Good information from @canada_eagle. Also, your NOC code is also on the list for SINP, although note that you would need to get CIPS certification to qualify as indicated on this page:applying from Seattle, I submitted my EE Profile yesterday, however my CRS score is just 365. I'm looking into PNP as an option in hope to additional points, however they require a job offer for you to be considered. Anybody here have a similar case? or does anyone here can give advice? Thanks!
Thanks for thinking of me! I did submit my application last night/this morning a little after 2 AM and am praying for a smooth and speedy nomination.@trumprefugee Looks like OINP is taking applications. Hope you got your in
Hi everyone. I'm just curious, is the whatsapp group still active? I tried joining it, but it doesn't seem to work.link to join whatsaap group https://chat.whatsapp.com/1nCqXZMNQgeBdfyYULKsJv
I would advise you to do your landing on the first trip through. When landing, tell them you are going to be going back to the US prior to getting your PR card to settle things, pack up, etc., and they *may* go ahead and put a visa stamp in your passport (They may not, because it seems to confuse people when I show them mine- at the end of the day it's not a big deal). After you soft land, you can continue to use your US passport to enter Canada at airports. [The main issue at airports & PR cards is individuals can use the PR Card to be allowed to board the plane. As US passport holders, we don't have this issue so having the PR Card itself is rather useless to us on a plane.]Does anyone here have experience traveling to Canada after receiving a COPR but returning to the US before receiving your PR card? I'm going to need to go to Vancouver for a job interview soon and I'm wondering if I can just travel as a US citizen and not do my landing since I'll be returning to the US the very next day or so and will possibly need to go back and forth a few times before I would receive my PR card.
As a US citizen travelling with a US passport I don't need a visa or ETA to go to Canada, but I don't want to feel like I'm doing anything wrong by not disclosing or "activating" my COPR and landing. Is immigration okay with this? Do I just explain my situation when I go through customs? How did you go about coming and going for job interviews as a US citizen post receiving your COPR? The only information I can find on the topic has to do with people from countries (everywhere besides the US) who need an ETA or Visa and therefore need to activate their COPR at the time they first arrive in Canada.
I do not suggest going this route. More than likely the CBSA officer will not allow you to list a post office box.@moose17 Some folks apparently setup a mailbox in Canada to receive their PR cards for them.
Yes, I just did that - I'm US-based but with another passport that needs an eTA (I had the eTA before I got my COPR). They just asked me the purpose for the visit and I said I was attending a conference in Canada, that was it; they did not even ask me anything about COPR. Of course, if they ask you anything about COPR, you should answer truthfully... I had brought with me all the documents to prove that I was only staying in Canada temporarily for now (return tickets, the proof of current enrollment in school, etc) and say I was planning to land next spring; I'm no lawyer but as far as I could tell, you'll just need to convince them that you are leaving Canada after the temporary stay (see IRPA Article 22 (2)).Does anyone here have experience traveling to Canada after receiving a COPR but returning to the US before receiving your PR card? I'm going to need to go to Vancouver for a job interview soon and I'm wondering if I can just travel as a US citizen and not do my landing since I'll be returning to the US the very next day or so and will possibly need to go back and forth a few times before I would receive my PR card.
As a US citizen travelling with a US passport I don't need a visa or ETA to go to Canada, but I don't want to feel like I'm doing anything wrong by not disclosing or "activating" my COPR and landing. Is immigration okay with this? Do I just explain my situation when I go through customs? How did you go about coming and going for job interviews as a US citizen post receiving your COPR? The only information I can find on the topic has to do with people from countries (everywhere besides the US) who need an ETA or Visa and therefore need to activate their COPR at the time they first arrive in Canada.