Hi everyone,
I am in the process of sponsoring my husband via the Out of Canada family class and I am trying to get answers from all possible sources.
We need the PR to be effective in September 2017 as this is our planning timeline given that my husband is on a major project with the British Government and not free until then. So we don't need or want the PR before September 2015. Obviously, we want to do all the logistics (UK house sale, sorting out furniture move, etc) and physically move together to Canada.
We were going to wait until late 2016 to start the immigration process but to our surprise found out in February 2015 that the London Office processing times had gone from 12 months or so when we last checked in 2014 to an astonishingly high 29 months (+ 2 months in Canada sponsor vetting)! This triggered a frenzy of activities such as assembling our application, doing the £500 medical in London, and submitting our file in May 2015. Doing the math of the Canada + London Office 31 month processing actually made us eligible to receive the PR visa approval in Dec 2017 so we figured we had shaved it a bit close.
To our dismay, 6 months into the process my husband received an email from the IO saying "Your sponsor indicated an intention to resume residency in Canada in September 2017. Given that I foresee that the finalization of your application will take place well before September 2017, I am not satisfied that your sponsor indeed intends to resume residency in Canada as soon as you are granted a PR visa".
Clearly the London Office processing times seem to have compressed dramatically, by probably a good 20 months.
So my questions are:
1. If my husband was in fact to receive his PR visa in say, early 2016 - which would have made the London Office processing time 20 months shorter than the advertised 29 months - must I then immediately resume residency in Canada as the IO seems to suggest? I am certainly not ready to do that.
2. How should we answer the query of the IO? Our inclination is to reply the simple truth, that is that I as a sponsor am only able to resume residency in Canada with my husband at the same date as originally planned, that is September 2017. We would add that our application was submitted in good faith based on the published London Office processing times. If the London Office compresses its processing times and a PR visa is issued before September 2017, then we would gladly take it but I, as a sponsor, cannot go back to Canada before September 2017. Doing so would potentially split up the family in a damaging way.
3. Essentially, must I as a sponsor take up residency "as soon as" as my husbands "lands" in Canada to activate his COPR?
4. What should we do if the London Office surprises us by issuing a COPR 3, 6, 12 or, haven forbid, 20 months earlier than their posted processing times? Are we stuck in taking it? What are our options?
Any help would be immensely appreciated.
Coming home.
I am in the process of sponsoring my husband via the Out of Canada family class and I am trying to get answers from all possible sources.
We need the PR to be effective in September 2017 as this is our planning timeline given that my husband is on a major project with the British Government and not free until then. So we don't need or want the PR before September 2015. Obviously, we want to do all the logistics (UK house sale, sorting out furniture move, etc) and physically move together to Canada.
We were going to wait until late 2016 to start the immigration process but to our surprise found out in February 2015 that the London Office processing times had gone from 12 months or so when we last checked in 2014 to an astonishingly high 29 months (+ 2 months in Canada sponsor vetting)! This triggered a frenzy of activities such as assembling our application, doing the £500 medical in London, and submitting our file in May 2015. Doing the math of the Canada + London Office 31 month processing actually made us eligible to receive the PR visa approval in Dec 2017 so we figured we had shaved it a bit close.
To our dismay, 6 months into the process my husband received an email from the IO saying "Your sponsor indicated an intention to resume residency in Canada in September 2017. Given that I foresee that the finalization of your application will take place well before September 2017, I am not satisfied that your sponsor indeed intends to resume residency in Canada as soon as you are granted a PR visa".
Clearly the London Office processing times seem to have compressed dramatically, by probably a good 20 months.
So my questions are:
1. If my husband was in fact to receive his PR visa in say, early 2016 - which would have made the London Office processing time 20 months shorter than the advertised 29 months - must I then immediately resume residency in Canada as the IO seems to suggest? I am certainly not ready to do that.
2. How should we answer the query of the IO? Our inclination is to reply the simple truth, that is that I as a sponsor am only able to resume residency in Canada with my husband at the same date as originally planned, that is September 2017. We would add that our application was submitted in good faith based on the published London Office processing times. If the London Office compresses its processing times and a PR visa is issued before September 2017, then we would gladly take it but I, as a sponsor, cannot go back to Canada before September 2017. Doing so would potentially split up the family in a damaging way.
3. Essentially, must I as a sponsor take up residency "as soon as" as my husbands "lands" in Canada to activate his COPR?
4. What should we do if the London Office surprises us by issuing a COPR 3, 6, 12 or, haven forbid, 20 months earlier than their posted processing times? Are we stuck in taking it? What are our options?
Any help would be immensely appreciated.
Coming home.