lleahdoll
Hero Member
- Nov 12, 2012
- 38
- Visa Office......
- Ottawa
- App. Filed.......
- Sep 9th, 2014
- Doc's Request.
- May 5th, 2015 (CSQ requested)
- AOR Received.
- Oct 14th, 2014
- File Transfer...
- Nov 14th, 2014
- Med's Request
- Upfront
- Med's Done....
- July 29th, 2014
- VISA ISSUED...
- DM: Aug 1st, 2015 COPR: Aug 6th, 2015
- LANDED..........
- Sep 1st, 2015
I emailed our MP today, here's what I wrote (wrote it as if I was my husband, haha)
"Dear xxxxx,
My name is xxxxxx, I'm a Canadian Citizen, residing in xxxxxx, Quebec. Myself and my wife, Leah, are currently caught up in the process of applying for Permanent Residency (PR) under the Spousal Sponsorship category.
We are outland applicants and we submitted our application to CIC September 9th, 2014. We had a small speed bump while waiting for sponsorship approval, finding out our application had been wrongly filed inland. That mistake of the Mississauga office cost us a month. Our application was then forwarded to Ottawa November 14th, 2014.
Since I am a resident of Quebec and my wife will be landing here, we had to submit for a CSQ. We received that in December and per the instructions that accompanied it, we did not mail a copy to Ottawa. In May 2015, my wife received a documents request for our CSQ, to further her application. We sent it the same day and CIC received it the very next day. According to our GCMS notes, the CSQ was not recorded into the system until what looks like May 22nd, 2015. Since then we have heard nothing and in our notes we saw my wife's medical went from "passed" to "not started". It seems the officer may have requested an extension of medical, April 27th, 2015. I'm just wondering why it would take over 2 months for that.
My wife's medicals expire July 29th (they were done last year on this date), and we want to make sure we have enough time to buy a reasonably priced plane ticket to get her to the states and then back here to land (if approved).
So, that's basically where we stand right now. We know we're well within the processing times, but we don't seem to be within the trends of other applicants who applied the same month as us. We aren't a complicated case from what we can tell; first marriage, no kids, close in age, etc.
If there is anything you can do for us, in your position as our Member of Parliament to request even a morsel of information regarding my wife's application for Permanent Residency, we would greatly appreciate it. We are not expecting anyone to help speed up the process, we just want to be treated fairly and to expect our application to be processed in a timely manner with a basic level of communication available for us to know where we stand.
Regards,
Xxxxx and Leah xxxxx"
"Dear xxxxx,
My name is xxxxxx, I'm a Canadian Citizen, residing in xxxxxx, Quebec. Myself and my wife, Leah, are currently caught up in the process of applying for Permanent Residency (PR) under the Spousal Sponsorship category.
We are outland applicants and we submitted our application to CIC September 9th, 2014. We had a small speed bump while waiting for sponsorship approval, finding out our application had been wrongly filed inland. That mistake of the Mississauga office cost us a month. Our application was then forwarded to Ottawa November 14th, 2014.
Since I am a resident of Quebec and my wife will be landing here, we had to submit for a CSQ. We received that in December and per the instructions that accompanied it, we did not mail a copy to Ottawa. In May 2015, my wife received a documents request for our CSQ, to further her application. We sent it the same day and CIC received it the very next day. According to our GCMS notes, the CSQ was not recorded into the system until what looks like May 22nd, 2015. Since then we have heard nothing and in our notes we saw my wife's medical went from "passed" to "not started". It seems the officer may have requested an extension of medical, April 27th, 2015. I'm just wondering why it would take over 2 months for that.
My wife's medicals expire July 29th (they were done last year on this date), and we want to make sure we have enough time to buy a reasonably priced plane ticket to get her to the states and then back here to land (if approved).
So, that's basically where we stand right now. We know we're well within the processing times, but we don't seem to be within the trends of other applicants who applied the same month as us. We aren't a complicated case from what we can tell; first marriage, no kids, close in age, etc.
If there is anything you can do for us, in your position as our Member of Parliament to request even a morsel of information regarding my wife's application for Permanent Residency, we would greatly appreciate it. We are not expecting anyone to help speed up the process, we just want to be treated fairly and to expect our application to be processed in a timely manner with a basic level of communication available for us to know where we stand.
Regards,
Xxxxx and Leah xxxxx"