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You do not need 2 draws?

I got invitation to apply, and by look at
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigratio...parents-grandparents/who-you-can-sponsor.html

It says the following:

There is no mention that you need to get 2 draws.

As far as I remember, when I submitted the interest form, I added both my mother and father in the form.

Yet another reason this system is insane. There shouldn’t be this confusion and it should be very clear that only one set of parents or grandparents can be sponsored at one time. What happens is it is likely left up to the VO to interpret the rules without consistency and left up to applicants to interpret whether they can include both divorced parents during EOI. The ability for one person to be able to sponsor what sounds like 2 separate families with what sounds like 4 seniors is demographically insane. With an ageing population we are adding 4 seniors for one worker in Canada. Even if earning 250k most would not have an extra 10-15k+ in their budget if every senior needed longterm care at once and that is bare minimum. Getting old in Canada is expensive and most overestimate what is covered and what services they can expect from government.
 
But it also tells you the following



The term application in the link you mentioned is not meant to be the sponsor form. It is the actual sponsorship application when you apply if you get selected.

Also according to last sentence, you cannot submit 2 sponsor forms because they will only take the last one so it means you can only sponsor your father or mother but not both cause they will take only 1 form.

Adding 2 parents in the same form seems to be logical that you wanna sponsor both of them.

Seems logical if they are married. Not being able to submit 2 applications at once would be to ensure that each family has an equal chance of sponsoring one family unit versus some being able to sponsor multiple family units and others sponsoring none. The changes to EOI are typically referring to change in who is the primary applicant in the couple for example because primary applicant may now be deceased. Agree that IRCC should be very clear about how to deal with divorced parents, how to deal with parents and grandparents as separate units (since many consider them as one family unit), etc.
 
Yet another reason this system is insane. There shouldn’t be this confusion and it should be very clear that only one set of parents or grandparents can be sponsored at one time. What happens is it is likely left up to the VO to interpret the rules without consistency and left up to applicants to interpret whether they can include both divorced parents during EOI. The ability for one person to be able to sponsor what sounds like 2 separate families with what sounds like 4 seniors is demographically insane. With an ageing population we are adding 4 seniors for one worker in Canada. Even if earning 250k most would not have an extra 10-15k+ in their budget if every senior needed longterm care at once and that is bare minimum. Getting old in Canada is expensive and most overestimate what is covered and what services they can expect from government.
Your comment should go to your MP not here. It's worthless
 
Seems logical if they are married. Not being able to submit 2 applications at once would be to ensure that each family has an equal chance of sponsoring one family unit versus some being able to sponsor multiple family units and others sponsoring none. The changes to EOI are typically referring to change in who is the primary applicant in the couple for example because primary applicant may now be deceased. Agree that IRCC should be very clear about how to deal with divorced parents, how to deal with parents and grandparents as separate units (since many consider them as one family unit), etc.
It can also be logical to only add 1 parent and add the other as spouse in the application if they are married.

If you are right, then they would not add the 2nd button to Add a parent.
And if there is, then it should also cover divorced parents scenario, not someone who is now deceased.
It's like adding father and mother names, but then they get divorced and now I got selected to apply. Giving that they got divorced but I also mentioned their names in the interest form, I can apply for both of them.
Note something, the interest form doesn't mention "principal applicant", it mentioned Parent (1) then Add a parent button.
 
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From https://ircc.canada.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?qnum=1329&top=14

Can I sponsor more than one person through the Parents and Grandparents Program?​


Yes, you may sponsor more than one person if you want to.

If you are invited to apply, you can sponsor your parents and grandparents.

To do so, you will need to submit separate applications for each person (or couple) you sponsor. We will process each application separately. <-Application here means the sponsorship application, not the interest form since they mentioned "process each application separately". They did not explicitly mention you need to submit 2 different forms and wait to see if you get multiple draws

You’ll have to meet the income requirements for all people you apply to sponsor and their dependants.

Invitations to apply are not transferable. For example, you cannot use the invitation to sponsor your spouse’s parents and grandparents or give it to a friend or other family member. <- Yes, I cannot give it to my spouse, friends etc.. But I can use to sponsor MY PARENTS AND/OR GRANDPARENTS. Not someone's else.

If your spouse also wants to sponsor their parents and grandparents, they’ll need to tell us they want to sponsor separately and see if they’re invited to apply. <- clearly means she needs to submit an interest form since they mention "See if they're invited to apply".

Find out more about who you can sponsor under the Parents and Grandparents Program.

In short, if you add 2 parents in your application (Mother + father, or Mother + grandfather, or Father + grandmother) and you get invited to apply, you apply for both of them either by adding them as spouse or separate applications if they are divorced.