Majromax
Hero Member
- Nov 19, 2014
- 18
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- CPC-Ottawa
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 2014-10-21
- AOR Received.
- 2015-01-11 [Inland AOR rec'd 2014-11-19, corrected]
- File Transfer...
- 2015-01-20 [CSQ applied Feb 9, issued Feb 19]
- Passport Req..
- [IP: 2015-06-10; DM: 2015-06-30]
- VISA ISSUED...
- 2015-07-20
- LANDED..........
- 2015-07-27
Yes. There is an ongoing pilot program to offer open work permits to inland ("in-Canada") applicants after their application is received. That is the part that takes ~4 months.flittering said:I think we had intended to do inland, we have notes on the new law that allows me to get a work permit within four months. That seems to only apply to the inland route. Am I correct in this?
The downside is that the "in-Canada" sponsorship program requires that you reside Canada *first*, and more importantly it takes substantially longer to fully process the application and grant permanent residency. Current processing times for in-Canada applicants are running about two years, meaning that those who applied in summer of 2013 are now finally receiving their PR.
"Outland" applications do not offer intermediate working status, but they are processed much more quickly. The official timeline for applications processed in Ottawa is about 16 months, but the vast majority of applicants from the US who have posted here have seen approvals in well less than a year, with 8-10 months being more typical. Processing times have varied, and this time last year the approval process was around 6 months.
Outland applications can be filed before you wish to move to Canada, meaning that you can file one immediately (upon collecting the paperwork and such, anyway). They also remain active if for whatever reason you needed to temporarily move back to the US, such as for work.
Presuming there is no problem with your moving to Canada in advance of the application (Americans are visa-exempt, but can only stay on tourist status for 6 months at a stretch without approval, and in turn that is under the discretion of CIC and/or the CBSA), given current trends inland processing will allow you to work 4-6 months earlier but will delay your final legal status by over a year.