Thanks buddy! Yours is also in the corner. Hopefully, 2 years later we all together apply for citizenship.uwaterloo said:Congratsssssss, the journey is finally over. Wish you a happy life in Canada as a PR ;D
Thanks buddy! Yours is also in the corner. Hopefully, 2 years later we all together apply for citizenship.uwaterloo said:Congratsssssss, the journey is finally over. Wish you a happy life in Canada as a PR ;D
congratszorroo said:Guys, I received my PR card today. Here it is my timeline:
Landed: January 19, 2016 at Vancouver
PRC received on March 8, 2016
No photo re-submission request
Good luck for everybody who is waiting!
I am here to help anybody who needs it. Thanks again for all your supports and helps.
Cheers
Good for you. May be it has slowed down a bit when I called, I was gettin an appointment for March first week and I landed via border on 24 janRenozzz said:Hi All,
I just want to share my experience with everyone. It might help those who lives in Edmonton and planning to go at border for landing. I received my CoPR on 26th Feb (Friday evening) and i called CIC call centre on 29th Feb (Monday Morning) to get the appointment for landing. I was told that currently wait time is 6 to 8 weeks to get call from CIC office to book an appointment and if it is ok with you, we can send your appointment request to your local CIC office in Edmonton. I was not in hurry so i said please send the request to Edmonton office for appointment. Very next day on 1st Mar I got call from CIC office Edmonton and they booked me on 8th March for landing appointment. It hardly took 45 mins (35 mins wait time and 10 mins with officer) there to complete all the process.
I would suggest to call CIC office for appointment instead of going to border for landing.
No worries, I cannot log in with my COPR #. But I got the cards for my wife and me yesterday 8) No photo requestAlialiali said:congrats to everyone who has received PRC
I have a silly question: I know that ecas is not important but it just came to my attention that I cannot log in using my COPR Number. is it just me? could it be because of the nice officer hasn't processed my application yet? maybe that's why it takes forever for some people to receive their cards?
Thanks boss +1.uwaterloo said:No worries, I cannot log in with my COPR #. But I got the cards for my wife and me yesterday 8) No photo request
Here is my timeline:
Landed at Niagara Falls on Jan 21, 2016
Cards issued on Mar. 8, 2016
Rcvd on Mar. 15, 2016 (@Kitchener, ON)
Hope everyone good luck!
Congrats buddy! Finally, your journey is over too. Good luck with your life in Canadauwaterloo said:No worries, I cannot log in with my COPR #. But I got the cards for my wife and me yesterday 8) No photo request
Here is my timeline:
Landed at Niagara Falls on Jan 21, 2016
Cards issued on Mar. 8, 2016
Rcvd on Mar. 15, 2016 (@Kitchener, ON)
Hope everyone good luck!
Not really,kwyatt75 said:Well, now that I have been issued COPR and will be landing in the near future, I am thinking about the parent sponsor path. It's good to see that the current government is making that easier in that they are going to be increasing the number of allowed applications per year. However, in beginning to look into this matter it appears from what I am seeing that there is some requirement to demonstrate 3 years of income at the minimum level based on family size. From what I am seeing it seems that to prove that you have to submit the past 3 years of Canadian tax returns. That seems to me then by proxy that this is adding 3 years to the whole process. Am I seeing this right? Do you have to be living in the country for 3 years (and have tax filings) before you can even apply to sponsor your parent? Is there any other way to do this sooner? It is such a long process I was hoping to do it ASAP after I land. Any thoughts/ideas?
Thanks!
Wow. So, in reality it is 4 years to because you have to have filed for 3 years. Then with the 5 years processing time that means it's more like a 9 year period. That's such a long time. Especially for a parent/grandparent who may be older already. I don't suppose you can use US, IRS filings from previous years to show you meet the income. It almost seems it would be better for them to use another quicker stream for them to immigrate to Canada...express entry, or enroll in classes and come as a student...or even as a temporary worker. I know there is the Super Visa, but then they don't qualify for healthcare. I wish there was some sort of immigration stream for retired persons who already have a pension and could move and support themselves with their retirement.Diplomatru said:Not really,
It's 3 years to meet LICO eligibility (either for you or your co-signer aka spouse) + 5 years processing time. Also the process of application submission is luck-based and dependant on when the courier makes it to CPC-M because of cap.
I hear you, but it is what it is :-(kwyatt75 said:Wow. So, in reality it is 4 years to because you have to have filed for 3 years. Then with the 5 years processing time that means it's more like a 9 year period. That's such a long time. Especially for a parent/grandparent who may be older already. I don't suppose you can use US, IRS filings from previous years to show you meet the income. It almost seems it would be better for them to use another quicker stream for them to immigrate to Canada...express entry, or enroll in classes and come as a student...or even as a temporary worker. I know there is the Super Visa, but then they don't qualify for healthcare. I wish there was some sort of immigration stream for retired persons who already have a pension and could move and support themselves with their retirement.