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masimo24

Newbie
May 8, 2014
4
0
Hello my name is Moe. I am a dual citizen in between Canada and Jordan. I was born in Canada, however the last 3 years i have been working in Jordan. I am getting engaged in June to a Jordanian citizen. I am also flying back to Canada right after the engagement to begin the spouse partnership. Now we do not intend to live in Canada. I want her to be able to travel with me when i do visit and as well for when we have kids and such, God willing. I also would like to have a marriage ceremony in Canada too as most of my family resides. Please can someone help me in the right direction? What should i do to start? Thank you in advance.
 
M

mikeymyke

Guest
I believe if you're applying for your wife's PR, you have to show that both of you intend to live in Canada. Is the reason you want to get her PR is so she can travel to more countries or have access to the health care system, but still live in her home country? That's the very thing CIC is trying to avoid. Also, if she gets PR, she's supposed to remain in Canada for a certain period of time or she will lose it.
 

rhcohen2014

VIP Member
Apr 6, 2014
4,935
185
Category........
Visa Office......
Ottawa
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
March 17, 2014
Doc's Request.
April 11, 2014
AOR Received.
May 8, 2014
File Transfer...
May 9, 2014
Med's Request
upfront
Med's Done....
Nov 15, 2013
Interview........
waived
Passport Req..
July 15, 2014
VISA ISSUED...
July 25, 2014/ received August 1, 2014
LANDED..........
August 29, 2014
mikeymyke said:
I believe if you're applying for your wife's PR, you have to show that both of you intend to live in Canada. Is the reason you want to get her PR is so she can travel to more countries or have access to the health care system, but still live in her home country? That's the very thing CIC is trying to avoid. Also, if she gets PR, she's supposed to remain in Canada for a certain period of time or she will lose it.
i thought the sponsor and applicant only have to live with each other, not necessarily in canada, just together?
 

taffy7

Champion Member
May 23, 2013
2,482
69
Category........
Visa Office......
London
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
10th April 2014/June 10th 2014 application complete
Doc's Request.
09 June 2014 same doc's requested again 6th Oct 2014. docs not needed again mistake by cic
AOR Received.
sponsorship approval 05 Aug 2014
File Transfer...
05 Aug 2014
Med's Request
28 July 2015
Med's Done....
30th Dec 2013
Passport Req..
in process 18th July 2015/ DM 5/12/2015
LANDED..........
28/12/2015
She doesn't have to live with him in Canada ,as long as they live together somewhere it will go towards her P.R time. The only thing she has to do is land and get her documents for P.R.
 
M

mikeymyke

Guest
Really? I got this from CIC site:

If I live outside Canada, may I sponsor?

If you are a Canadian citizen, you may sponsor a spouse, a common-law partner or conjugal partner, or a dependent child who has no children of his or her own. However, you must demonstrate that you will live in Canada when the sponsored person becomes a permanent resident.

Note: Permanent residents residing abroad may not sponsor from outside of Canada. Canadian citizens travelling as tourists are not considered to be residing abroad.

Or is there something I'm missing? :( I think that rule kinda makes sense because there would be too many people getting PR, but living in their home countries, and using the PR for free health care, visa free travel, etc
 

Zarilenth

Hero Member
Oct 18, 2013
884
21
Ontario
Category........
Visa Office......
Ottawa
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
27-01-2014
File Transfer...
07-03-2014
Med's Done....
01-04-2014
VISA ISSUED...
23-06-2014; COPR received 27-06-2014
LANDED..........
30-07-2014
mikeymyke said:
Really? I got this from CIC site:

If I live outside Canada, may I sponsor?

If you are a Canadian citizen, you may sponsor a spouse, a common-law partner or conjugal partner, or a dependent child who has no children of his or her own. However, you must demonstrate that you will live in Canada when the sponsored person becomes a permanent resident.

Note: Permanent residents residing abroad may not sponsor from outside of Canada. Canadian citizens travelling as tourists are not considered to be residing abroad.

Or is there something I'm missing? :( I think that rule kinda makes sense because there would be too many people getting PR, but living in their home countries, and using the PR for free health care, visa free travel, etc
No, you're not missing anything! Although the other posters are right, you can live outside of Canada with your spouse after you get your PR but you can't just state on y application that your application will not be living in Canada. (Deleted wrong info)

It's a bit of a technicality I think - the whole 'being outside of Canada after you gain PR as long as it's with a Canadian' is okay in theory but I think that's more for short traveling trips or vacations, not for permanently moving away from Canada. A sponsorship application will be denied if the Sponsor cannot prove intent to move back to Canada once their applicant is approved.
 

little_apple

Hero Member
Jun 11, 2013
824
11
124
Calgary
Category........
Visa Office......
Vienna/Austria
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
April 20, 2013
Doc's Request.
June 4, 2013 & February 18, 2014
AOR Received.
May 5, 2013
File Transfer...
May 27, 2013
Med's Done....
April 4, 2013
Interview........
waived
Passport Req..
exempt
VISA ISSUED...
April 17, 2014
LANDED..........
in Calgary since March 29, 2012. Landed as PR May 3, 2014
When I landed last weekend the officer told us that I have to live 2 out of 5 years in Canada to keep my PR status. If my sponsor (a Canadian Citizen - not valid for sponsors who are "only" PR) moves to a foreign country for job reasons and I move with him then this time outside of Canada counts towards my PR time.

But I think that CIC wants to avoid that people take advantage of this, obtain PR and then move back to their home country. That's why they want to see that the sponsor will move back to Canada after PR approval.
 

taffy7

Champion Member
May 23, 2013
2,482
69
Category........
Visa Office......
London
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
10th April 2014/June 10th 2014 application complete
Doc's Request.
09 June 2014 same doc's requested again 6th Oct 2014. docs not needed again mistake by cic
AOR Received.
sponsorship approval 05 Aug 2014
File Transfer...
05 Aug 2014
Med's Request
28 July 2015
Med's Done....
30th Dec 2013
Passport Req..
in process 18th July 2015/ DM 5/12/2015
LANDED..........
28/12/2015
It's a double edge sword .He is a Canadian citizen so they can live outside the country and she will still be able to apply her time to her P.R. status but on the other hand they want intent to move to Canada .I am sure it won't go down well with Cic if they sate this in their application.
 

truesmile

Champion Member
Jun 7, 2012
2,622
94
Category........
Visa Office......
MNL
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
25-05-2012
AOR Received.
18-07-2012
File Transfer...
24-07-2012
Med's Done....
18-05-2012
Interview........
WAIVED
Passport Req..
05-12-2012
VISA ISSUED...
08-01-2013
LANDED..........
02-02-2013
Zarilenth said:
No, you're not missing anything! Although the other posters are right, you can live outside of Canada with your spouse after you get your PR, and it will count towards your 'four years' before you can apply for Citizenship, I don't think you can just state on your immigration application that you will not be living in Canada.
That's NOT true. It counts towards your 2 years out of 5 for PR residency obligations but it does not count towards "Canadian Citizenship".
 

canuck_in_uk

VIP Member
May 4, 2012
31,553
7,204
Visa Office......
London
App. Filed.......
06/12
masimo24 said:
Now we do not intend to live in Canada. I want her to be able to travel with me when i do visit
As the others have said, this will be an issue. You are required to prove that you intend to return to Canada permanently in order for your spouse to be granted PR. When a person has been living outside of Canada for several years, CIC usually requires fairly solid proof of the intent to return.

If you only intend for her to visit, she should apply for a multiple-entry TRV.
 

fandv

Hero Member
Aug 8, 2011
778
11
Category........
Visa Office......
Singapore
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
22 Jan 2013
AOR Received.
CPC-M: None. Singapore: 25 Apr 2013
File Transfer...
17 Apr 2013
Med's Request
2nd request: 5 Feb 2014
Med's Done....
1st: 12 Dec 2012. 2nd: 11 Feb 2014
Interview........
Waived
Passport Req..
14 Feb 2014 and also e-CAS changed to "In Process" on that day. Passport got to Singapore: 12 Mar '14
VISA ISSUED...
Decision Made on eCAS: 12 April 2014. Visa n COPR issued 8 April 2014, received 16 May 2014.
LANDED..........
20 May 2014. PR card arrived on 29 July 2014.
To those of you who are confused (not your fault; the rules can be confusing and contradictory), let me explain all of the rules ;D

DURING THE SPONSORSHIP PROCESS

If the sponsor is a Canadian citizen, he/she IS ALLOWED to be outside Canada, as long as he/she provides proofs that he/she will reside in Canada once the sponsored spouse is granted PR.

Reference: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/guides/3900ETOC.asp (Ctrl F on your web browser and type "If I live outside Canada")


AFTER THE PR HAS BEEN GRANTED

Well, in general, the PR has to be inside Canada for at least 730 days out of every 5 rolling years. Else the PR status gets cancelled.


***BUT***

- If accompanying a Canadian citizen spouse abroad, then the sponsored spouse's time outside of Canada is counted towards maintaining PR status (but not towards getting citizenship). It doesn't matter who the sponsor works for. It doesn't even matter whether or not the sponsor works at all.

- If accompanying a Canadian PR spouse abroad, then the sponsored spouse's time outside of Canada is counted towards maintaining PR status (but not towards getting citizenship) only if the sponsor works for a Canadian business or public service.

More details here (Ctrl F and look for "Time spent outside of Canada")

http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/guides/5445ETOC.asp
 

canuck_in_uk

VIP Member
May 4, 2012
31,553
7,204
Visa Office......
London
App. Filed.......
06/12
fandv said:
DURING THE SPONSORSHIP PROCESS

The sponsor IS ALLOWED to be outside Canada, as long as he/she provides proofs that he/she will reside in Canada once the sponsored spouse is granted PR.

Reference: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/guides/3900ETOC.asp (Ctrl F on your web browser and type "If I live outside Canada")
Not entirely correct. If the sponsor is a Canadian citizen, s/he is allowed to be outside of Canada during a sponsorship app. If the sponsor is a PR, s/he MUST be residing in Canada throughout the process.
 

Zarilenth

Hero Member
Oct 18, 2013
884
21
Ontario
Category........
Visa Office......
Ottawa
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
27-01-2014
File Transfer...
07-03-2014
Med's Done....
01-04-2014
VISA ISSUED...
23-06-2014; COPR received 27-06-2014
LANDED..........
30-07-2014
truesmile said:
That's NOT true. It counts towards your 2 years out of 5 for PR residency obligations but it does not count towards "Canadian Citizenship".
Ah sorry I thought if you were with a Canadian citizen it did. I thought someone on here told me that :(
 

zardoz

VIP Member
Feb 2, 2013
13,298
2,167
Canada
Category........
FAM
Visa Office......
London
App. Filed.......
16-02-2013
VISA ISSUED...
31-07-2013
LANDED..........
09-11-2013
The bottom line is this. If you don't intend to reside in Canada once the PR is granted, don't apply for sponsorship.
CIC are becoming much stricter about the standard of proof of this particular "intent" clause. If they are not entirely convinced, they will refuse the application. It's as simple as that.
 

jomz

Hero Member
May 3, 2011
723
52
First things first. The OP states he is getting engaged, therefore if not already common law cannot apply for sponsorship. His fiancee can apply for a visit visa if they want to travel to Canada for a visit and have their wedding here. I can't comment on chances of approval for a visit visa, it varies greatly.