Hey all,
I'm hoping someone can shed some light on this situation. Background: I'm a Canadian citizen sponsoring my spouse, who's a U.S. citizen, for permanent residence. We were married in Canada on January 20, 2013. He's currently residing with me in Vancouver, BC as a visitor and has been here since November 30, 2012. We are applying outland, and it has been a slow process. Originally, he extended his visitor status in May 2013 for 14 months (until August 23, 2014). The intention (and what he wrote in the included letter) was to prepare and file the PR application and that 14 months should be enough time to process it. Well, that didn't happen. We had just moved cities when we filed for the extension, so in addition to getting settled in a new place, we also went on our honeymoon, traveled to visit a bunch of my family over the coming months, etc. Then his FBI police certificate expired (had no idea it was only valid for 3 months instead of 6). We both struggled with depression and anxiety pretty bad last winter and spring (small town kids in the big city=more stress), which kept us from completing the application in a timely manner. We have most of it completed now, just need to flesh out some details and complete the medical exam. He extended his status again before it expired (for 6 months only this time), explaining the situation to CIC (everything I just mentioned, except all the depression details, but he told them I was having health problems, which is true). At the time we extended, he was awaiting a new FBI police certificate in the mail, and told them this as well--told them exactly what we had left to do. He requested 6 months for final preparation and initial processing of the application, after which time he could extend further if needed.
I'm hoping there won't be any problems extending his status; I spoke with another forum member who had been through multiple extensions before filing the PR with no issues, though their situation was different and they were shorter extensions. I am hoping CIC will be understanding of our situation even though we failed to do what we intended in that time. I checked the online times and right now, they are being very slow processing paper applications, so it could be weeks before we hear anything back on his extension of status. We got the police certificate a few weeks ago, but it took forever to reach us, and the date on the document was weeks earlier, which has given us little time to actually use it (we were also away from home for a while). So it's expiring in 2-3 weeks, and we still haven't scheduled the medical exam--we were hoping to do it in Victoria, because we're planning another move right now closer to that area (we have essentially reached our limit with Vancouver--it's become a huge source of stress at this point). We have even begun looking at places. Basically, there is a lot happening at once, which leaves us little time to complete everything before the police certificate expires (again), and I keep going around in circles in my head wondering what to tackle first. So here's what I'm wondering:
1. How long before the FBI police certificate expires can we send it in? Should it be 3 months (maximum) before the postmark date, or the date they receive it? Also, does the Canadian one expire? He got one of those, too, back when we got the first FBI one, but the guys at the fingerprinting place said the Canadian one doesn't expire, and that he wouldn't need a new one. Obviously, if he'll need to get any new certificates, the process will be delayed again (though we shouldn't have any trouble getting the application in before February, which is when his new extension will end--if they grant it).
2. Should we even bother filing the PR application until we've heard something back about the extension? I would hate to change all our plans and frantically fill out paperwork and pay those huge PR application fees only to get a letter in the mail saying they denied his visitor extension. Though we are applying outland, so would it even matter? Could it improve his case for extension if they noticed his PR application on file by the time they start processing? Could it harm his chances if it's not?
3. How worried should I be, realistically? Ha... I'm wondering if we should even attempt to move (to an island, no less) before we know the answer--money IS an issue right now, so I don't want to go to all the trouble and cost of moving and then find out we have to move again back to the States (we will be sticking together if that happens!) Am I being paranoid? What are the odds that they'll deny his extension? (Please, no unnecessary fearmongering, I do enough of that to myself!)
Thanks very much in advance! Looking forward to all your responses.
I'm hoping someone can shed some light on this situation. Background: I'm a Canadian citizen sponsoring my spouse, who's a U.S. citizen, for permanent residence. We were married in Canada on January 20, 2013. He's currently residing with me in Vancouver, BC as a visitor and has been here since November 30, 2012. We are applying outland, and it has been a slow process. Originally, he extended his visitor status in May 2013 for 14 months (until August 23, 2014). The intention (and what he wrote in the included letter) was to prepare and file the PR application and that 14 months should be enough time to process it. Well, that didn't happen. We had just moved cities when we filed for the extension, so in addition to getting settled in a new place, we also went on our honeymoon, traveled to visit a bunch of my family over the coming months, etc. Then his FBI police certificate expired (had no idea it was only valid for 3 months instead of 6). We both struggled with depression and anxiety pretty bad last winter and spring (small town kids in the big city=more stress), which kept us from completing the application in a timely manner. We have most of it completed now, just need to flesh out some details and complete the medical exam. He extended his status again before it expired (for 6 months only this time), explaining the situation to CIC (everything I just mentioned, except all the depression details, but he told them I was having health problems, which is true). At the time we extended, he was awaiting a new FBI police certificate in the mail, and told them this as well--told them exactly what we had left to do. He requested 6 months for final preparation and initial processing of the application, after which time he could extend further if needed.
I'm hoping there won't be any problems extending his status; I spoke with another forum member who had been through multiple extensions before filing the PR with no issues, though their situation was different and they were shorter extensions. I am hoping CIC will be understanding of our situation even though we failed to do what we intended in that time. I checked the online times and right now, they are being very slow processing paper applications, so it could be weeks before we hear anything back on his extension of status. We got the police certificate a few weeks ago, but it took forever to reach us, and the date on the document was weeks earlier, which has given us little time to actually use it (we were also away from home for a while). So it's expiring in 2-3 weeks, and we still haven't scheduled the medical exam--we were hoping to do it in Victoria, because we're planning another move right now closer to that area (we have essentially reached our limit with Vancouver--it's become a huge source of stress at this point). We have even begun looking at places. Basically, there is a lot happening at once, which leaves us little time to complete everything before the police certificate expires (again), and I keep going around in circles in my head wondering what to tackle first. So here's what I'm wondering:
1. How long before the FBI police certificate expires can we send it in? Should it be 3 months (maximum) before the postmark date, or the date they receive it? Also, does the Canadian one expire? He got one of those, too, back when we got the first FBI one, but the guys at the fingerprinting place said the Canadian one doesn't expire, and that he wouldn't need a new one. Obviously, if he'll need to get any new certificates, the process will be delayed again (though we shouldn't have any trouble getting the application in before February, which is when his new extension will end--if they grant it).
2. Should we even bother filing the PR application until we've heard something back about the extension? I would hate to change all our plans and frantically fill out paperwork and pay those huge PR application fees only to get a letter in the mail saying they denied his visitor extension. Though we are applying outland, so would it even matter? Could it improve his case for extension if they noticed his PR application on file by the time they start processing? Could it harm his chances if it's not?
3. How worried should I be, realistically? Ha... I'm wondering if we should even attempt to move (to an island, no less) before we know the answer--money IS an issue right now, so I don't want to go to all the trouble and cost of moving and then find out we have to move again back to the States (we will be sticking together if that happens!) Am I being paranoid? What are the odds that they'll deny his extension? (Please, no unnecessary fearmongering, I do enough of that to myself!)
Thanks very much in advance! Looking forward to all your responses.