should a returned application be sent back with the original dates it was sent with or it should be filled with new dates?
New dates = more buffer daysshould a returned application be sent back with the original dates it was sent with or it should be filled with new dates?
May I ask if your application was returned and for what reason ? Thanksshould a returned application be sent back with the original dates it was sent with or it should be filled with new dates?
This is completely wrong and it doesn't even make any logical sense..."sending it in the past". What does that even mean? Any date you send the letter will be "the past" relative to when it reaches the recipient; there's nothing wrong with backdating an application. Do you even proofread what you write?new dates. putting an original date would be sending it in the past. even on the physical presence calculator online, you just have to change 1 date. there is no hassle.
No my application was not returned. I read on another forum which spyfy manages that someone else's application was returned due to not putting the SIN number. I just thought how he should handle it. This becomes interesting only if one leaves Canada during this process and the application is returned. If the law stipulates that new dates have to be filled in, then one might become disqualified. The 90 day period where it is mentioned above kind of says that a returned application could be sent back as along as it is received within 90 days from the original signing date again. I am just not sure about this.May I ask if your application was returned and for what reason ? Thanks
Yes, you can mail the same application package back to them with the missing info/doc. This has been confirmed by several people on this forum who got their applications returned, re-sent it, and are now citizens. Of course, the 90 day limitation applies.No my application was not returned. I read on another forum which spyfy manages that someone else's application was returned due to not putting the SIN number. I just thought how he should handle it. This becomes interesting only if one leaves Canada during this process and the application is returned. If the law stipulates that new dates have to be filled in, then one might become disqualified. The 90 day period where it is mentioned above kind of says that a returned application could be sent back as along as it is received within 90 days from the original signing date again. I am just not sure about this.
looks like you did not read my post well and are pointing at phrases from my statements without understanding the context and meaning. but i wouldnt start name calling you. i do agree that there is a lot of bad advice and people ridiculing others by taking their reading their responses incorrectly.This is completely wrong and it doesn't even make any logical sense..."sending it in the past". What does that even mean? Any date you send the letter will be "the past" relative to when it reaches the recipient; there's nothing wrong with backdating an application. Do you even proofread what you write?
Anyways, straight from the instruction manual:
1) Note: Your application will be returned to you if it is:
So it's okay to keep the old dates so long as they are within 90 days of which your updated application will reach the CIC
- not signed and dated
- dated more than 90 days before we receive it
- post-dated (dated into the future).
2) You actually have THREE dates the change. The date you input into the calculator, the date you sign with in the calculator printout, and the date in the application, not one. And all three dates should match. Oh, and you have to change the dates in the application as well (I believe on page 2).
This is such a hassle rife with mistakes that it's better to just leave the old dates as is and hurry to send them back. The amount of bad advice people give here is ridiculous.