PerrinAyabara said:
No, My wife is canadian and lives full-time in Canada and I was pretty specific on the application that I am a US citizen that spends a good portion of my time in Canada but not all of it. I applied outland at Buffalo because people here told me that was the best way to go.
So this is not typical?
Perrin...
I'd say: the letter that they sent you is really bizarre!
Here's the rule: a sponsor who is a Canadian citizen may sponsor his/her foreign spouse while the sponsor is living abroad, provided that the sponsor can show (strong) proofs of intention to resettle in Canada (with the sponsored person, obviously), once the sponsor's foreign spouse is granted PR.
So the facts are:
* Your wife is the sponsor, and she is Canadian
* You are the husband, an American, who is the sponsored person
The letter that they sent you would've been valid and would've made sense if your wife was living outside Canada while sponsoring you. Then it would've been their rights to want your wife to show proofs that she will settle permanently once you got your Canadian PR.
However...you told us that your wife lives full time in Canada...
So there's absolutely no reason for them to want proofs that your wife will want to settle in Canada, because she does in fact already lives there full time...
I think the following might've happened:
- The VO/CIC misunderstood your application....may be they mistakenly thought that you were the sponsor......or may be they mistakenly thought that your wife has been outside of Canada during the whole sponsorship process
or
- You might've inaccurately portrayed your situation in your application, causing the CIC/VO to misunderstand your situation.
or
- Admittedly, if we don't concentrate, the application forms can feel like they are traps.....when you finalised them, did you check to make sure that the fields were filled out correctly? It's possible that when it asks for the sponsor's name, you might've accidentally typed your name instead of your wife's.......and many other things could've gone wrong.....
If I were you, I would just send them a letter, clarifying that:
a. Your wife is a Canadian citizen, and she is sponsoring you
b. Your wife has been living in Canada the whole time, which means that there's no reason why she should provide any more proofs of her intention to
resettle in Canada (how can she resettle when she's already living in Canada full time! ;D )
c. You are the sponsored person, who's obviously going to settle in Canada permanently, or else you wouldn't have submitted the PR application
The more senior members can probably advise better...