Right now Ecas is down (at least for me it is... I can't log in) so maybe the online payment is down as well.... ?VPS said:When I try to pay the permanent resident fee online, it says Transaction not approved. Does anyone know what to do??
Right now Ecas is down (at least for me it is... I can't log in) so maybe the online payment is down as well.... ?VPS said:When I try to pay the permanent resident fee online, it says Transaction not approved. Does anyone know what to do??
was it down yesterday too??? I have been trying it since yesterday. Very worried...tink23 said:Right now Ecas is down (at least for me it is... I can't log in) so maybe the online payment is down as well.... ?
I couldn't log in either last night. In the morning, yes, but not in the evening/ night.VPS said:was it down yesterday too??? I have been trying it since yesterday. Very worried...
Me too..i tried yesterday afternoon ard 12:30 and today 3 times....Thanks. I was worried that my ecas had some issue, lil relieved to know the server/ecas is downtink23 said:I couldn't log in either last night. In the morning, yes, but not in the evening/ night.
Have you called your credit card company yet? They can tell you why the transaction is being declined. CIC fees seem to trigger anti-fraud rejections for some people, but if you call them and confirm with them they can clear it so the transaction will succeed.VPS said:When I try to pay the permanent resident fee online, it says Transaction not approved. Does anyone know what to do??
Thankscomputergeek said:Have you called your credit card company yet? They can tell you why the transaction is being declined. CIC fees seem to trigger anti-fraud rejections for some people, but if you call them and confirm with them they can clear it so the transaction will succeed.
Even if your husband had lived in Canada for two years, he wouldn't need a police check done unless CIC requested it. Unless they ask, you only need PCCs for countries outside Canada.chipits said:My husband has visited Canada a few times, but never more than six months at a time, always on the visitors visa. However, the TOTAL amount of time he's been in Canada ever does come up to more than six months. Does he need to have a police check done in Canada?
You were on vacation, so you would just list your permanent residence address. While five months is a long vacation, you never intended to "move" to those places, and thus you never severed your residential ties to your address in Canada.chipits said:Also, at one point we came to Canada for about five months, then went traveling for a while (3 months) in Europe, then came back to Canada and have been here since. When the application asks for an address, during those three months should I list the specific addresses where we stayed, or should I list his Australian address, or should I list the Canadian address where we were before and after? Or should I just write traveling, or something?
Yes. It was only a vacation, it wasn't a change in residence.chipits said:^^ Excellent, thank you! So even though it was a long vacation to Canada he should still put his Australian address as his residential address during that time?
Generally, people list their residential address in their home country and their mailing address in Canada. I had a three year work permit, so I listed my Canadian address for both.chipits said:Will there be any issues with the fact that we will be listing his current address as being here in Canada, since we intend to stay here (if his visitors visa is extended) during the processing of the visa?
ohh thanks i had same questioncomputergeek said:Even if your husband had lived in Canada for two years, he wouldn't need a police check done unless CIC requested it. Unless they ask, you only need PCCs for countries outside Canada.
You were on vacation, so you would just list your permanent residence address. While five months is a long vacation, you never intended to "move" to those places, and thus you never severed your residential ties to your address in Canada.
Just stick to the Canadian address if that's where he lived, or the Australian address if he hadn't moved to Canada yet.