Ryissa said:
Oh yes, sorry! This is spouse/partner class. But that is a relief to hear!
If you aren't excessive demand exempt it is very difficult to enter Canada (on the other hand, CIC doesn't do very well in court on such cases, either. Better with parent/grandparent cases, losing something like 75% of the economic class cases that get a hearing in court - compared to winning about 80% of cases overall.)
But spouse/partner is "Excessive Demand Exempt". The only medical grounds for refusal are threat to public safety or health (e.g., TB - and that's treatable you just have to complete the treatment.)
Ryissa said:
Oh wow, Toronto! If the spouse class would "protect" me from medical issues I may not need a lawyer specifically for that, but I'd have to see. I'd like to be able to see a lawyer face-to-face but there's no one reputable in Vancouver, then Toronto it'll have to be!
There are reputable immigration attorneys in Vancouver, but not in the narrow field of medical inadmissibility. There are a couple in Toronto, though. But I don't think you need an attorney familiar with A38 refusals (my first attorney - in Vancouver - basically wrote me off when we found out that I had an issue).
Ryissa said:
I've been declared legally disabled from pain in the US. Basic treatment for it involves medicine, but getting treatment like physical therapy, acupuncture, and other pain-managing treatments is
much better. I'm hoping that once I can get proper coverage from my husband's extended health plan I can get better treatments, and hopefully find myself a job that would cause very minimal pain. Feel free to message me for specific details.
Good idea! I'll do just that. Would a copy do or is it just best to send the original document?
Vancouver is a veritable hot bed of treatment modalities, with numerous acupuncture treatments, TCM, naturopathic medicine, etc. There are even integrative clinics with both traditional medical treatment and alternative treatment modalities working together.
If you are living with your spouse in BC and have an application for PR pending, you become eligible (as his dependent) for MSP coverage. See:
http://www.health.gov.bc.ca/msp/infoben/pdf/covering-a-spouse-or-child-who-is-an-applicant-for-permanent-resident-status-in-canada.pdf - the key is to make sure you have the documentation to prove you have a pending application.
This would normally make you eligible for his extended health plan as well (typically they require you be covered by the provincial plan). Of course he should check with the plan administrator.
Just send a copy - keep the original. That way they can easily find it in the computer. Make sure to apply before your current status document expires (then you are covered by "implied status").
Good luck!