My wife and I are doing an outland spousal sponsorship. We have already received emails from IRCC regarding the federal approval for the sponsorship, have completed the biometrics within the first few months, and up until now we thought everything was going well so far. After scanning and emailing our documents in for the requested medical exams (which has been approved by a Canadian certified health facility) and also the scanned document for the CSQ (which has been approved by the province of Quebec), we have now received the following email (see below):
In particular, this sentence in the email:
"I have concerns that your sponsor may not meet the requirement of Regulation 130(2) as outlined above. Your application provides little to no evidence that you and your sponsor intend to reside in Canada once your permanent resident visa is issued."
We already included documentation in our sponsorship package, detailing our plans to live in Canada permanently. Showing our job search results in Montreal (at the time of submitting the sponsorship package it is too early to have a work contract), plans for our life in Canada, plans for our retirement in Canada. As the sponsor, I have savings in my bank account (Canadian bank account) and I am a Canadian born citizen with friends and family in Canada. We are currently living and working overseas right now so this is the first time we have heard we must show proof of a job in Canada. If the job search we provided is not enough I'm not sure what else they would be looking for? We have work related connections in Montreal, Quebec but no work contract set in stone lined up as of right now. It's too early to apply for university in September 2022, new applications will open up in March 2022. With our savings we plan on living in Montreal, working in Montreal, and I am also planning on going to university in Montreal. The federal government (IRCC) has already approved our spousal sponsorship and the province of Quebec has already approved CSQ (Certificat de Selection du Quebec).
Therefor, in regards to this email coming from an overseas Migration Section Officer, I wonder if they also have access to the hard copy of the sponsorship package that was mailed to IRCC in Canada? It includes these details, so I also am wondering if communication sometimes not crystal clear between all of the departments? Or if this is a normal part of the process and they typically want to do another check?
If anybody has received an email similar to this, or might have further information, any assistance on how to reply is greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
In particular, this sentence in the email:
"I have concerns that your sponsor may not meet the requirement of Regulation 130(2) as outlined above. Your application provides little to no evidence that you and your sponsor intend to reside in Canada once your permanent resident visa is issued."
We already included documentation in our sponsorship package, detailing our plans to live in Canada permanently. Showing our job search results in Montreal (at the time of submitting the sponsorship package it is too early to have a work contract), plans for our life in Canada, plans for our retirement in Canada. As the sponsor, I have savings in my bank account (Canadian bank account) and I am a Canadian born citizen with friends and family in Canada. We are currently living and working overseas right now so this is the first time we have heard we must show proof of a job in Canada. If the job search we provided is not enough I'm not sure what else they would be looking for? We have work related connections in Montreal, Quebec but no work contract set in stone lined up as of right now. It's too early to apply for university in September 2022, new applications will open up in March 2022. With our savings we plan on living in Montreal, working in Montreal, and I am also planning on going to university in Montreal. The federal government (IRCC) has already approved our spousal sponsorship and the province of Quebec has already approved CSQ (Certificat de Selection du Quebec).
Therefor, in regards to this email coming from an overseas Migration Section Officer, I wonder if they also have access to the hard copy of the sponsorship package that was mailed to IRCC in Canada? It includes these details, so I also am wondering if communication sometimes not crystal clear between all of the departments? Or if this is a normal part of the process and they typically want to do another check?
I am reviewing your application for a permanent resident visa as a member of the family class. I
have concerns that you may not meet the requirements for immigration to Canada.
Section 130 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations states that a sponsor in the
family class must meet the following requirements:
130 (1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), a sponsor, for the purpose of sponsoring a foreign
national who makes an application for a permanent resident visa as a member of the family class
or an application to remain in Canada as a member of the spouse or common-law partner in
Canada class under subsection 13(1) of the Act, must be a Canadian citizen or permanent
resident who
• (a) is at least 18 years of age;
• (b) resides in Canada; and
• (c) has filed a sponsorship application in respect of a member of the family class or the
spouse or common-law partner in Canada class in accordance with section 10.
(2) A sponsor who is a Canadian citizen and does not reside in Canada may sponsor a foreign
national who makes an application referred to in subsection (1) and is the sponsor’s spouse,
common-law partner, conjugal partner or dependent child who has no dependent children, if the
sponsor will reside in Canada when the foreign national becomes a permanent resident.
I have concerns that your sponsor may not meet the requirement of Regulation 130(2) as outlined
above. Your application provides little to no evidence that you and your sponsor intend to reside
in Canada once your permanent resident visa is issued. Before I make a decision on your
application, I want to give you an opportunity to directly address this concern. Therefore, please
provide documentary evidence of your and your sponsor’s plans to date to relocate to Canada.
This may include but is not limited to:
- A written job offer or documentation indicating work transfer back to Canada, job contract in
Canada, etc
- Evidence of a job search in Canada
- Evidence that you sold a home abroad or terminated a lease or rental agreement
- Evidence that you have searched for a home in Canada
- Bank documentation showing accounts opened in Canada or closed abroad
- A detailed written account of your plans once you reach Canada (where you plan to live, what
type of work you plan to do, etc)
- Any other evidence or information in your possession that you feel helps establish your
intention to relocate to Canada
Before proceeding to assess your file, I would like to provide you with the opportunity to
respond to this information and provide any new relevant information and material. You will
have sixty (60) days from the date of this letter to submit any additional information and material
you would like taken into consideration. For online applications all responses should be sent via
the IRCC online portal. For all other applications, all responses should be sent via email to
###immigration@international.gc.ca. Please clearly indicate your file number on all
correspondence with our office.
Sincerely,
Officer
Migration Section
If anybody has received an email similar to this, or might have further information, any assistance on how to reply is greatly appreciated.
Thanks!