It should not be a problem as it not about your partner's status but your to be born child. The latter gets the right for citizenship through either of the parents, in this case through youself.Andrei13 said:Also she is not Canadian .... she has a work permit for one year and a postodtoral offer starting 1st of March, so we are not both Canadians.
It's up to you. If she applies for a TRV for the baby, it would be a faster way for the baby to come to Canada and you can apply for the citizenship certificate from inside Canada which is faster than through the embassy.Andrei13 said:Thanks Leon,
this is what I am afraid the most, so you think I should go for the temporary passport to avoid any unpleasant results?
Andrei
If you already had a citizenship certificate for the baby, you would apply for a normal passport, not a temporary one so everybody applying for a temporary passport would be doing it because they don't have a citizenship certificate for the baby yet. I think the main thing is proving that you have applied for the citizenship certificate for the baby (you will do that at the embassy too so they will know that you did), proving that you have citizenship (you will do that for the application for the citizenship certificate anyway), possibly prove that it is your child if they ask (DNA test but only if they ask) and prove that you have an urgent need of travel (your gf visa and flight tickets).Andrei13 said:I read the application form for the temporary passport and one thing that you have to complete there is a proof of citizenship for the baby, and we will not have one.
No. You and the children have to reside in Canada to claim CCTB. I hope you haven't been claiming them.astro said:Hi,
I am a canadian Citizen and my Wife and three kids (all under 18 yrs) are also Canadian Citizens from last 8-9 years. Since 2007 we are living outside canada as my kids are doing their schooling at their grandparent's place. Me and my wife are also accompanying them. We are paying Income tax in canada every year and also visiting Canada every year for some time. Now My question is When we come to canada Are we eligible for Child Tax benefits for all these year spent outside canada?
Just curious - what's the reason you have been paying income tax in Canada when you are not a Canadian resident? If you were deemed a resident for tax purposes, it would seem like you ought to be deemed a resident for child tax benefits as well. And if you weren't deemed a resident, why were you paying Canadian tax?astro said:Hi,
I am a canadian Citizen and my Wife and three kids (all under 18 yrs) are also Canadian Citizens from last 8-9 years. Since 2007 we are living outside canada as my kids are doing their schooling at their grandparent's place. Me and my wife are also accompanying them. We are paying Income tax in canada every year and also visiting Canada every year for some time. Now My question is When we come to canada Are we eligible for Child Tax benefits for all these year spent outside canada?