gone for an EOI.

If you are unable to find a friend in Manitoba you will be charged with misrepresentation and ban for 2 years.

Better to decline and redo EOI after finding a friend who would endorse your settlement plan.
 
Hello,

I'm still preparing all documents to apply for MPNP, and planning, somehow, to go to another province, unless I can find a good job in Manitoba that is well paid. Of course I'll be landing in MB and be validated in that province that will nominate me under skilled worker program. Will I be in troubles if I move out after 3 months or so?
 
faisalqaseem said:
dear, My EOI is accepted in Manitoba and now to apply formally i have to provide a settlement plan duly endorse by a Manitoba friend with a scan copy of his PR card. Please any one help me being my friend and endorse my plan. I may compensate him.
faisalqaseem@gmail.com (please reply before 4th of February, 2016)

What you're suggesting to do is immigration fraud. I doubt you will find anyone to help you here.
 
I sponsored my niece here in Manitoba but it's not yet even a year that she wanted to move to Alberta. Will I be banned to sponsor another relative again, if she moved out of Manitoba earlier than 2 years?
 
Hello guys,

I applied for MNPN but before my nomination was approved, my sponsors left Manitoba. I was nominated by Manitoba and i just got Immigrant Visa.

Now, my sponsors are no longer in Manitoba. Can i rely on this and go to Alberta where they are now or i should still land in Manitoba and stay for a while.

Thank you.
 
Hello guys,

I applied for MNPN but before my nomination was approved, my sponsors left Manitoba. I was nominated by Manitoba and i just got Immigrant Visa.

Now, my sponsors are no longer in Manitoba. Can i rely on this and go to Alberta where they are now or i should still land in Manitoba and stay for a while.

Thank you.

You were nominated by Manitoba to live in Manitoba. If, before you land, you intend to reside in Alberta, then becoming a PR of Canada off Manitoba sponsoring you to live in Manitoba when you do not intend to live in Manitoba would be immigration fraud.
 
Hello guys,

I applied for MNPN but before my nomination was approved, my sponsors left Manitoba. I was nominated by Manitoba and i just got Immigrant Visa.

Now, my sponsors are no longer in Manitoba. Can i rely on this and go to Alberta where they are now or i should still land in Manitoba and stay for a while.

Thank you.
Hello Brother, Are you still in Manitoba?
 
i just have a quick question,
in 2008, my husband had applied for Alberta H1B category and then withdrawn because he went back to home country and did not have the H1B when the invitation arrived. Now i qualify for OID MPNP category but we don't have any relative in MB. Question is will my EOI be rejected because of his previous application? It was more than 10 years back.

Thanksi
 
Hello everyone,

I will be graduated in April this year in Marketing and Sales program from a certified SPP institution in Toronto, and I will be getting a post-graduate work permit for three years. I am planning to move to another province to get a Permanent Residency sooner. My options are limited in Ontario because my job will fall in NOC C category and it'll take a lot of time to reach NOC B and apply for PR here. So, if anyone knows information about Atlantic Piolet Program or PNP in any other province and how it will benefit in my case, please help me. Your help is highly appreciated. I'd like to make a note that I have read in few forums that even if I change province and work one year (1560 hours or something), there is still no guarantee that I will be given PNP. So, please enlighten me with the new information so that I can draw a clear roadmap

Krishna
 
I'd like to make a note that I have read in few forums that even if I change province and work one year (1560 hours or something), there is still no guarantee that I will be given PNP. So, please enlighten me with the new information so that I can draw a clear roadmap

This is because the Provinces nominate people that they believe will reside in, and contribute to their Province. If, for example, you move to Newfoundland, or Saskatchewan, and work the minimum amount of time to qualify to request Provincial nomination, and then that Province looks at your life and sees you studied in Ontario, and lived for years in Ontario, and you spent the shortest possible time in their Province before applying for nomination - they can reasonably ask if you actually plan to live in them long-term, or if you're just using them as an end-run around getting to live in Ontario. If you have strong links to one Province, and want to use the Provincial Nomination scheme of another, you're really going to have to show to the new one that you intend to stay there if they nominate you, and that their investment in you will pay off.

You don't have to commit to staying there forever, but you do have to convince them you're not using their Provincial nomination scheme fully intending to live in another Province.
 
This is because the Provinces nominate people that they believe will reside in, and contribute to their Province. If, for example, you move to Newfoundland, or Saskatchewan, and work the minimum amount of time to qualify to request Provincial nomination, and then that Province looks at your life and sees you studied in Ontario, and lived for years in Ontario, and you spent the shortest possible time in their Province before applying for nomination - they can reasonably ask if you actually plan to live in them long-term, or if you're just using them as an end-run around getting to live in Ontario. If you have strong links to one Province, and want to use the Provincial Nomination scheme of another, you're really going to have to show to the new one that you intend to stay there if they nominate you, and that their investment in you will pay off.

You don't have to commit to staying there forever, but you do have to convince them you're not using their Provincial nomination scheme fully intending to live in another Province.
Alright. So how do I prove them that, I intend to live in tgat particular province and I am not using them as a short cut. To be honest, Nova Scotia looks promising to be in regards to srttle down because of the reasonable whether conditions. If the cost of living is cheaper than Toronto and they are giving me an option to settle down. I'd like to stay there permanently. Again, my question is, how do I prove them and how do I convince the province of my intent. Is it the employer who plays a key role in nominating me in PR, or the province itself. If it's former. Jos do I find these employers in the said or other provinces?
 
Please could you explain what you meant by social services?
You are free to move between provinces. There is no law that restricts your movement. That is the reason Immigration folks are not going after those people who moved out of the province.

You may argue that you signed the "Intent to live" so you must satisfactorily demonstrate your intention to live in the province that chose you. Actually, your intention to live in the province was when you applied for your nomination, and when you applied for PR. You are satisfactorily demonstrating your intention when you land on the province that nominated you. Hence it is important to note that you should land on the province who nominated you, and you must satisfy Immigration Officer to prove your intention.

Once you landed and got your PR status you will be covered by Canadian mobility rights. This right will let you move between provinces as long as you are not getting any social services from the province.
 
Hello,
Kindly advice please.My connection to Manitoba (cousin) lives in Winnipeg. I picked outside Winnipeg to earn more points (extra 50 points). Is there a risk factor in picking region outside where the sponsor stays.Anyone with similar issue?
 
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