@muimui
yup I checked that link already. I just asked this question where in I was thinking (maybe
) someone had this kind of situation.
HAHAHAHAHA.
Anyways, A newsletter from a NEWSLETTER from lawfirm states that the AOT will not be a retroactive!!! I repeat NOT RETROACTIVE!
here was the complete and detailed news from CAMPBELL:
Thousands of Canadian immigration applications may be affected by court decision
(Cliquez ici pour la version française)
The Superior Court of Quebec has arrived at a decision in the case of Stasenko v. MICC et al, which challenged the government of Quebec’s decision to apply changes to the Quebec Skilled Worker Program’s (QSWP) eligibility criteria retroactively, having previously promised applicants that their application would be processed based on regulations in effect when it was submitted.
Legal proceedings were initiated by the law firms of Campbell Cohen (David Cohen) and Irving Mitchell Kalichman (Mathieu Bouchard) in an effort to prevent the government of Quebec from applying new immigration regulations retroactively. The decision centred on the principle of promissory estoppel — the legal principle that a promise is enforceable by law when the promisor (person making the promise) makes a promise to the promisee (person being promised) who relies on it to his or her detriment.
This important decision represents a victory for thousands of applicants whose applications for immigration to Canada under the QSWP may have been affected by regulations introduced by the government of Quebec that came into effect on August 1, 2013.