Me too.I am confused your previous message said your wife has already landed 2 days ago in Canada
You can do as I mentioned in previous post, to renounce your PR status, return to home country, and start the whole PR process over again from scratch. This time include your child as a dependent.There must be some way out
I have told my wife to declare the son upon arrival at airport i don't know what will happen. But i don't have another option.
OP, Rob has very clearly and correctly explained your only options. There is nothing else you can do. I seriously doubt an H&C app would be successful, as ignorance isn't a defense against misrepresentation.You can do as I mentioned in previous post, to renounce your PR status, return to home country, and start the whole PR process over again from scratch. This time include your child as a dependent.
Your wife can't declare the child upon landing.
Or you can attempt to sponsor your child under H&C means even though they weren't declared. However I would expect a long and expensive process here (since you would need a lawyer and may be many years in appeals), with very small chance of success.
Yes , my wife is coming here leaving baby behind at home.Am I reading this that the poster has landed and the wife is coming to land is September.... what are they doing with the baby??? Obviously there is no visa for the baby, are they not planning to bring the child? Is she bringing the child along with no way to get him into the country? I’m just confused here.
She is going to inform VO at airport that we have 4months old child at home and explain our situation in detail. We have not misinterpreted anything. My consultant had sent them an email mentioning my wife's pregnancy at the time of her medical to centralize intake office, nova scotia.Yes , my wife is coming here leaving baby behind at home.
As already explained, yes, you have committed misrepresentation by not adding the child to your application before you landed as a PR. You can't blame this on your consultant.She is going to inform VO at airport that we have 4months old child at home and explain our situation in detail. We have not misinterpreted anything. My consultant had sent them an email mentioning my wife's pregnancy at the time of her medical to centralize intake office, nova scotia.
That will not work, as you've been told. Your consultant was a complete idiot who doesn't understand basic immigration rules to Canada. You don't need to inform visa office of pregnancy, you only need to inform once a baby is actually born. CBSA at the airport can't add dependents!She is going to inform VO at airport that we have 4months old child at home and explain our situation in detail. We have not misinterpreted anything. My consultant had sent them an email mentioning my wife's pregnancy at the time of her medical to centralize intake office, nova scotia.
Informing of a pregnancy is not required. The only dates that matters is that of the actual birth of the child, and the DATE YOU LAND IN CANADA.
If a child is born ANYTIME before you do PR landing, then that child MUST be added to the app as a dependent and do a medical exam, BEFORE ANYONE LANDS AS PR. It doesn't matter if PR visas/COPR was already issued, that is irrelevant.
In OPs case here the child was born BEFORE ANYONE DID PR LANDING, which is why the child is now banned to be sponsored under family class.
A consultant giving bad advice is not relevant. Ultimately it's the applicant's responsibility to ensure they are following the correct process and not committing misrepresentation.I thinking it's his fault for not telling cbsa when he landed that there is changes in the family and the consultant fault for not telling him they need to add baby to the Application and it's sound more difficult his case
A consultant giving bad advice is not relevant. Ultimately it's the applicant's responsibility to ensure they are following the correct process and not committing misrepresentation.
Also one is not supposed to even attempt to fly to Canada if their family composition has changed with new dependents. CBSA can't add dependents since they can't give medical exams. If someone does declare a new dependent to CBSA upon trying to land, CBSA should reject the landing, destroy the COPR, and tell the applicant to go back to their visa office to add them.
Unfortunately, the actual COPR document specifically lists down all declared dependents. When we land, we are asked to make sure that document is accurate and that we do not have any other undeclared dependents. The OP, being of sound mind and having a good understanding of the English language (based on this thread) during landing chose to say that he did NOT have any undeclared dependents making Rob absolutely correct in that it is his and any other applicant's ultimate responsibility. I wish the OP luck, seems to me that Rob's advice is best.
thats why people like op make it harder for legit people to bring there love ones hereyes, which is why Rob is right that the OP misrepresented himself.