mpapdp.1984
Hero Member
- Oct 27, 2009
- 271
- 6
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Buffalo
- NOC Code......
- 4121
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 13-11-2008
- AOR Received.
- 18-03-2009
- File Transfer...
- 27-10-2009
- Med's Request
- 16-04-2010
- Med's Done....
- 29-04-2010 (Reached Ottawa May 4 2010)
- Interview........
- waived
professional 1 said:Hey googleman, I found the definite answer for our discussion from CIC official link :
"Processing
Once processing begins, officers will review the application against the minimal requirements and
the selection criteria for FSW. Visa officers are also required to approve or refuse FSW
applications according to the requirements of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA)
and the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations (IRPR).
In cases of refusals, this means an applicant fails to meet the minimal requirements, is not
awarded sufficient points or is found to be inadmissible. As applicants may specify more than one
NOC code in their application, failure to meet the minimal requirements for an occupation on the
MI list will not necessarily result in refusal.
Interviews, verifications of the authenticity of documents, site visits, investigations or seeking
clarification from applicants constitute processing. These activities may be undertaken to
determine if applicants meet the minimal requirements, can be awarded points for the selection
criteria or are inadmissible.
Finding inadmissibility for misrepresentation involves a relatively high standard of procedural
fairness. In addition, only an operations manager, deputy program manager or immigration
program manager may refuse for misrepresentation."
This states clearly that they start counting the points after the processing begins not before.
The source : http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/manuals/op/op06-eng.pdf
At the end of page 20 and the beginning of page 21.
Agree here with Professional1. In some cases, the applicant also claims the adaptibility factor points and get over 67. The Visa officer may check whether the applicant's relatives currently reside in Canada or not (which will happen during the "In Process" stage) and if any information is doubtful, he may not award the 5 points. In this case if the points total is below 67, the applicant may be denied for lack of 67 points.