Hello all! As a Canadian citizen I have to say I'm humbled, gratified and outrage by the passionate stories in this forum of success and failure in running the gauntlet of my country's bureaucracy. I have new-found respect for the immigrant experience and new-found appreciation for the blessings of having been born in Canada, and the responsibility to live up to that privilege and not take it for granted. To the users of this forum who are working so diligently and honorably to come to Canada legally and responsibly, I wish you the best of luck. My (and hopefully your soon to be) country will be better off for your efforts.
For the more seasoned posters on this forum, I present my current situation. Any and all advice, criticism, suggestion, or even wishes of support would be gratefully received. Here are the particulars:
1. I met my Filipino girlfriend in Malaysia in February 2014. I was working and she was on vacation. We are NOT married.
2. She is a Philippines-born citizen and resident living and working in Metro Manila, and I am a Canadian-born citizen and resident working in shipping overseas, currently in Malaysia. (As far as the government is concerned I am a full-time Canadian resident)
3. We are hoping that she can acquire a visa to come to Canada to meet my family and friends in May 2015 (approx.) for a period of at least three weeks. She has a Philippines passport valid until February 2016.
4. She is from a wealthy family (by Filipino standards) and is a university-educated professional working in advertising. She does NOT have a full-time job, she is a freelance contractor. Her work is conducted under the table so she can not provide Philippines income tax records. Her proof of finances and income is limited to receipts for contract payment and bank statements only. She earns good money but not on a full-time basis.
5. Her passport holds entry stamps to Singapore, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar, Malaysia and Indonesia, all of which were countries visited for the purpose of tourism.
5. She has no family or financial ties to Canada. She does not have any major financial assets in the Philippines except for her bank accounts and credit card. She lives with her parents, who own the house, and drives their car. She owns no vehicle or property.
6. I am willing and able to provide a letter of invitation and a notarized promise of financial support. I have more than sufficient income and savings (CAD$90,000/year salary) to take care of her travel and accommodation costs and can show supporting documents such as bank statements and my previous-year tax return. I understand a ballpark figure of CAD$1,000/week is acceptable as a cost-of-living standard for TRV applicants, which I can provide
7. As I am currently in Malaysia and she in the Philippines, the idea would be for us to fly to Canada together from the Philippines in May when my current work visa expires.
8. We have not yet contacted CIC or any VAC in any way nor initiated any kind of application process.
That's about all I can think of right now. Please do give me any advice, criticism, play devil's advocate, whatever you'd like. We want to abide by the law and do this right, but we also want to make this happen for us and our families. I gratefully await any responses you may have.
Thank you very much for reading this, and best of luck to you all with your own battles.
Cheers,
S
For the more seasoned posters on this forum, I present my current situation. Any and all advice, criticism, suggestion, or even wishes of support would be gratefully received. Here are the particulars:
1. I met my Filipino girlfriend in Malaysia in February 2014. I was working and she was on vacation. We are NOT married.
2. She is a Philippines-born citizen and resident living and working in Metro Manila, and I am a Canadian-born citizen and resident working in shipping overseas, currently in Malaysia. (As far as the government is concerned I am a full-time Canadian resident)
3. We are hoping that she can acquire a visa to come to Canada to meet my family and friends in May 2015 (approx.) for a period of at least three weeks. She has a Philippines passport valid until February 2016.
4. She is from a wealthy family (by Filipino standards) and is a university-educated professional working in advertising. She does NOT have a full-time job, she is a freelance contractor. Her work is conducted under the table so she can not provide Philippines income tax records. Her proof of finances and income is limited to receipts for contract payment and bank statements only. She earns good money but not on a full-time basis.
5. Her passport holds entry stamps to Singapore, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar, Malaysia and Indonesia, all of which were countries visited for the purpose of tourism.
5. She has no family or financial ties to Canada. She does not have any major financial assets in the Philippines except for her bank accounts and credit card. She lives with her parents, who own the house, and drives their car. She owns no vehicle or property.
6. I am willing and able to provide a letter of invitation and a notarized promise of financial support. I have more than sufficient income and savings (CAD$90,000/year salary) to take care of her travel and accommodation costs and can show supporting documents such as bank statements and my previous-year tax return. I understand a ballpark figure of CAD$1,000/week is acceptable as a cost-of-living standard for TRV applicants, which I can provide
7. As I am currently in Malaysia and she in the Philippines, the idea would be for us to fly to Canada together from the Philippines in May when my current work visa expires.
8. We have not yet contacted CIC or any VAC in any way nor initiated any kind of application process.
That's about all I can think of right now. Please do give me any advice, criticism, play devil's advocate, whatever you'd like. We want to abide by the law and do this right, but we also want to make this happen for us and our families. I gratefully await any responses you may have.
Thank you very much for reading this, and best of luck to you all with your own battles.
Cheers,
S