lauramark20 said:
@ on-hold, OK I am making money, but I had opportunity to work in Dubai which I could make more money back then since 2012 to 2015 than doing this in Canada. Getting salary of 10.000$ in Dubai without any taxes cut for them, is much better than getting salary in Canada. The bottom line is, that's not fair, people decide because they have plans, it's like an agreement, you can't just change after the agreement.
I'm sympathetic, because it's no fun making plans and finding that the rules have changed; but I couldn't disagree more with the specifics of your concern. You've been in Canada for about 3 years as a Temporary Worker and Canada has seen fit to give you, and your family and descendants, the permanent right to every benefit and service that the country offers, except two; and you can apply for those two in four years. The only change is that under the old rules, you would have had to wait two years to apply for them.
One good way to estimate the generosity of this grant is by comparing it to Dubai, where you'd like to go work. You could work there for 3 full generations, and your status would be the same -- servant, with all the rights that come with that status (i.e. the right to shut up and work). If you prefer money to belonging, then you can leave today and earn Dubai's money; and Canada is generous enough to let you do it for three years, and still come back here with the permanent status of a human being.
I am sorry that the jerkish policies of the current government have been so deaf to the regards and needs of immigrants; but the current government will be gone some day and the underlying generosity of Canada's bargain with immigrants will still be here. Don't miss the forest for the trees when you look at the revised rules of the citizenship application.
Finally, one of the big reasons that the rules changed is that the current government wanted to discourage 'passport hunting' -- working for 3 years, applying for a Canadian passport while looking for better-paying jobs abroad, and holding Canada in reserve as a place to retire to, after a career of not paying taxes abroad. I don't agree with them in their assessment of the seriousness of this problem, but it sounds like your situation is actually rather the type that the new regulations are trying to discourage.
Anyway, good luck! Think of the extra three years in Canada (two to become eligible to apply and one for the application) as a period of Canadianization . . . Complain about the local hockey team . . . skate in frozen ditches . . . laugh at the news from America . . .