have you ever had immigration or citizenship status in any country other than canada? Does this question include visitor visa's too?
As a general rule, immigration status is when a country grants you a right to work, study and/or live in the country, even if not as an immigrant. Transit, visitor or business visit visas are not a grant of immigration status.have you ever had immigration or citizenship status in any country other than canada? Does this question include visitor visa's too?
Thankyou so muchAs a general rule, immigration status is when a country grants you a right to work, study and/or live in the country, even if not as an immigrant. Transit, visitor or business visit visas are not a grant of immigration status.
Thankyou so much![/QUOTE
As a general rule, immigration status is when a country grants you a right to work, study and/or live in the country, even if not as an immigrant. Transit, visitor or business visit visas are not a grant of immigration status.
Hi Natan,
I was just wondering if I have a US b1/b2 visa and a question to me is put up while I am physically present in the US:
What's your immigration status?
and I will probably answer: I am a non-immigrant, with a B1/B2 Visa.
Similarly, a question has been asked in the application. I feel the presence of a 'visa' of a country is "connecting" you to the 'immigration status'.
No one there that can provide information on this, ideally from experience? Just realized I am in same boat with my application already IP for some time, and wondering mostly about potential impact/consequences...Anyone have experience with accidentally omitting an immigration status from Q13? Did you correct it after receiving AOR or encounter any hiccups during the process? I forgot to add a student status, since I misunderstood the question thinking it was only asking for PR/citizenship status.
Any advice would be appreciated!
Awesome , Thanks so much , I will do so+ 1 like to you
As a general rule, immigration status is when a country grants you a right to work, study and/or live in the country, even if not as an immigrant. Transit, visitor or business visit visas are not a grant of immigration status.
As a general rule, immigration status is when a country grants you a right to work, study and/or live in the country, even if not as an immigrant. Transit, visitor or business visit visas are not a grant of immigration status.
My interpretation is Business Visa/ Visitor visa is clearly not the ask in that Q13 as they are neither "immigrant" or "citizenship" status. All other categories including Student, Worker, "Implied" worker, yes.
[quoting @Natan, same as quoted above in this post]
this is not correct.. work visas generally in US (on L1, H1) are treated as non-immigrant and doesn't need to be listed.. business and visitor visa are same cases. those doesnt need to be listed. If you had applied for GC, while you were on H1, L1.. then it's different case and it needs to be listed.
So then, if I left out a country for question 13 for reason mention in my post above, although the country it is mentioned in address and work history, do I need to let them know via webform? My test/interview invite should be coming any moment now. Not sure if sending them this update would stir things up unnecessarily, or if there is no actual risk for me to let it go. I would personally believe it can be let to slide, because they will see that country listed in address and work history they would categorize my omission as an innocent mistake when filling form rather than doing it on purpose to withhold material information.REMINDER: this has NOTHING to do with how other countries categorize such things. For example, if a country treats temporary worker permits as "non-immigrant," THAT does change what is required in a CANADIAN application under citizenship or immigration law. Canadian laws, regulations, and rules govern. Temporary worker status is clearly considered immigration status under Canadian law. The citizenship application form specifically lists employment/worker status in a country as an example of immigration status to be disclosed.
So then, if I left out a country for question 13 for reason mention in my post above, although the country it is mentioned in address and work history, do I need to let them know via webform? My test/interview invite should be coming any moment now. Not sure if sending them this update would stir things up unnecessarily, or if there is no actual risk for me to let it go. I would personally believe it can be let to slide, because they will see that country listed in address and work history they would categorize my omission as an innocent mistake when filling form rather than doing it on purpose to withhold material information.
@dpenabill So what finally happend ? Did you send the Immigration status via Webform or they just let it go ? Pls share your experiance here bcoz we are in the same boat.