candy00 said:
I applied under CEC and FSTP and I have a spouse and 2 kids.
They are asking about a travel document in which I have describe my husband's travel history. The problem is that my husband visited the United States of America for the last two years almost every week because he is truck driver and he does long hauls and short hauls on I94s (We are European citizens and we don't need a visa in order to visit the USA). How can I make a document which shows my husband's travel history?
Please help me.
Thank you.
Hey! I'm a European citizen myself and also travel to the states every now and then on I-94s. Before I start, to clarify: I have NOT received such a request (yet) but here is what I would do based on my general CIC experience:
I-94s are valid for up to 90 days. So about every 90 days, your husband should have received a new stamp in his passport by US border officials, including a handwritten date of expiry for the I94. Even when your husband returned the I94 forms at the Canadian border (which he should do), he still should have the stamps in his passport.
Based on this, this is what I would do: First of all, scan the passport of your husband (bio page and the pages with the US stamps). Also attach a letter with this:
- Introductory statement (who this is about etc)
- Explain the situation ("I am a truck driver, driving to the states etc...")
- Point to the stamps in the attached scans
- Briefly Explain the I-94 process (Just like two sentences, I am sure CIC knows of this)
- List the exact travels made with each I-94 ("with the I-94 issued on YYYY-MM-DD, I traveled to the states on these dates", be as precise as possible, border crossings etc. in case you still know them. If you don't know all the details explain why, e.g. because of frequent trips etc. Don't guesstimate! If you don't know it anymore, you don't know it anymore)
- Let your husband sign the whole thing
Again, this is what I would do. It is not something I picked up somewhere else/confirmed with anyone. It's purely based on my experience with I-94s and such.