+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445
sevenseconds77 said:
Thanks. For those who got their visa stamped was there a date specified before which you had to arrive in Canada.

I needed to know how much time we have before coming to Canada

PR Visa normally has an expiry date. Usually, it's valid till the expiry of the medical and medicals are valid for 12 months.

Someone who got PGP PR Visa can be more helpful in this case.
 
dadaum said:
Thank you Rossei.
I read email for RPRF but not for documents. Yes I saw in "view submitted application" in which it was written upload documents.So I feel I can upload or sent as an attachment in the email mentioned by you. Thank you very much.

If it's instructed in the email that you can upload docs using MyCIC, then go ahead. I haven't seen anyone who was instructed in this way. It has always been any of these 3 ways:
- Upload docs using 'Webform'
- Send email to specific email address provided with attachments
- Regular mail
 
Tina16 said:
Hi Rossei

Do you think it is a good idea to email all the requested docs to NDVO and then send it by post/ courier too?

If NDVO asked docs in reg. mail, then you don't have to email them. But you should always have scanned copies of what are you sending in case they don't receive it.
 
Rossei said:
PR Visa normally has an expiry date. Usually, it's valid till the expiry of the medical and medicals are valid for 12 months.

Someone who got PGP PR Visa can be more helpful in this case.
Nothing is written for PCC.It is written for sending receipt of RPRF.For PCC only this muchnis mentioned: Police Certificate: Please provide us with a scanned copy of an original police clearance certificate from India. This must be received at this office by: 2016/10/16 I will send PCC as per your instructions.
 
Rossei said:
This is what I've found after searching in the forum:
Canadian High Commission
Immigration Section
7/8 Shantipath
Chanakyapuri
Post Box 5209
New Delhi – 110021

This is what NDVO website says:
7/8 Shantipath, Chanakyapuri
New Delhi 110 021, India

Thanks Rossei. For RPRF, I believe you need to send something to CPC-Mississauga as well along with Cost-Recovery@cic.gc.ca? Does anybody know the email address for them? Or even better post both the email addresses?

Thanks.
 
dbss said:
Thanks Rossei. For RPRF, I believe you need to send something to CPC-Mississauga as well along with Cost-Recovery@cic.gc.ca? Does anybody know the email address for them? Or even better post both the email addresses?

Thanks.

NDVO email instructed me to send the RPRF receipt to CPCM-EXTCOM@cic.gc.ca
 
After being approved by Singapore and got visa stamping done in Ottawa, I took my mom to Coutts land border in Alberta this afternoon to complete landing. The process was so quick and seamless. Since we wanted to avoid busy weekend we decided to go Friday afternoon and both sides were pretty much quiet, even though it is the biggest border crossing in Alberta. We were one of very few passenger vehicles, the rest were cargo trucks at the time.

Quite different from others' experience, it took us longer at the U.S office than on Canadian side. On the U.S side, we were told to park the car and came inside the building. Officer was nice, after about 20 minutes doing some paperworks on computer he came back and gave my mom refusal of admission into the U.S. Without being asked, he told us that this has nothing to do with our entry records to the U.S as it is an administrative refusal to do the landing on Canadian side tonight. He said you guys can declare "no" if later on being asked if ever refused into the U.S. Then he drove his car to escort us back to the U-turn into Canada.

Once on Canadian soil, the frontline officer asked what we were there for and took my Canadian passport and my mom foreign passport. He asked typical custom questions about items or cash to declare to which we responded no. He then gave us a yellow paper, asked us to pull over to the front building and come inside with all other paperworks to finish landing. Friendly, quick and professional.

We went inside, there was nobody we were the only people (actually just my mom) there for landing at 8pm Friday afternoon. One male officer greeted us warmly and asked if mother can speak English, if not I will need to translate. He was the only immigration officer on duty at the time I guess. He asked mom 2 questions on COPR which are "ever been arrested" and "any other dependent children". He didn't bother to ask anything else. Then he asked me to write down address to send PR card. Mom initialed on the 2 COPR copies for those 2 questions and signed at the bottom. He then told us to sit and wait. After 5-7 minutes of entering data in the system, he called us back and very nicely and warmly smiled and said to us "Please tell your mom I congratulate her for becoming a PR today. It's all done now. Expect PR Card within 90 days". He stapled her COPR to the passport and told us this paper is her temporary proof of PR. He gave us a paper instruction on how to get SIN and Health Care. By the way make sure you bring any immigration permits you had since they do ask you to surrender at the time of landing.

Our own experience about landing at land border was quite pleasant, quick and easy. The whole process for both US and Canadian side was just about 30 minutes. I guess we came during less busy hours so the officers from both sides were nice and helpful, though I heard some people had very bad and scary experiences with officers at border crossings in Alberta when they try to validate their COPR during busy hours, especially at the Carway POE.

So the journey is complete after 1 year and 9 months (actually the real processing just took 3 months from SA assessment to PR Visa because for 1 year 6 month the file just sat idly at CPC-Mississauga). We drove back to home in Calgary which is 3 hours away from Coutts border.

Good luck to the rest of you here. I can tell CIC is doing their best to help reunite parents to their Canadian children as quickly and easily as they possibly can. It's hard to remain patient, I wasn't a patient person myself, but your day will come eventually.
 
vnexpress said:
After being approved by Singapore and got visa stamping done in Ottawa, I took my mom to Coutts land border in Alberta this afternoon to complete landing. The process was so quick and seamless. Since we wanted to avoid busy weekend we decided to go Friday afternoon and both sides were pretty much quiet, even though it is the biggest border crossing in Alberta. We were one of very few passenger vehicles, the rest were cargo trucks at the time.

Quite different from others' experience, it took us longer at the U.S office than on Canadian side. On the U.S side, we were told to park the car and came inside the building. Officer was nice, after about 20 minutes doing some paperworks on computer he came back and gave my mom refusal of admission into the U.S. Without being asked, he told us that this has nothing to do with our entry records to the U.S as it is an administrative refusal to do the landing on Canadian side tonight. He said you guys can declare "no" if later on being asked if ever refused into the U.S. Then he drove his car to escort us back to the U-turn into Canada.

Once on Canadian soil, the frontline officer asked what we were there for and took my Canadian passport and my mom foreign passport. He asked typical custom questions about items or cash to declare to which we responded no. He then gave us a yellow paper, asked us to pull over to the front building and come inside with all other paperworks to finish landing. Friendly, quick and professional.

We went inside, there was nobody we were the only people (actually just my mom) there for landing at 8pm Friday afternoon. One male officer greeted us warmly and asked if mother can speak English, if not I will need to translate. He was the only immigration officer on duty at the time I guess. He asked mom 2 questions on COPR which are "ever been arrested" and "any other dependent children". He didn't bother to ask anything else. Then he asked me to write down address to send PR card. Mom initialed on the 2 COPR copies for those 2 questions and signed at the bottom. He then told us to sit and wait. After 5-7 minutes of entering data in the system, he called us back and very nicely and warmly smiled and said to us "Please tell your mom I congratulate her for becoming a PR today. It's all done now. Expect PR Card within 90 days". He stapled her COPR to the passport and told us this paper is her temporary proof of PR. He gave us a paper instruction on how to get SIN and Health Care. By the way make sure you bring any immigration permits you had since they do ask you to surrender at the time of landing.

Our own experience about landing at land border was quite pleasant, quick and easy. The whole process for both US and Canadian side was just about 30 minutes. I guess we came during less busy hours so the officers from both sides were nice and helpful, though I heard some people had very bad and scary experiences with officers at border crossings in Alberta when they try to validate their COPR during busy hours, especially at the Carway POE.

So the journey is complete after 1 year and 9 months (actually the real processing just took 3 months from SA assessment to PR Visa because for 1 year 6 month the file just sat idly at CPC-Mississauga). We drove back to home in Calgary which is 3 hours away from Coutts border.

Good luck to the rest of you here. I can tell CIC is doing their best to help reunite parents to their Canadian children as quickly and easily as they possibly can. It's hard to remain patient, I wasn't a patient person myself, but your day will come eventually.

Congrats

How much time took ottawa from the day the passport arrived to them to the day they returned it back to you with the visa on it ?
 
We just got medical request for my parents not PCC . they completed thier medical about two weeks but still shows in process . I see everybody gets PCC request with medical but we didn't get any PCC request .
Could someone please advise should we ask CIC or just wait for them about PCC.

Thank you
 
vnexpress said:
After being approved by Singapore and got visa stamping done in Ottawa, I took my mom to Coutts land border in Alberta this afternoon to complete landing. The process was so quick and seamless. Since we wanted to avoid busy weekend we decided to go Friday afternoon and both sides were pretty much quiet, even though it is the biggest border crossing in Alberta. We were one of very few passenger vehicles, the rest were cargo trucks at the time.

Quite different from others' experience, it took us longer at the U.S office than on Canadian side. On the U.S side, we were told to park the car and came inside the building. Officer was nice, after about 20 minutes doing some paperworks on computer he came back and gave my mom refusal of admission into the U.S. Without being asked, he told us that this has nothing to do with our entry records to the U.S as it is an administrative refusal to do the landing on Canadian side tonight. He said you guys can declare "no" if later on being asked if ever refused into the U.S. Then he drove his car to escort us back to the U-turn into Canada.

Once on Canadian soil, the frontline officer asked what we were there for and took my Canadian passport and my mom foreign passport. He asked typical custom questions about items or cash to declare to which we responded no. He then gave us a yellow paper, asked us to pull over to the front building and come inside with all other paperworks to finish landing. Friendly, quick and professional.

We went inside, there was nobody we were the only people (actually just my mom) there for landing at 8pm Friday afternoon. One male officer greeted us warmly and asked if mother can speak English, if not I will need to translate. He was the only immigration officer on duty at the time I guess. He asked mom 2 questions on COPR which are "ever been arrested" and "any other dependent children". He didn't bother to ask anything else. Then he asked me to write down address to send PR card. Mom initialed on the 2 COPR copies for those 2 questions and signed at the bottom. He then told us to sit and wait. After 5-7 minutes of entering data in the system, he called us back and very nicely and warmly smiled and said to us "Please tell your mom I congratulate her for becoming a PR today. It's all done now. Expect PR Card within 90 days". He stapled her COPR to the passport and told us this paper is her temporary proof of PR. He gave us a paper instruction on how to get SIN and Health Care. By the way make sure you bring any immigration permits you had since they do ask you to surrender at the time of landing.

Our own experience about landing at land border was quite pleasant, quick and easy. The whole process for both US and Canadian side was just about 30 minutes. I guess we came during less busy hours so the officers from both sides were nice and helpful, though I heard some people had very bad and scary experiences with officers at border crossings in Alberta when they try to validate their COPR during busy hours, especially at the Carway POE.

So the journey is complete after 1 year and 9 months (actually the real processing just took 3 months from SA assessment to PR Visa because for 1 year 6 month the file just sat idly at CPC-Mississauga). We drove back to home in Calgary which is 3 hours away from Coutts border.

Good luck to the rest of you here. I can tell CIC is doing their best to help reunite parents to their Canadian children as quickly and easily as they possibly can. It's hard to remain patient, I wasn't a patient person myself, but your day will come eventually.

Congratulations
 
vnexpress said:
After being approved by Singapore and got visa stamping done in Ottawa, I took my mom to Coutts land border in Alberta this afternoon to complete landing. The process was so quick and seamless. Since we wanted to avoid busy weekend we decided to go Friday afternoon and both sides were pretty much quiet, even though it is the biggest border crossing in Alberta. We were one of very few passenger vehicles, the rest were cargo trucks at the time.

Quite different from others' experience, it took us longer at the U.S office than on Canadian side. On the U.S side, we were told to park the car and came inside the building. Officer was nice, after about 20 minutes doing some paperworks on computer he came back and gave my mom refusal of admission into the U.S. Without being asked, he told us that this has nothing to do with our entry records to the U.S as it is an administrative refusal to do the landing on Canadian side tonight. He said you guys can declare "no" if later on being asked if ever refused into the U.S. Then he drove his car to escort us back to the U-turn into Canada.

Once on Canadian soil, the frontline officer asked what we were there for and took my Canadian passport and my mom foreign passport. He asked typical custom questions about items or cash to declare to which we responded no. He then gave us a yellow paper, asked us to pull over to the front building and come inside with all other paperworks to finish landing. Friendly, quick and professional.

We went inside, there was nobody we were the only people (actually just my mom) there for landing at 8pm Friday afternoon. One male officer greeted us warmly and asked if mother can speak English, if not I will need to translate. He was the only immigration officer on duty at the time I guess. He asked mom 2 questions on COPR which are "ever been arrested" and "any other dependent children". He didn't bother to ask anything else. Then he asked me to write down address to send PR card. Mom initialed on the 2 COPR copies for those 2 questions and signed at the bottom. He then told us to sit and wait. After 5-7 minutes of entering data in the system, he called us back and very nicely and warmly smiled and said to us "Please tell your mom I congratulate her for becoming a PR today. It's all done now. Expect PR Card within 90 days". He stapled her COPR to the passport and told us this paper is her temporary proof of PR. He gave us a paper instruction on how to get SIN and Health Care. By the way make sure you bring any immigration permits you had since they do ask you to surrender at the time of landing.

Our own experience about landing at land border was quite pleasant, quick and easy. The whole process for both US and Canadian side was just about 30 minutes. I guess we came during less busy hours so the officers from both sides were nice and helpful, though I heard some people had very bad and scary experiences with officers at border crossings in Alberta when they try to validate their COPR during busy hours, especially at the Carway POE.

So the journey is complete after 1 year and 9 months (actually the real processing just took 3 months from SA assessment to PR Visa because for 1 year 6 month the file just sat idly at CPC-Mississauga). We drove back to home in Calgary which is 3 hours away from Coutts border.

Good luck to the rest of you here. I can tell CIC is doing their best to help reunite parents to their Canadian children as quickly and easily as they possibly can. It's hard to remain patient, I wasn't a patient person myself, but your day will come eventually.

Congratulations!
 
random hero said:
Congrats

How much time took ottawa from the day the passport arrived to them to the day they returned it back to you with the visa on it ?

Exactly 2 weeks from the day they received passport until the day we received it back at home. If you don't need visa only need COPR then maybe one week sooner. If you need visa then 2 weeks.
 
We just got medical request for my parents not PCC . they completed thier medical about two weeks but still shows in process . I see everybody gets PCC request with medical but we didn't get any PCC request .
Could someone please advise should we ask CIC or just wait for them about PCC.

Please some one help if you have/had situation or know the process.

Thanks
 
vnexpress said:
After being approved by Singapore and got visa stamping done in Ottawa, I took my mom to Coutts land border in Alberta this afternoon to complete landing. The process was so quick and seamless. Since we wanted to avoid busy weekend we decided to go Friday afternoon and both sides were pretty much quiet, even though it is the biggest border crossing in Alberta. We were one of very few passenger vehicles, the rest were cargo trucks at the time.

Quite different from others' experience, it took us longer at the U.S office than on Canadian side. On the U.S side, we were told to park the car and came inside the building. Officer was nice, after about 20 minutes doing some paperworks on computer he came back and gave my mom refusal of admission into the U.S. Without being asked, he told us that this has nothing to do with our entry records to the U.S as it is an administrative refusal to do the landing on Canadian side tonight. He said you guys can declare "no" if later on being asked if ever refused into the U.S. Then he drove his car to escort us back to the U-turn into Canada.

Once on Canadian soil, the frontline officer asked what we were there for and took my Canadian passport and my mom foreign passport. He asked typical custom questions about items or cash to declare to which we responded no. He then gave us a yellow paper, asked us to pull over to the front building and come inside with all other paperworks to finish landing. Friendly, quick and professional.

We went inside, there was nobody we were the only people (actually just my mom) there for landing at 8pm Friday afternoon. One male officer greeted us warmly and asked if mother can speak English, if not I will need to translate. He was the only immigration officer on duty at the time I guess. He asked mom 2 questions on COPR which are "ever been arrested" and "any other dependent children". He didn't bother to ask anything else. Then he asked me to write down address to send PR card. Mom initialed on the 2 COPR copies for those 2 questions and signed at the bottom. He then told us to sit and wait. After 5-7 minutes of entering data in the system, he called us back and very nicely and warmly smiled and said to us "Please tell your mom I congratulate her for becoming a PR today. It's all done now. Expect PR Card within 90 days". He stapled her COPR to the passport and told us this paper is her temporary proof of PR. He gave us a paper instruction on how to get SIN and Health Care. By the way make sure you bring any immigration permits you had since they do ask you to surrender at the time of landing.

Our own experience about landing at land border was quite pleasant, quick and easy. The whole process for both US and Canadian side was just about 30 minutes. I guess we came during less busy hours so the officers from both sides were nice and helpful, though I heard some people had very bad and scary experiences with officers at border crossings in Alberta when they try to validate their COPR during busy hours, especially at the Carway POE.

So the journey is complete after 1 year and 9 months (actually the real processing just took 3 months from SA assessment to PR Visa because for 1 year 6 month the file just sat idly at CPC-Mississauga). We drove back to home in Calgary which is 3 hours away from Coutts border.

Good luck to the rest of you here. I can tell CIC is doing their best to help reunite parents to their Canadian children as quickly and easily as they possibly can. It's hard to remain patient, I wasn't a patient person myself, but your day will come eventually.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thank you for sharing & congrats .
 
I created a CIC account under my name and linked my parents application to this account with the file number that was in the sponsorship approval email.
Is this the right way to do it? The application status shows as follows.

Application/profile status - Open
Review of eligibility - Review in Progress
Review of medical results - Not needed at this time
Review of submitted documents - (blank)
Scheduling an interview - Not needed at this time
A background check is needed - Not needed at this time
Final decision - Not Started

Is it normal that "Review of submitted documents" shows blank?? Also, if we haven't been asked for medical exam yet, is it supposed to show "Not needed at this time"? I don't see medical requests in the application messages section at the bottom. It seems that now many applicants have been moving forward fast and I just want to make sure I haven't missed anything or done anything incorrectly. My parents application was sent to Ottawa and has been in process since Aug. 10. Since then, no requests or updates yet. It's just being a little slow, right?