Hi,
I have read through the forum regularly and it has been an invaluable source of information. As I am about to send in my renewal documents, I wanted to consult the unparalleled experience this forum houses about the following.
Intro - My spouse and small daughter are Canadian, I am a PR. Since landing, I have worked as an international civil servant and have been posted to several countries. My family accompanied me and I am applying for renewal on the basis of time spent with Canadian spouse abroad. All in all, in the immediate 5 year period, the combined total of time outside Canada with spouse and time in Canada comes to just over 1,400 days out of a possible 1,825. The rest of the time, my wife and daughter were in Canada while I was abroad - my wife completed an MA and will hopefully soon get a job decent enough for us to all live here comfortably. We are currently in Canada as I will be teleworking for the next 3 months and will use the period to renew my PR card which expires in March 2021.
My questions is related to proof of us residing abroad. Thanks to the nature of my work, it has been easy to obtain letters from my organization and respective Ministries of Foreign Affairs showing my accredited status and the presence of my family at the duty station. Together with this, I have my wife's passport with all the stamps as well as our diplomatic ID's. In one case, my wife worked for the same organization as me as a secondee of the Canadian Government and we have emails from the Canadian government notifying her of her secondment and posting as well as the organization's attestation letters showing us both employed at the same time. So far so good.
The problem comes when it comes to proof of address. All the countries we were in would not have many options for us to provide proof of address - we used our international bank in all cases, a joint account on our Canadian address; utility bills were either included in the rent or were paid by landlords with us paying them back; phones were provided by the mission. Our diplomatic status also meant that we are tax-exempt and anything with local authorities got handled by Ministries of Foreign Affairs.
With all this in mind, I assembled the following proof in addition to the stuff mentioned above:
Country A:
1. Sworn affidavit from landlady saying she owned the property we were renting and that we all lived at the property as a family.
2. Lease agreement (my name is listed as the Lessee)
3. Letter of attestation from our organization showing both my wife and I employed at the same mission, with her seconded by the Canadian Government.
3. Daughter's daycare enrollment and invoice which lists my wife and me as the parents and has our local address.
In country A, there is a bit of an issue with passport stamps as we received them only when entering via air - since we mostly traveled via road, we would be just waved through on the basis of our organization's ID documents which showed us to be international civil servants in the territory in questions.
Country B:
1. Lease agreement (my name is listed as the Lessee). Have been trying unsuccessfully to reach the landlord to provide sworn affidavit that we all lived at the dwelling.
2. Signed statement and contract from the company providing residence security that lists the property address and the three of us as inhabitants living at the dwelling and enjoying the protection of the security company.
3. Signed statement from the Canadian High Commissioner in the country acknowledging our presence in the country and visiting us at the aforementioned address.
4. Daughter's Nursery enrolment for the time period in question.
5. Medical reports for my wife and daughter which list the address.
6. Letters from the organization notifying the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of my deployment and my family's arrival in the country.
6. Ministry of Foreign Affairs ID cards for myself, my wife, and my daughter (no address)
Country C:
1. Lease agreement (my name is listed as the Lessee)
2. Letter from the organization I work for about my employment status, who is accompanying me at the duty station and our address at the duty station.
3. My wife's medical and pharmacy invoices which show her name and address in the country.
4. Ministry of Foreign Affairs ID cards for myself and my family.
Is there anything else that I need or is this sufficient? For Country C we also have my wife's credit card statements which shows purchases in the country but the statement and card are listed for our Canadian address. Should I include these as well?
On the experience here, is this above sufficient? It should also be noted that all the countries are third countries to which none of us have any ties and it is established on basis of passports, tickets, and official documents that we were all there at the same time, including our toddler/young daughter so I am wondering whether there is a dose of relying on common sense that we lived together in these situations. I will also explain in a letter, that certain processes in these countries are different and that registering for services and utilities is quite different and less efficient than in Canada (and that diplomats and foreigners are largely excluded from it completely).
Thank you all very much in advance and apologies for the long post.
I have read through the forum regularly and it has been an invaluable source of information. As I am about to send in my renewal documents, I wanted to consult the unparalleled experience this forum houses about the following.
Intro - My spouse and small daughter are Canadian, I am a PR. Since landing, I have worked as an international civil servant and have been posted to several countries. My family accompanied me and I am applying for renewal on the basis of time spent with Canadian spouse abroad. All in all, in the immediate 5 year period, the combined total of time outside Canada with spouse and time in Canada comes to just over 1,400 days out of a possible 1,825. The rest of the time, my wife and daughter were in Canada while I was abroad - my wife completed an MA and will hopefully soon get a job decent enough for us to all live here comfortably. We are currently in Canada as I will be teleworking for the next 3 months and will use the period to renew my PR card which expires in March 2021.
My questions is related to proof of us residing abroad. Thanks to the nature of my work, it has been easy to obtain letters from my organization and respective Ministries of Foreign Affairs showing my accredited status and the presence of my family at the duty station. Together with this, I have my wife's passport with all the stamps as well as our diplomatic ID's. In one case, my wife worked for the same organization as me as a secondee of the Canadian Government and we have emails from the Canadian government notifying her of her secondment and posting as well as the organization's attestation letters showing us both employed at the same time. So far so good.
The problem comes when it comes to proof of address. All the countries we were in would not have many options for us to provide proof of address - we used our international bank in all cases, a joint account on our Canadian address; utility bills were either included in the rent or were paid by landlords with us paying them back; phones were provided by the mission. Our diplomatic status also meant that we are tax-exempt and anything with local authorities got handled by Ministries of Foreign Affairs.
With all this in mind, I assembled the following proof in addition to the stuff mentioned above:
Country A:
1. Sworn affidavit from landlady saying she owned the property we were renting and that we all lived at the property as a family.
2. Lease agreement (my name is listed as the Lessee)
3. Letter of attestation from our organization showing both my wife and I employed at the same mission, with her seconded by the Canadian Government.
3. Daughter's daycare enrollment and invoice which lists my wife and me as the parents and has our local address.
In country A, there is a bit of an issue with passport stamps as we received them only when entering via air - since we mostly traveled via road, we would be just waved through on the basis of our organization's ID documents which showed us to be international civil servants in the territory in questions.
Country B:
1. Lease agreement (my name is listed as the Lessee). Have been trying unsuccessfully to reach the landlord to provide sworn affidavit that we all lived at the dwelling.
2. Signed statement and contract from the company providing residence security that lists the property address and the three of us as inhabitants living at the dwelling and enjoying the protection of the security company.
3. Signed statement from the Canadian High Commissioner in the country acknowledging our presence in the country and visiting us at the aforementioned address.
4. Daughter's Nursery enrolment for the time period in question.
5. Medical reports for my wife and daughter which list the address.
6. Letters from the organization notifying the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of my deployment and my family's arrival in the country.
6. Ministry of Foreign Affairs ID cards for myself, my wife, and my daughter (no address)
Country C:
1. Lease agreement (my name is listed as the Lessee)
2. Letter from the organization I work for about my employment status, who is accompanying me at the duty station and our address at the duty station.
3. My wife's medical and pharmacy invoices which show her name and address in the country.
4. Ministry of Foreign Affairs ID cards for myself and my family.
Is there anything else that I need or is this sufficient? For Country C we also have my wife's credit card statements which shows purchases in the country but the statement and card are listed for our Canadian address. Should I include these as well?
On the experience here, is this above sufficient? It should also be noted that all the countries are third countries to which none of us have any ties and it is established on basis of passports, tickets, and official documents that we were all there at the same time, including our toddler/young daughter so I am wondering whether there is a dose of relying on common sense that we lived together in these situations. I will also explain in a letter, that certain processes in these countries are different and that registering for services and utilities is quite different and less efficient than in Canada (and that diplomats and foreigners are largely excluded from it completely).
Thank you all very much in advance and apologies for the long post.