CharlieD10
VIP Member
- Sep 5, 2010
- 185
- 124
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- KGN
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 15-02-2011
- File Transfer...
- 09-05-2011
- Med's Done....
- 17-01-2011, 08-03-2012
- Interview........
- Waived
- Passport Req..
- 30-3-2012
- VISA ISSUED...
- 13-04-2012
- LANDED..........
- 06-06-2012
Good morning!blondie1216 said:Happy Wednesday everyone,
So i read the manuals (confusing mostly). What I was trying to find was how the process from cic then from the vo. It is 2 separate processes correct? It seems if I am reading correctly, that they check sponsorship requirements again in stage 2. Then all other stuff like medicals, police records, for fraud etc.
Also does Kingston have their own manuals because Kingston doesn't really abide by the time limits etc stated or the way they handle in terms of updating, AORs etc.
CharlieD maybe you can explain better...
Blondie, yes, you have it correctly. The two steps are separate, and yes KG will evaluate the sponsor again. The reason for this is that a sponsor must remain eligible to sponsor for the entire time it takes for a decision to be made on the application, which is essentially when the applicant lands and is granted permanent resident status.
That is why sponsors who are PRs must continue resident in Canada until their spouses land, and that is why citizen/PR spouses who are sponsoring cannot access welfare, declare bankruptcy and so on during the processing time. All these matters of eligibility will again be assessed and if the sponsor is not eligible when the applicant is to receive their visa, even if they were found eligible initially at CPC-M, the applicant will be refused a visa.
As a side note and for example purposes: when I was landing, the immigration officer that processed me said the week before he had to turn someone back because their spouse had begun accessing welfare after his visa was issued but before he landed. So nothing is final until the applicant actually shows up in Canada and has their visa in hand to be examined at the border.
KG will not have a separate manual, but what they will have are local procedures specific to dealing with Jamaicans. Remember that although the operational procedures are the same across the board, how the officers will be able to access the information they need and how quickly they get it will be impacted by local situations. As we all know, Jamaica is the land of "soon come".
There is not a time limit, per se. They have processing standards and guidelines, that is why the manual says they aim to deal with spouses and dependents within 6 months, I think. However, officers will get to a point in dealing with an application whereby they cannot satisfy themselves that the person is admissible to Canada, which is really the entire point of processing an application. At this point, in dealing with family class, they will request an interview. If the interview fails to reconcile their concerns, then they refuse the application.