snigdhap said:
Thanks Leon, appreciate your time. It would be great if you could answer me few more questions.
We are living in Alberta, and planning to apply PR through my husband's employer. I did a little research on that and came to know.
1- There are two types of PR one is federal and another one is Province wise. Can we ask his employer while filing PR to apply the federal one?
2- Also I heard Alberta is not nominated for express entry hence it would take around 26 months of processing time ?
All are most welcome to answer on this.
Thanks,
Snigdha
1. Once you land as a PR, there is no difference between a PNP and a federal PR. A PR is free to live and work anywhere in Canada. Of course you should not say that to your PNP when you are applying or to the immigration officer when you are landing because as a PNP nominee, it should be your intention to settle in your PNP province. However, if you want to move later, you are free to do so.
His employer is not applying for the PR itself. It is up to you which you apply for. I assume the employer has agreed to nominate him to the PNP. If he does and you get your nomination, you can apply for PR based on that. However, if he qualifies under an express entry stream like skilled worker or Canadian experience class, you can apply for federal PR through express entry without the nomination.
2. Looking at http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/provincial/index.asp they say that:
Each province and territory’s streams, eligibility requirements and nomination guidelines for their PNP can change without notice. Check the websites of the provinces or territories for the most up-to-date information.
If you are nominated under a non-Express Entry stream:
you will have to apply through the paper-based process, and
if the province or territory finds you eligible and nominates you, you will send an application to Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC).
If you are nominated under a province or territory’s Express Entry stream, you must:
meet their requirements, and
meet the minimum criteria for Express Entry
this includes meeting the requirements of at least one of the immigration programs it covers.
You can use our online tool, Come to Canada, to see if you are eligible. If you are invited to apply for permanent residence, you will submit an online application to CIC.
So basically what that means that as a PNP nominee, you can only apply under express entry if your province has an express entry stream. Alberta does not seem to have an express entry stream at the moment but you can call them and ask if they are planning to. If they are, you might be able to get in there. If not, the processing time is currently 15 months according to http://www.cic.gc.ca/englisH/information/times/index.asp but that is not including the time it takes Alberta to give you the nomination. You would have to ask them how long that takes. However, if your husband qualifies under Federal skilled worker or Canadian experience class, it would take 6 months.