gc-canada said:
Hi All
Many of us have received fairness letter due to medial reasons either due to self or family members.. I have seen people sending replies on their own or through some law group ..I wanted to ask all of you ,who have gone through this phase .. I do not want anybody to disclose their issue ..But in general interest I want an opinion to help others
1 First of how many have successfully cleared this hurdle -- Is it 0.000000001% I believe ??
2 Have you replied on your own or taken help of any law group ? Is it worth to spend 6-7K dollars and then wait for 3-4 years to hear no from CIC , IRCC
3 Do you think is it worth waiting for for years to get an reply from CIC and putting you whole lief on hold, your finances each and everything
I would appreciate if you all who have seen this , please come up with your opinion and help close this racket/business of law groups/CIC
Thanks
(1) I'd say that it's about 50% based upon my experiences. IRCC medical officers often take a shotgun approach and take the most expensive treatment option, leaving the applicant to argue otherwise. While this seems to violate the principles of
Hilewitz, that does seem to be how they proceed.
(2) I've seen both. I've not heard of anyone paying $6-7k just for a fairness response, though I suppose that's possible. You shouldn't wait 3-4 years. It should take less than a year once you've submitted your response.
(3) That's a personal decision. IRCC does not actually do particularly well with excessive demand cases involving the applicant or children when they do go to court, which is why a high percentage are ultimately granted.
There are some interesting legal problems with the current system (e.g., the fact that Canada has legal obligations under various international treaties/conventions they've signed which agree to behave in a particular fashion, or the fact that the federal government's authority to make health care decisions derives from agreements with the provinces to do so and is thus bound by provincial human rights laws) that remain to be explored, but it does cost time and money and most people don't want to put their lives on hold - and the legal process does generally take another year, with the best outcome being that your file goes back to IRCC for reconsideration, and thus another 6-12 months of processing.
That's why most people choose to just stop pursuing it at that point. Few of us go to court.