david_oz
Full Member
- Feb 2, 2010
- 3
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Buffalo
- NOC Code......
- 0111
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 20-01-2010
- AOR Received.
- 12-03-2010
- Med's Request
- 29-06-2010
- Med's Done....
- 30-06-2010
- Passport Req..
- 20-08-2010
- VISA ISSUED...
- 31-08-2010
- LANDED..........
- 04-09-2010
In order of your questionsth0i3 said:Hi all,
I found this forum while searching for information on how to migrate to Canada. I'm an Australian and my spouse is a Singaporean currently living in Melbourne, Australia. I am entitled to Working Holiday Visa(WHV) and my spouse is slightly older than me and is unable to obtain the WHV. However, after further research, I've found her job is critical occupation list. She works for advertising agency under "1122 Professional Occupations in Business Services to Management". This I believe, entitle her for entry to Canada without a pre-arranged job. I am senior security engineer(IT/networks) and is under the skilled migration list but not on the critical state which requires a pre-arranged job.
Now, my questions are:
- Can I enter canada under working holiday visa and later transfer to permanent residency visa under the "Canadian experience class"? This allows me to work in Canada for 24 months and also gain experience with the Canadian culture.
- As my spouse is not entitle for the WHV, can she apply permanent residency while she's with me on tourist visa which I believe is 6 months.
- Are there any other ways we could gain entry to Canada?
- Can I apply for WHV but my spouse put me as dependent on her application?
- How's the IT job market in Toronto?
Thanks for all your help and look forward to your answers.
1. Yes you can. I have just done exactly the same thing. I came here in January 2009 on a working holiday visa, found a job and applied for permanent residence, and landed 2 days ago. If I'm not mistaken, you need 24 months experience for the canadian experience class?? In that case, wouldn't you be better off including yourself as a spouse on her PR application, rather than waiting for 2 years experience in Canada, and then for a PR app to be processed.
2. Yes. I would apply right now, before you move to Canada. The CIO takes about 3-4 months to process applications and hand them off to a visa office. If you apply now, then probably by the time you are ready to move to Canada you will know if she is eligible for processing or not. You wouldn't want to make the move first, and then find out she isn't eligible. I believe she can enter as a tourist and stay for 6 months at a time, but you might get hassles at the border - and bear in mind she can't work. So unless your job pays well it might be quite miserable for you. Someone with more experience can probably answer this a bit better than me
3. No idea
4. Yes
5. No idea
Good luck with everything!!! Let me know if you've got anymore questions
cheers
Dave