Thanks Sophieee. Good luck to everyonesophieee said:See this:
http://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/-t181359.0.html
Thanks Sophieee. Good luck to everyonesophieee said:See this:
http://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/-t181359.0.html
But how come issuing aips are based on chronological dates? If the files for aip issuance are already on cues, why cant they just follow that order? I know not all have owp attached but still...GustavesF said:This is discouraging. Why exactly is CIC allowed to operate like like decrepit system of the 1920's?
Why do "automated responses" take between 2 and 10 months to send out?
Why can't files be stored in chronological order?
Why aren't files stored in something more precise than a "heap"?
The picture I develop in my head when I hear "rather devote the resources to give the OWPs than sorting them in chronological order" sounds like the files are stored in an obstacle course or scavenger hunt, and it *actually* takes rigorous effort to locate them. Like individual files are affixed to irritable birds that CIC agents literally need to subdue in order to recover.
I don't understand, there have to be some best practices in place.
Is it because we're dealing with a government union? Is that why they can't hire people, is that why they work so slowly, is that why processes haven't progressed along with the rest of humanity?
LeBon ...its a good question ... has anyone been denied? I have no knowledge of anyone being denied, but i don't know many who have tried from a non-exempt country. Yesterday I had an interesting conversation with a CIC agent, who actually spent a considerable time on the phone. Many would already know this, but I will repeat nonetheless so excuse me. My situation was that there was a family death in my spouse's family (applicant) and she's stuck till the PR card is in hand or travel and accept the risk. We are from a non-exempt country. I am a PR of course. I was trying to understand from the CIC agent the process and the risks associated.LeBon said:In my time in Canada, I've had four study permits and I'm now on my third work permit (PGWP, IEC and Pilot). Every single one has said "does not permit re-entry". I've crossed to the US and flown home to the UK 20 or 30 times in total. If I was not from a visa exempt country, maybe I would be less confident, but I'm from the UK so I'm really not worried. Ponga is conservative on these things as is his right, my experience has been different.
Of course Blackdisc, you're correct being visa exempt doesn't guarantee anything. My experience is conditional on being a good little temporary resident for cic! I've never been out of status or broken any laws. And actually did experience difficulty entering as a visitor although it always worked out ok eventually. I certainly wouldn't encourage leaving if you are a visitor or on implied status. I have a work permit and a job paying taxes, it's not in Canada's interest to have me unable to work because I spent weekend in Vermont!Blackdisc said:LeBon ...its a good question ... has anyone been denied? I have no knowledge of anyone being denied, but i don't know many who have tried from a non-exempt country. Yesterday I had an interesting conversation with a CIC agent, who actually spent a considerable time on the phone. Many would already know this, but I will repeat nonetheless so excuse me. My situation was that there was a family death in my spouse's family (applicant) and she's stuck till the PR card is in hand or travel and accept the risk. We are from a non-exempt country. I am a PR of course. I was trying to understand from the CIC agent the process and the risks associated.
How does RE-ENTRY to Canada work for INLAND applicants from VISA non exempt countries?
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Any person is free to leave Canada at any time during their inland processing; there are no restrictions in leaving. The caveat is during re-entry. Because as everyone knows, if you are denied re-entry, you will lose your inland applicant status. Technically you have 2 hoops to jump for re-entry.
Hoop # 1:
As an inland applicant, if having a visitor record of entry (technically the paper that you get mailed by CIC to have status in Canada while you wait in perpetuity for your DM), will not enable to get back or even board a flight back to Canada. So once you exit Canada and get to your home country, you need to get a visa through the local Canadian embassy. This Visa which will be affixed to your passport will allow you to board the aircraft and get to a Canadian port. But Wait !!! There is one more caveat! The visa does not guarantee you re-entry into Canada. It just means that you can board a commercial carrier to reach a Canadian port of entry. Just that. Ha!
Hoop # 2:
Once you land in a Canadian port you have to jump through the second hoop. At the port of re-entry, now the CBSA officer will chat with you and you have to make your case. Being an inland applicant, Some of the things they will look for are ....... Have you always maintained your status in a legal way? Have you broken the law in anyway? (Of course this is not an exhaustive list, but if you have played by all rules correctly, its suggested that the officer will have little grounds to deny you to get back in Canada and continue your wait for your inland application). By the way the 2nd hoop of chatting with the CBSA officer applies to inland applicant re-entering Canada from a visa-exempt country (such as UK) as well. Being from a visa exempt country may possibly make the questioning easier or eliminate the need for questioning, but if the officer has any reason to believe that you have not played by the rules, it may not end in a re-entry in such a situation.
I wish that CIC issues multiple re-entry visa by default to inland applicants from visa-non exempt countries and levels the playing field with those from visa exempt countries. This is at the very least. An inland applicant without an OWP is waiting unproductively and re-entry visa will alleviate a lot of concerns.
Please also note that only two types of people CANNOT BE DENIED RE-ENTRY. They are the Permanent Residence Card holders and Citizens. Everyone ELSE is subject to CBSA officer decision. Coming from a visa-exempt country does not give one the privilege for RE-ENTRY. but it does let you get to a Canadian port on a Commercial carrier, without having to apply for a visa at your homeland.
This is as per my understanding, I hope that I am accurate in this and that this is helpful for those from visa non-exempt countries.
BlackDisc
My Wife has a Muilti-Entry Visa, and even then, she doesnt want to leave/re-entry. Just the thought of a possible Deny of Entry freaks her out!.Blackdisc said:LeBon ...its a good question ... has anyone been denied? I have no knowledge of anyone being denied, but i don't know many who have tried from a non-exempt country. Yesterday I had an interesting conversation with a CIC agent, who actually spent a considerable time on the phone. Many would already know this, but I will repeat nonetheless so excuse me. My situation was that there was a family death in my spouse's family (applicant) and she's stuck till the PR card is in hand or travel and accept the risk. We are from a non-exempt country. I am a PR of course. I was trying to understand from the CIC agent the process and the risks associated.
How does RE-ENTRY to Canada work for INLAND applicants from VISA non exempt countries?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Any person is free to leave Canada at any time during their inland processing; there are no restrictions in leaving. The caveat is during re-entry. Because as everyone knows, if you are denied re-entry, you will lose your inland applicant status. Technically you have 2 hoops to jump for re-entry.
Hoop # 1:
As an inland applicant, if having a visitor record of entry (technically the paper that you get mailed by CIC to have status in Canada while you wait in perpetuity for your DM), will not enable to get back or even board a flight back to Canada. So once you exit Canada and get to your home country, you need to get a visa through the local Canadian embassy. This Visa which will be affixed to your passport will allow you to board the aircraft and get to a Canadian port. But Wait !!! There is one more caveat! The visa does not guarantee you re-entry into Canada. It just means that you can board a commercial carrier to reach a Canadian port of entry. Just that. Ha!
Hoop # 2:
Once you land in a Canadian port you have to jump through the second hoop. At the port of re-entry, now the CBSA officer will chat with you and you have to make your case. Being an inland applicant, Some of the things they will look for are ....... Have you always maintained your status in a legal way? Have you broken the law in anyway? (Of course this is not an exhaustive list, but if you have played by all rules correctly, its suggested that the officer will have little grounds to deny you to get back in Canada and continue your wait for your inland application). By the way the 2nd hoop of chatting with the CBSA officer applies to inland applicant re-entering Canada from a visa-exempt country (such as UK) as well. Being from a visa exempt country may possibly make the questioning easier or eliminate the need for questioning, but if the officer has any reason to believe that you have not played by the rules, it may not end in a re-entry in such a situation.
I wish that CIC issues multiple re-entry visa by default to inland applicants from visa-non exempt countries and levels the playing field with those from visa exempt countries. This is at the very least. An inland applicant without an OWP is waiting unproductively and re-entry visa will alleviate a lot of concerns.
Please also note that only two types of people CANNOT BE DENIED RE-ENTRY. They are the Permanent Residence Card holders and Citizens. Everyone ELSE is subject to CBSA officer decision. Coming from a visa-exempt country does not give one the privilege for RE-ENTRY. but it does let you get to a Canadian port on a Commercial carrier, without having to apply for a visa at your homeland.
This is as per my understanding, I hope that I am accurate in this and that this is helpful for those from visa non-exempt countries.
BlackDisc
Given the current frustrating wait times, are you having no option other than inland? When we applied inland the wait times was 6-8 months. Now CIC is running at 24 months as you might know with a track record of 1-2 week processing for 1 day worth of applications, leaving alone the attitude it caries for inland applicants.vinotintazo said:My Wife has a Muilti-Entry Visa, and even then, she doesnt want to leave/re-entry. Just the thought of a possible Deny of Entry freaks her out!.
We're submitting our inland next week. Her 6 month Visitor Status expires Feb 10.
I took mine at the London drugs at WEM , paid around 12 - 13 dollars . Just ask for a permanent residence photo , they will know , but bring your specifications just to make sure . God bless us allshyla36 said:Hi. Those who landed in Edmonton, where did you have your photo taken? Just wanna make sure i get the right ones.
Including the OWP app does give you implied status (as long as it gets to cic before Feb 10) but it's worth thinking about extended the visitor status. It could be seen as a waste of money but, to us, it was worth the piece of mind of knowing nothing can accidentally make you out of status.vinotintazo said:My Wife has a Muilti-Entry Visa, and even then, she doesnt want to leave/re-entry. Just the thought of a possible Deny of Entry freaks her out!.
We're submitting our inland next week. Her 6 month Visitor Status expires Feb 10.
What was ur longest time u were gone for without ur spouse?LeBon said:In my time in Canada, I've had four study permits and I'm now on my third work permit (PGWP, IEC and Pilot). Every single one has said "does not permit re-entry". I've crossed to the US and flown home to the UK 20 or 30 times in total. If I was not from a visa exempt country, maybe I would be less confident, but I'm from the UK so I'm really not worried. Ponga is conservative on these things as is his right, my experience has been different.
Since we've been married we've never been apart.ging910 said:What was ur longest time u were gone for without ur spouse?
Thanks as always tilikunTilikun said:I took mine at the London drugs at WEM , paid around 12 - 13 dollars . Just ask for a permanent residence photo , they will know , but bring your specifications just to make sure . God bless us all
Slight error here.LeBon said:Including the OWP app does give you implied status (as long as it gets to cic before Feb 10) but it's worth thinking about extended the visitor status. It could be seen as a waste of money but, to us, it was worth the piece of mind of knowing nothing can accidentally make you out of status.
This begs the question: Why are we being fed complete garbage?shyla36 said:But how come issuing aips are based on chronological dates? If the files for aip issuance are already on cues, why cant they just follow that order? I know not all have owp attached but still...
I am assuming when they received these files, they are put to certain order according to their dates.