Hello everyone - I post here as I do not have anywhere else I care to turn. A brief history of where I am at, currently:
I am a Canadian citizen, born/raised; my S/O and I met while she was on a student/work visa.
After a year of co-habitation, my S/O and I applied for within Canada PR sponsorship. Her work permit was extended as our application was submitted with request to extend prior to it's expiration. She is working here full time.
My fiancee and I will be married this coming Sunday in Canada; we also have a 2 week stay in South Korea upcoming for our Korean wedding ceremony.
Our application was received at the start of February, 2014; confirmation email received mid-June, 2014. By current numbers, we can expect our stage 1 approval to wrap up next February (ideally - does anyone know of a situation where application delays actually get SHORTER, not longer..?) and she can have PR.
Upon calling the CIC hotline for info on processing times (I couldn't get the website to load a result page - 30 minutes on hold, by the way), I was told that it would be 'risky' to leave Canada at any time during an inland application. We understood that her legal work status would be terminated until the application was approved, but this 'risk' of CIC cancelling our application was news to me. So, a few things I guess to note:
a) What can we do to minimize 'risk' when re-entering Canada? The call center worker wanted nothing more then to get me off of the line and send me an email which gives a vague description of what I already knew - will having documents/pictures/copy of our application help with re-entry? We even state in our application our intent to have a Korean wedding, and gave the date.
b) How does someone at immigration assess any of this? Like..is it case by case basis? My fiancee is from South Korea.
Anyone who can provide guidance would be appreciated. It is absolutely absurd the lengths we have to go to just to live here; myself, always a proud Canadian, cannot believe the absolute song and dance (not to mention costs) associated with this whole process. Thank you all for your time.
I am a Canadian citizen, born/raised; my S/O and I met while she was on a student/work visa.
After a year of co-habitation, my S/O and I applied for within Canada PR sponsorship. Her work permit was extended as our application was submitted with request to extend prior to it's expiration. She is working here full time.
My fiancee and I will be married this coming Sunday in Canada; we also have a 2 week stay in South Korea upcoming for our Korean wedding ceremony.
Our application was received at the start of February, 2014; confirmation email received mid-June, 2014. By current numbers, we can expect our stage 1 approval to wrap up next February (ideally - does anyone know of a situation where application delays actually get SHORTER, not longer..?) and she can have PR.
Upon calling the CIC hotline for info on processing times (I couldn't get the website to load a result page - 30 minutes on hold, by the way), I was told that it would be 'risky' to leave Canada at any time during an inland application. We understood that her legal work status would be terminated until the application was approved, but this 'risk' of CIC cancelling our application was news to me. So, a few things I guess to note:
a) What can we do to minimize 'risk' when re-entering Canada? The call center worker wanted nothing more then to get me off of the line and send me an email which gives a vague description of what I already knew - will having documents/pictures/copy of our application help with re-entry? We even state in our application our intent to have a Korean wedding, and gave the date.
b) How does someone at immigration assess any of this? Like..is it case by case basis? My fiancee is from South Korea.
Anyone who can provide guidance would be appreciated. It is absolutely absurd the lengths we have to go to just to live here; myself, always a proud Canadian, cannot believe the absolute song and dance (not to mention costs) associated with this whole process. Thank you all for your time.