txboyscout said:
Thanks for the response.
Yes she is in the US
I checked with the consulate and they said that new citizens can only apply for passports within Canada.
I am thinking that after my oath. I leave for the US. The airlines should let me board because my green card gives me visa free entry into Canada.
Once I return, I can apply for a passport.
Does this sound plausible?
Firstly I hope your grandmother and your family are doing as well as can be expected.
I'm not a lawyer, so please do your due diligence and make the decisions that you are comfortable with.
I do not recommend trying to get back into Canada w/out the proper documentation, but it is up to you to decide what is best for you and your family.
That said,
Advice/Options:
1. Call a lawyer now or have a lawyer's phone number on hand when you cross.
2. Call the CBSA. Ask for the agents' name before you speak to them. Write it down along with the time of the call. Ask them what to do.
3. Call the CIC. Ask for the agents' name before you speak to them. Write it down along with the time of the call. Ask them what to do.
4. Contact your MP. Get their staff to rush the hell out of your passport and leave for USA afterwards. Or alert them to your situation ahead of leaving for USA and tell them you may be calling on them for assistance should you have trouble getting back into Canada.
5. If you do go without a Canadian passport and run into trouble, call the journalists who wrote the stories I linked above. Call the CBSA. Call your MP.
6. Crossing via land would be easier than going via airplane. (Are you going to Texas?)
If you do it, present yourself to the CBSA as a new citizen not a US green card holder (perhaps it's slightly less of a problem to use your green card with the airlines, to get on the flight, but I can't say for sure).
The problem with entering as
txboyscout: US green card holder is that CBSA will register you as another person with striking similarities (same DOB) as
txboyscout: Cdn PR/citizen. If there's one thing that freaks border guards out, it's when the person in front of them might not be who they're saying they are or that they have multiple identities meaning the CBSA can't see the whole picture. They will worry that you are trying to trick them, that you are hiding who you really are, or that your document could be fraudulent.
This is not unlike US/Cdn dual citizens being required to enter Canada on a Canadian passport and US on their US passport.
Anyway, good luck, godspeed and let us know how it goes. I can only imagine that this is a large and entirely unnecessary stress during a challenging, important time for you and your family.