Same here, ours was approved and sent out on June 25th, 2012. Still no update on the website, but there is something I noticed:sway_in_de_wind said:Us too. We've had squat diddley from LVO. It seems to be the norm. :
you would think that they would realize a simple AOR from VO would ease the minds of so many people....KJG said:i hear ya blondie1216...mine was sent June 20th and I am the same as you....nothing...nada...and you're right it does suck...
I know....it really should be mandatory and that would save alot of unnecessary worry on our part as well as probably their part so people aren't emailing them and taking precious time away from actually working on the files!!! but really when does the government ever do anything efficient???blondie1216 said:you would think that they would realize a simple AOR from VO would ease the minds of so many people....
I would include any place lived in, even if you didn't include it before. You won't get in trouble, you can just say you forget to put it in that time. If you can't remember the exact address, give as much information as you can. From what I've heard on forums, being detailed makes all the difference.Chuladaa said:Hello everyone.. really need your help.. once again
We just received letters from Mexico the first being the AOR and the second regarding paying the RPRF, the police checks PGR and SSP and lastly requesting further information on my husbands Schedual A Background/declaration below is what they wrote. What I am confused about is why they are asking for this because on the initial paper work it says to provide “history since the age of 18 or the past ten years whichever comes first” so we gave information for the past 10 years did I misinterpret that? Because now they are asking for information from 1997 which was when my husband turned 18.
Also question if you forgot living somewhere for a brief period of time so you didn't include it in your initial application but now they are asking question about your background/declaration is it better to try to tell them about it or leave it out (exact address and dates are not known).
I feel like we are such a mess right now
Updated Schedule A. Background/Declaration. Please provide a properly filled form and
with clear details of your activities in Section 8 “Personal history” and Section 11
“Addresses” since December, 1997 to this date. Please ensure that you don't leave any
gaps in time and that you provide complete information.
Please note:
1) ‘Schedule A' should include all personal history and address history from your 18th
birthday (December, 1997 to present day).
2) There should be absolutely NO gaps in the personal history or the address history.
3) You should include ALL history in the personal history, whether employed or not. The
personal history should detail your activities and should not merely indicate 'working/not
working'.
4) The ‘Schedule A' can be prepared as a word document provided it includes all of the
exact same fields as the original form.
Joshmantis said:I would include any place lived in, even if you didn't include it before. You won't get in trouble, you can just say you forget to put it in that time. If you can't remember the exact address, give as much information as you can. From what I've heard on forums, being detailed makes all the difference.
Good luck!
rickypc said:Hi!
I am really concerned now! The website shows Part 1 status as - "Application received on March 14". Its been stuck on that for over a month. Tried calling the immigration office over 50 times today and I can't get connected to any agent.
Its been over 4 months since the application was received and its still not processed the stage 1!
Any suggestions?
I would print out a copy of the website where it says it could take longer than 120 days, and then I would mail it to the VO you are going through. And I would send them an email as well stating that. But hopefully you can get what you need from the RCMP before 120 are up.Chuladaa said:Another update.
We received a letter asking for fingerprint based police certificate from the RCMP.
My husband lived in Canada previously.
They are giving us 120 days for it. However, according to the RCMP website they say it can take longer than that.
Anyone had to request this?
Also does anyone know about these deadlines they give us if you know you can't make the deadline is it at all possible to get an extension.
Joshmantis said:I would print out a copy of the website where it says it could take longer than 120 days, and then I would mail it to the VO you are going through. And I would send them an email as well stating that. But hopefully you can get what you need from the RCMP before 120 are up.
This is a common problem. What you do is get it in process and then send them a letter advising them that you have requested them, tell them the date when you requested them and quote the estimated processing time. Ask them for 30 days beyond that date. Police clearances can often be time-consuming to obtain.Chuladaa said:Another update.
We received a letter asking for fingerprint based police certificate from the RCMP.
My husband lived in Canada previously.
They are giving us 120 days for it. However, according to the RCMP website they say it can take longer than that.
Anyone had to request this?
Also does anyone know about these deadlines they give us if you know you can't make the deadline is it at all possible to get an extension.
computergeek said:This is a common problem. What you do is get it in process and then send them a letter advising them that you have requested them, tell them the date when you requested them and quote the estimated processing time. Ask them for 30 days beyond that date. Police clearances can often be time-consuming to obtain.
I am curious: where does it say that it takes 120 days? From http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/cr-cj/time-temps-eng.htm it says that a criminal background check takes 4 weeks (paper fingerprints) and 3 days (electronically submitted fingerprints). Maybe there's a different kind of record check I'm not aware of, but I was really surprised at a 4 month time quotation. Personally, if I were asked for an RCMP clearance, I'd pay a submission firm for the electronic submission, just to get them that much faster.