+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445
Manonthemove,
thanx for sharing the information.
parhar51
 
Mine ecas status is still AR & DM....I dont understand what NDVO is doing....
 
I have got an interview call from NYC visa office:

Please bring the following with you at your interview:

Original police certificates from the FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigations - USA) are required for . FBI instructions can be accessed at www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/security/police-cert/north-america/united-states.asp. As the FBI may take more than 60 days to issue police certificates, these may be sent separately at a later date.

Evidence of your solvency (proof of funds) such as a detailed letter from your bank or accountant showing all your assets and liabilities or bank statements.

Evidence of your experience from your previous and/or current employers- letters from your employer describing your position and responsibilitiesyour Tax Returns for the last 4 years
Q1:Do I need updated letters/statements for proof of funds(I have to get those from my home country too!!)
Q2:I had mailed them the original work-experience certificate with the original application,will they accept the photo-copies of the same as its very difficult to contact old employers now???

Please help
Thanks
 
Seems the cases for pre-June 2010 have also been started moving in London VO as well. Below is the e-cas details of my friend from London VO. He is under NOC 0111.

We received your application for permanent residence on January 20, 2010.

We reviewed your application and sent you a letter on March 22, 2010. Please consider delays in mail delivery before contacting us.

Your application and supporting documents were received by the London England office. They are pending review.

We transferred your application to the London England office on April 1, 2010. The London England office may contact you.

Your application was reviewed and we started processing on January 13, 2012.


Wish everyone all the best!

smiling_face :)
 
Hi All I am new to this theard
I had recived 2nd AOR in sept 2010 and my status is changed RBVO to "In Process" in Dec 2011 but inner details are same as shown in "RBVO"
 
congrates for u friend

dear can u ask your frind when he recived/

Your application was reviewed and we started processing on January 13, 2012.

and wheen status change to in process

thanks
zakout
 
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?authkey=CIjkqtYF&key=0Av1EkeYofwNIdDAwMGFLZ2VCcUVVcmxKWllJMUt0WHc&hl=en&authkey=CIjkqtYF#gid=10

anyone who can update this speadsheet
 
Good to share....

Designated Medical Practitioner Handbook
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/publications/dmp-handbook/appendix-02.asp
 
New Occupational Structure
http://www5.hrsdc.gc.ca/NOC/English/NOC/2011/NewNOC.aspx
 
Hello friends,

You may go through a Spreadsheet for Pre June New Delhi applicants having "In Process with Date" status, here.....

http://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/spreadsheet-for-prejunes-of-new-delhi-vo-having-in-process-with-date-t96458.0.html;msg1284010

Please inform about any missing details & update your status too..

Thanks :)
 
Hi
A sign of some movement in my case with NDVO. This line has been added to my ECAS

Your application was reviewed and we started processing on February 16, 2012.
 
[size=10pt]Labour shortage becoming ‘desperate'[/size]

An increasingly “desperate” labour shortage is the main obstacle keeping companies from becoming more competitive.

An aging work force and growing demand for specialized skills means that hundreds of thousands of jobs are going begging despite stubbornly high unemployment, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce concludes in a report being released Wednesday.

The expected shortfall over the next decade or so includes 163,000 construction jobs, 130,000 oil workers, 60,000 nurses, 37,000 truckers, 22,000 hotel workers and 10,000 skilled steel tradespeople.

“Canada is developing a desperate labour shortage and resolving it is key to the continued success of Canadian businesses and the economy,” according to the report, Top 10 Barriers to Competitiveness.

The chamber said businesses must work closely with the federal and provincial governments to tap “underutilized” potential workers, including older workers, youth, natives, the disabled and new immigrants.

“We have to have a real sense of urgency. We're trying to sound an alarm,” Perrin Beatty, chief executive of the chamber, said in an interview.

Most Canadians are “blissfully unaware” that their future prosperity is being put at risk by emerging economic challenges, from inside and outside the country, Mr. Beatty argued.

He pointed out that Prime Minister Stephen Harper's visit to China this week is a powerful reminder that faster-moving trade rivals are rapidly moving up the economic “value chain.” He said Canada must “up its game” to keep pace.

“A lot of things we take for granted are at risk,” Mr. Beatty said.

The labour shortage is the most severe of 10 barriers facing businesses, which include discriminatory employment-insurance benefits across the country, a complex tax system that is laden with exemptions and too dependent on income and corporate taxes, lingering barriers to trade within Canada, and vague and overly restrictive foreign-investment rules.

A key challenge is to help workers laid off from shrinking industries, such as manufacturing, find work in fast-growing sectors.

That's the reason the biotech industry is launching an online skills-transfer tool this week designed to help factory workers identify expertise that could be useful to new employers. Many traditional manufacturing skills are desperately needed in biotech, including those of equipment installers and operators and monitoring and control technicians, according to BioTalent Canada, an Ottawa-based non-profit group that developed the Web resource.

“Unemployed workers simply do not know this,” said Rob Henderson, executive director of BioTalent Canada.

Immigrants are another vast pool of potential workers. They make up a fifth of the labour force and all of its recent growth. But language barriers, mismatches of skills and problems converting foreign credentials is forcing too many of them into low-paying unskilled work or unemployment, concludes a report issued this week by Toronto-Dominion Bank.

Raising the employment rate for immigrants to the same level as native-born Canadians would mean 370,000 more people working, according to TD. And if immigrants were paid the same as non-immigrants, the boost to the economy would equal $30-billion, or 2 per cent of the gross domestic product.

“Canada would gain a major competitive advantage if this country were recognized around the world as one where all migrants are successful in being able to practise their own trade and raise their standard of living,” the TD said.

Solving the dilemma is “integral to the long-term prosperity of Canada's economy,” the bank said. Better targeting of immigrants with the skills Canada needs, along with improved language training and better recognition of foreign credentials would help to close the gap, according to TD.

Source: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/economy/growth/labour-shortage-becoming-desperate/article2330196/
 
passport.jpg

I got PPR today, best of luck to all :)
 
hello sukh,

please accept my heartiest congrats for ppr !
may this open door for others,as well.
god bless all !!!!!
parhar51
 
parhar51 said:
hello sukh,

please accept my heartiest congrats for ppr !
may this open door for others,as well.
god bless all !!!!!
parhar51

Thanks very much Parhar for your kind wishes, I hope this thread gets its life back should start getting Medicals.It is worst thing to wait. But you never know. Last steps went really quick for me as well. Best of luck Parhar. Give us a good news soon. :)