wildroots said:1) Do you have to be already married in order to start your sponsorship process?
wildroots said:2) Do you have to have made ( min 22-28,000) last 12 months in order to start your sponsorship for your spouse?
I have only been part time/ full time of minimum wage over the course of the last year, with months of unemployment. I know I have not made enough in the last 12 months If they base the sponsorship off that previous income.
waikiki said:Hi everyone, my husband has recieved from his outland VO an information saying that they will send him instructions concerning new medicals and new police certificate. He applied more than 1 year ago, so those documents have expired. Is it safe to assume, that they are done with the process and they only need those documents renewed? PR should be near?
canadaeh1234 said:i left canada while my inland spousal application is in process due to family emergency. however, i have a multiple entry visitor visa. now i want to go back to canada to reunite with my husband, will i be allowed re entry? do i have a chance to go back?
canadaeh1234 said:thanks so much for the reply, i am quite relieved. i was scared because i read posts about if you cannot re enter, the application will be bandoned
chipits said:I've asked this question in another thread (the Sydney applicants one) but hopefully someone here can help me too.
My husband has gone for his medical, but it turns out he had high blood pressure. He has to return in three days to get the blood pressure tested again, but is there any chance if the reading is the same that we'll be denied on that basis?
Thanks for the help!
BlackandBlue said:Hi everyone,
I have a question (but of course); after my Working Holiday visa expired, I applied for a change of status from worker to visitor (in July) to Vergaville, and was stupid enough to state I have a fiancee here in Canada. They responded today, refusing my application and saying I have to leave Canada immediately (WH visa expired in May). In the meantime, Him and I got married.
Do I now contact Vergaville, saying I am now married to a Canadian citizen (born and raised here) and submit the sponsorship application where it needs to go, and most importantly, can I stay here if I do so? Thank you SO much for any information...
I've been falling into this Canadian immigration black hole for a long time now... My employer also has an LMO submitted, waiting to be processed, and I have his job offer... I'm not giving up on my job, my Love, my life
thank you.
computergeek said:Nope. Zero chance. There are three categories for refusal on medical grounds: public health, public safety and excessive demand. High BP is not grounds for either of the first two and spouses are exempt from the excessive demand issue. So the DMP will do his or her job, but as an excessive demand exempt applicant the worst he could get would be an M39 coding.
So relax - don't worry about this issue.
computergeek said:You need to either get your spousal application submitted ASAP, including an open work permit application, OR you need to leave Canada. What you do not want to do is allow your departure order to become a deportation order, which is what happens after 30 days. A deportation order becomes a lifetime ban on entry to Canada and that will make things much more complicated for you (because it means they can force your removal, charge you for the costs of doing that and require you apply for an ARC to come back).
I'm not convinced that an inland spousal application will fix this issue for you, perhaps someone else with more experience in this case can provide greater clarity here. However, I would suggest that the safest thing for you to do right now is to leave Canada. You can then proceed with an outland application. If your employer obtains a positive LMO then you can apply for a new work permit; if you obeyed the departure order, you've demonstrated that you do comply with the law and thus would be more likely to receive a new temporary status document.
Good luck!