cjduguay said:
We were married in the US, I am a US citizen, he is Canadian. I real that the requirement for proof of income was waived for a spouse. Is this correct? We are an older couple and do not have a lot of income but we want to be together in Canada.
Yes, the minimum income requirement is waived for spousal/common-law/dependent child sponsorships - but CIC still asks for an Option C printout (to make sure the sponsor is not on social assistance or in an undischarged bankruptcy), and they do ask for a letter from an employer. If you're retired, he could probably submit income statements from benefits, savings, etc. The concern is whether he's able to support you so that you do not have to apply for social assistance.
cjduguay said:
Also, I do not ever want to give up my US citizenship. Will I have too if I become a Canadian citizen also?
Answered already - you don't have to become a Canadian citizen in the first place - you can remain a PR as long as you meet the 2 years in every 5 year period residency requirement, or you live exclusively with your Canadian citizen sponsor/spouse outside Canada. If you do take citizenship, you do not have to give up your US citizenship. You will become a dual citizen.
cjduguay said:
One more, for now, I am leaving in 6 months to satisfy my visa, how long must I stay out of Canada before I may return?
Reconsider leaving to extend your status - if you are in a qualifying relationship (marriage), you have a PR application in process, and you can prove your original entry date, you can apply before the six months expiration of that status to extend it by filing
this extension application. If you are filing an
inland PR application (not recommended for US citizens) file the extension application (don't forget to pay the fees) WITH the inland PR ap, in the same envelope. This gives you "implied status" to remain in Canada legally until they make a decision on first stage approval of your inland ap (5-6 months). Then it's another 6-12 months before you're finalized as a PR.
If you are filing an
outland PR ap, which you can do even while staying with your spouse in Canada, simply mail the extension application to CPC-Vegreville so that it's received BEFORE your current status expires. That gives you the same implied status to remain in Canada until they make a decision on the extension ap. That takes about 75 days. If you leave Canada, though, your "implied status" ends.