- Feb 17, 2010
- 1
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Vegreville
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 27-04-2010
- LANDED..........
- 12 MAY 2011
Hello friends,
Almost one year ago I had the great luck to meet an extraordinary man through the web. I am a greek citizen and my future husband (we will be getting married in 3 weeks) is a Canadian citizen. Initially I came to Canada to meet him, I returned to Greece and not being able to stay away from him, I returned to Canada in the beginning of October (as a visitor) to live with him. All this time we have been checking at the website of immigration Canada to see what we should do, so that I can legally live with him in Canada. The website is a total chaos, imagine that I had not discovered the the in-canada process of sponshorship. If you go to “visa and immigration applications (IN CANADA)” cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/menu-inside.asp and after “Sponsor a Spouse, Common-Law or Conjugal Partner and Dependent Children” you are given the forms of OUTSIDE CANADA. It seems that deliberately they want to mislead people.
Anyway, we were informed that we can fill in a sponsorship application in-canada, followed with an application for an open work permit. We will be doing so, after we have at our hands our certificate of marriage. They told us that the sponsorship application in-canada demands a period of 6 months as a first stage of approval and after those 6 months, I shall have the open work permit in 1 or 2 months. So 6+2=8months. 8 months I believe is the most optimistic scenario and let’s say I will need another one month to find a job, we are at 9 months. I’m young and well educated and I feel terrible to the idea of having to stay unemployed for almost one year because of this bureaucracy and having to make a living with what my husband is earning. Are these times true? Can you verify it too my friends?
They also told us that the outside Canada process is generally more quick, but -I think-maybe is more hard to be approved (in the form of outside Canada they ask u like a million indiscreet questions while in the one of inside it’s less).
I asked immigration Canada how I can start to work legally in Canada the soonest possible and they told me that if I have a Job offer and all the other documents I need, I can have a regular work permit issued very quickly, in one month. Now, I wonder, is there any employer who would like to hire a foreigner, satisfy Immigration Canada and the Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (HRSDC) and have to wait at least one month before the worker can actually work legally??? I mean in case the employer is not the worker’s daddy…
Do you have some piece of advice for me? Would it be better to apply from in Canada or out? Is the solution of the regular work permit, indeed the soonest way to be able to work in Canada? And sth last: my status as a visitor expires in the end of march. I have read that as the spouse of a Canadian citizen it doesn’t matter if I lose my status. And since I apply for sponsorship it’s ok to lose it because I’m waiting for a response. Is it indeed like that?
Thank you
Almost one year ago I had the great luck to meet an extraordinary man through the web. I am a greek citizen and my future husband (we will be getting married in 3 weeks) is a Canadian citizen. Initially I came to Canada to meet him, I returned to Greece and not being able to stay away from him, I returned to Canada in the beginning of October (as a visitor) to live with him. All this time we have been checking at the website of immigration Canada to see what we should do, so that I can legally live with him in Canada. The website is a total chaos, imagine that I had not discovered the the in-canada process of sponshorship. If you go to “visa and immigration applications (IN CANADA)” cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/menu-inside.asp and after “Sponsor a Spouse, Common-Law or Conjugal Partner and Dependent Children” you are given the forms of OUTSIDE CANADA. It seems that deliberately they want to mislead people.
Anyway, we were informed that we can fill in a sponsorship application in-canada, followed with an application for an open work permit. We will be doing so, after we have at our hands our certificate of marriage. They told us that the sponsorship application in-canada demands a period of 6 months as a first stage of approval and after those 6 months, I shall have the open work permit in 1 or 2 months. So 6+2=8months. 8 months I believe is the most optimistic scenario and let’s say I will need another one month to find a job, we are at 9 months. I’m young and well educated and I feel terrible to the idea of having to stay unemployed for almost one year because of this bureaucracy and having to make a living with what my husband is earning. Are these times true? Can you verify it too my friends?
They also told us that the outside Canada process is generally more quick, but -I think-maybe is more hard to be approved (in the form of outside Canada they ask u like a million indiscreet questions while in the one of inside it’s less).
I asked immigration Canada how I can start to work legally in Canada the soonest possible and they told me that if I have a Job offer and all the other documents I need, I can have a regular work permit issued very quickly, in one month. Now, I wonder, is there any employer who would like to hire a foreigner, satisfy Immigration Canada and the Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (HRSDC) and have to wait at least one month before the worker can actually work legally??? I mean in case the employer is not the worker’s daddy…
Do you have some piece of advice for me? Would it be better to apply from in Canada or out? Is the solution of the regular work permit, indeed the soonest way to be able to work in Canada? And sth last: my status as a visitor expires in the end of march. I have read that as the spouse of a Canadian citizen it doesn’t matter if I lose my status. And since I apply for sponsorship it’s ok to lose it because I’m waiting for a response. Is it indeed like that?
Thank you