YYC787
Star Member
- Sep 4, 2014
- 4
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- New Delhi
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 29-Sep-2014
- AOR Received.
- 19-Nov-2014
- File Transfer...
- In Process since 12-Aug-2015
- Med's Request
- Sent 18-Sep-2015...never received. Re-sent 17-Dec-2015
- Med's Done....
- July 2014; Remeds done Dec 2015
- Interview........
- WAIVED acc to GCMS notes
- Passport Req..
- 20-Apr-2016
- VISA ISSUED...
- Passport sent; waiting...
Re: Forgot to notify CIC about getting married before receiving PR
This is unrelated and off-topic, but I don't even understand why people feel the need to use an immigration consultant...you don't have to be a lawyer to understand this stuff. Just fill out the forms, get your documentation in order, and you're fine. Why would you waste thousands of dollars on an immigration lawyer who has absolutely no control over the immigration process? If a lawyer says "we guarantee that we can get your PR done quicker", they are lying through their teeth.
But it all comes down to just being aware of the process, really. I'm not trying to be unsympathetic to the OP, but you're absolutely right. In my limited time on this forum, I have seen a huge number of threads where the person tried to skate around the system, deliberately ignored proper procedures, or just plain didn't know how to read simple instructions.
There was one thread where the OP was planning to get married to someone who was living in Canada on an expired work visa, and wanted to know how to sponsor them for permanent residency. The work visa had expired two years prior, and the person was living in Canada illegally. REALLY?!
People like that are the very reason why genuine applicants have to suffer and wait for 2 years!
Sorry for the rant...and again, I'm not trying to be unsympathetic to the OP's situation. But I have to be honest...when I read this thread, my first thought was, "How did you just happen to forget to mention the fact that you got married? How is that even possible?!"
OP, I really do sympathize with your situation. But you're sort of between a rock and a hard place right now. Like others have said before me, your best bet is to have your spouse apply under Express Entry (although this may put your own PR in jeopardy for misrepresentation), or give up your PR and start all over again.
Maybe there should be a grace period, but one could argue that people would take advantage of such a policy. They would apply as a single person, and then add a spouse at the very end, to cut down on the processing time.kangamoose said:The amount of threads about this that I have read lately is crazy. Even on the express entry forum, people don't seem to understand they need to declare everyone. CIC is either not making it clear enough during the application process or people just ignore it (or deliberately lie) and hope for the best.
Maybe if CIC had a "grace period" whereby new PR's who landed without declaring family members could still have them added after landing, with the understanding that if the family member failed medical or background checks etc the whole application is rejected and the new PR has status revoked. It would save a lot of heartache for families and wouldn't be a loophole for medical inadmissibility.
This is unrelated and off-topic, but I don't even understand why people feel the need to use an immigration consultant...you don't have to be a lawyer to understand this stuff. Just fill out the forms, get your documentation in order, and you're fine. Why would you waste thousands of dollars on an immigration lawyer who has absolutely no control over the immigration process? If a lawyer says "we guarantee that we can get your PR done quicker", they are lying through their teeth.
But it all comes down to just being aware of the process, really. I'm not trying to be unsympathetic to the OP, but you're absolutely right. In my limited time on this forum, I have seen a huge number of threads where the person tried to skate around the system, deliberately ignored proper procedures, or just plain didn't know how to read simple instructions.
There was one thread where the OP was planning to get married to someone who was living in Canada on an expired work visa, and wanted to know how to sponsor them for permanent residency. The work visa had expired two years prior, and the person was living in Canada illegally. REALLY?!
People like that are the very reason why genuine applicants have to suffer and wait for 2 years!
Sorry for the rant...and again, I'm not trying to be unsympathetic to the OP's situation. But I have to be honest...when I read this thread, my first thought was, "How did you just happen to forget to mention the fact that you got married? How is that even possible?!"
OP, I really do sympathize with your situation. But you're sort of between a rock and a hard place right now. Like others have said before me, your best bet is to have your spouse apply under Express Entry (although this may put your own PR in jeopardy for misrepresentation), or give up your PR and start all over again.