rizmayo
Hero Member
- Aug 17, 2013
- 42
- Visa Office......
- LVO
- NOC Code......
- 0213
- IELTS Request
- With Application
- Med's Request
- 16-07-2013
- Med's Done....
- 26-08-2013
- Interview........
- Waived
- Passport Req..
- 03-09-2013, sent 17-09-2013, DM 06-10-2013
- VISA ISSUED...
- 30-09-2013
Wow you have had all sorts of bad experiences with CBSA haven't you? I think if you have some time, once you have completed all your settling in formalities, you should document your complete landing and settling in experience with the members for this forum, it is a learning experince in its own right.jazibkg said:To top off all the incompetency, let me tell you this as well. The Vancouver airport officials did not record our declared funds on the landing document as well (there is a field on the COPR 'money in possession') which the CBSA official conveniently penned in as a '0' whilst I was carrying $9000. We had trouble later trying to deposit that cash into our Scotiabank accounts as the bank did not believe we declared our funds and would not deposit them. Canada is a very inconvenient country mind you (and I've been living in a western country for the past 4 years before I went to Canada - and my jaws dropped at many of the things I saw in Canada. Quite backward in many ways).
As for taxable items and the goods to follow list, I find the idea absurd. Why is Canada so greedy as to tax personally purchased items overseas? I've been living in England for the past 4 years, and travelled frequently between England and Pakistan - and there is no such concept here (of goods to follow etc). Surely whilst I'm travelling to Canada from overseas, as long as the items are packed in my luggage, nobody should care? Can anyone here please expound upon taxable items?
Regarding your question about taxable items, CBSA is not interested in your personal items that you bring in your bags. Many people document things like laptops, iPads and smartphones that are in their use on form B4e, when this is not the purpose of the form. The allowance Canadian government has given is really for house hold goods you would have in your previous residence, like furniture, fridge, oven, etc.
Regards,