Alright guys, I've been lingering around here reading about what others have gone through in the arduous process that they call immigration, and I've finally decided to post and get some advice. Here's the scoop:
I'm a born Canadian citizen. When I was younger, my mother brought me to the U.S. She filed for her PR and, long story short, completely ignored mine. I didn't even have a copy of my birth certificate, passport, or any other ID, so I returned to Canada with the hope of squaring everything away properly and then came back to the states. Because of this, I now face a 10 year bar from the U.S. and have decided to take my wife and 1 year old son to Canada in hopes that we can get her PR and be done with the red tape and headaches. Given this situation, I need to leave a soon as humanly possible and don't have time to file and wait for an outland PR application for my wife. Also, for what it's worth, my wife and I were married here in the states a little over a year ago. We had a legitimate ceremony and everything with both of our families in attendance and officiated by a justice of the peace. We have a marriage license and are legally married, and have been together for about three years total. Our son was born here in the U.S. as well, and as I understand through my research, is a Canadian citizen because he is the first generation born outside of Canada to a Canadian citizen, I simply need to file for a citizenship certificate for him, which I plan to do after we get to Canada.
My plan is to pack up everything we own into an international moving container and have it shipped to my cousin's house in my home town. We will be taking the bare minimum in our vehicle that a family of 3 would take for a 2 week vacation and head north. When we reach the border, we will tell them that we are visiting some of my family (who have legitimately never met our son) and that we will be visiting for 2 weeks. This will, of course, not be the case, and we will not be returning to America. I already have a few prospects for jobs and intend to get employed and get us housing ASAP. Here's where my questions begin.
Is it feasible that we can pull off the border crossing given that I have no status in the states and have been here for quite some time? I've seen that people on here have their spouse with them in Canada the whole time the application process is taking place. The problem is, if she gets denied at the border, I can't cross back into the states with her. There's other border crossings near where we will initially be attempting that she could theoretically try, but I just want to know the likelihood that this will work.
U.S. citizens are exempt from visa requirements in Canada (to an extent anyway), and the CIC website states specifically that she does not need legal status to obtain PR through me. Should we attempt to apply for temporary residence or some sort of visa for her when the 6 month mark approaches, sooner than that, or at all? I'll be filing for her PR as soon as possible, so extra expenditures would hamper this, however I don't want to risk denial of the application.
How should we handle our son on the application given that he already has citizenship?
I may need to get some government assistance temporarily until I find work. Will this affect her application? I intend to file after I find employment of course, I'm just curious if there's an amount of time I should wait after getting assistance to file.
Any help on this would be appreciated so that we can get the ball rolling. Let me know if you guys need any more information from me, and if I think of any other questions, I'll let you know. Thanks.
I'm a born Canadian citizen. When I was younger, my mother brought me to the U.S. She filed for her PR and, long story short, completely ignored mine. I didn't even have a copy of my birth certificate, passport, or any other ID, so I returned to Canada with the hope of squaring everything away properly and then came back to the states. Because of this, I now face a 10 year bar from the U.S. and have decided to take my wife and 1 year old son to Canada in hopes that we can get her PR and be done with the red tape and headaches. Given this situation, I need to leave a soon as humanly possible and don't have time to file and wait for an outland PR application for my wife. Also, for what it's worth, my wife and I were married here in the states a little over a year ago. We had a legitimate ceremony and everything with both of our families in attendance and officiated by a justice of the peace. We have a marriage license and are legally married, and have been together for about three years total. Our son was born here in the U.S. as well, and as I understand through my research, is a Canadian citizen because he is the first generation born outside of Canada to a Canadian citizen, I simply need to file for a citizenship certificate for him, which I plan to do after we get to Canada.
My plan is to pack up everything we own into an international moving container and have it shipped to my cousin's house in my home town. We will be taking the bare minimum in our vehicle that a family of 3 would take for a 2 week vacation and head north. When we reach the border, we will tell them that we are visiting some of my family (who have legitimately never met our son) and that we will be visiting for 2 weeks. This will, of course, not be the case, and we will not be returning to America. I already have a few prospects for jobs and intend to get employed and get us housing ASAP. Here's where my questions begin.
Is it feasible that we can pull off the border crossing given that I have no status in the states and have been here for quite some time? I've seen that people on here have their spouse with them in Canada the whole time the application process is taking place. The problem is, if she gets denied at the border, I can't cross back into the states with her. There's other border crossings near where we will initially be attempting that she could theoretically try, but I just want to know the likelihood that this will work.
U.S. citizens are exempt from visa requirements in Canada (to an extent anyway), and the CIC website states specifically that she does not need legal status to obtain PR through me. Should we attempt to apply for temporary residence or some sort of visa for her when the 6 month mark approaches, sooner than that, or at all? I'll be filing for her PR as soon as possible, so extra expenditures would hamper this, however I don't want to risk denial of the application.
How should we handle our son on the application given that he already has citizenship?
I may need to get some government assistance temporarily until I find work. Will this affect her application? I intend to file after I find employment of course, I'm just curious if there's an amount of time I should wait after getting assistance to file.
Any help on this would be appreciated so that we can get the ball rolling. Let me know if you guys need any more information from me, and if I think of any other questions, I'll let you know. Thanks.