At the next answer: ask for a written confirmation of the information and the person's name (and agent ID code, if they have it at MICC? They do at CIC...) If MICC doesn't want to pay, you can always show your proof! You can ask if they can also pay for the courses at your immigrant center: if you're still turned down, at least you didn't loose that much money. ;-)QCSunshine said:So, on the fourth call to the MICC, the person seemed to be sure they had the right answer and that all the previous three people had misinformed me. I really have no idea anymore
well like QCsunshine says its depends on outland or inland. BUT there is another thing to remember; the classes only start about every few months and you have to go through a placement interview and wait for a place to become available. In the meantime there are often low cost places (45$ for a semester) to take French. Look up the city you'll be in and the word "francisation" for schools.medellinguy said:so when an immigrant gets to quebec, they aren't allowed to start francisation with MICC right away?? How long does it take to get into a class...this is kind of *bad word*....please help!
ahhh, that's what confused me...my wife is applying outland and is still living in Colombia...so, she can start up classes and get reimbursedQCSunshine said:medellinguy, the reimbursement policy you quote is for people who applied outland, and who are currently not living in Canada and want to take French classes in their home country. For people who applied outland but who are currently in Canada (with CSQ but still awaiting PR), the least expensive route seems to be what plumosa suggests.