Scylla is right. I am allowed to work on campus due to the terms of my study permit, but this is separate from the sponsorship approvalscylla said:No - kiwicanuck wouldn't be authorized to work in Canada because the sponsor has been approved. When using the outland process, you are only allowed to work once the application has been fully processed, PR has been approved for the applicant and the applicant has landed in Canada as a permanent resident.
Kiwicanuck may be able to work as a result of the student visa (which typically allows students to work part time once they have completed six months of study).
But receiving sponsor approval for an outland application gives you nothing in terms of a work permit.
What are your own skills? While people routinely say "you cannot work in Canada" they mean "unless you can find an employer willing to obtain an LMO." Depending upon where your partner lives, you may find that your skills are in high demand and employers have an open LMO. For example, I saw this exact case recently with a Canadian woman with a husband who was a US licensed electrician. In Alberta, finding an employer with an open LMO was not a problem. If you came over on an IEC, you could use the six months trying to find a suitable employment situation.Alberto70 said:Hello everyone,
me and my partner are very depressed, we are unable to find the right solution.
We are thinking it through to find a solution without a drastic decision.
We plan to marry but we want to know before we do, what is the best way to do the application.
This is our current situation:
- We requested an appeal for our rejected conjugal partner application
- We plan to marry and finally live together without having to rely on stupid, horrible, distant skype conversations and other similar things.
Well, we thought of requesting a Visa Holiday Work permit (IEC, for Italy it is 6 months in duration), get married immediately (in Canada) and apply under spouse category.
We have two questions for you:
Is it possible to apply outland when a partner is formally in Canada with a Visa Holiday permit?
Is it better to apply as outland or inland?
The timing for outland is 2 months (first step) and 11 months (second step), for inland is about 20 months, right?
But in case of outland solution, could the sponsored partner work while on the working holiday permit?
After the Visa Holiday I could remain in Canada like a tourist for other 6 months, so in total 12 months and after I hope that our application will be approved.
Thanks a lot for any advice and for your reply.
Bye.
If I were in your shoes, I would start the new application now. Yes, it is a bit of work, but the second time you complete an application is much faster than the first time - hopefully you kept a copy of everything, that makes it MUCH easier. You still need to obtain new original documents, of course, so there is additional effort and expense (new application fee). Indeed, the fact that you are now married might be used to argue against your conjugal filing (although my guess is that your partner obtained the TRV to attend the hearing, so they can't really argue that persuasively.) Instead, I'd focus on getting through with the process as quickly as possible.Alberto70 said:In the month of June we had our ADR but it was rejected, however...there is a but....
, last month (August) we got married in Toronto
(we are very happy about this
).
In your opinion...what should we do?
We have an open conjugal partner application appeal, can we request a new ADR?
If not, are there any chances to win the appeal with this new proof?
Does a new application under the spouse category mean:
1) Wait (max) 60 days for the first step
2) Wait (max) 14 months for the second step (Rome)
3) Re-fill all documents, resend all documentations (photo, logs, ecc.)
4) Pay the first tax and wait for the second one reimbursement
Thank you AnaMariaAnaMaria said:Just a reminder, some forms have been updated since you applied originally. Make sure you use the latest forms (with bar code).
If the ADR was in June it's likely that the full hearing won't be as long as a year away. And you should get real legal advice in this. A hearing at the IAD is de novo, meaning that new evidence CAN be submitted. That includes your marriage. You could of course still file another application while waiting to see if you win at full hearing. computergeek is correct about this. But the relationship was already deemed genuine so probably not necessary.computergeek said:If I were in your shoes, I would start the new application now. Yes, it is a bit of work, but the second time you complete an application is much faster than the first time - hopefully you kept a copy of everything, that makes it MUCH easier. You still need to obtain new original documents, of course, so there is additional effort and expense (new application fee). Indeed, the fact that you are now married might be used to argue against your conjugal filing (although my guess is that your partner obtained the TRV to attend the hearing, so they can't really argue that persuasively.) Instead, I'd focus on getting through with the process as quickly as possible.
If you continue with the IAD process you must wait for your IAD hearing; that is likely at least a year away and there is no guarantee that you will be successful. You aren't required to abandon the IAD appeal - you could allow the new application and old application to continue at the same time. It's unusual, but allowed under the rules.
Good luck!
I agree 100% on this point and indeed I'd assumed that the OP had counsel working with the IAD appeal (I'd not go into an appeal situation without an experienced attorney).rjessome said:And you should get real legal advice in this.
I thought this was the crux of the rejection- that CIC did not believe the relationship was genuine. Of course, that rationale doesn't work so well once they're legally married.rjessome said:But the relationship was already deemed genuine so probably not necessary.