- Apr 12, 2015
- 1
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Manila, Philippines
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- June 11, 2016 (recd June 13 by CIC)
- AOR Received.
- June 30, 2016
- File Transfer...
- SA: August 11, 2016
- Med's Done....
- Up Front: May 5, 2016
- Passport Req..
- not yet
- VISA ISSUED...
- not yet
- LANDED..........
- not yet
Hi everyone,
My wife and I got married this past April 7, 2016 in the Philippines so we are now in the phase of starting to gather the remaining documents to apply for permanent residence (outland). We've been in a Long Distance relationship for about 1 year and 4 months, and I've been to the Philippines 3 times to visit. Before we were married we tried to apply for Visitor Visa for her to visit me but were refused 2 times.
We have a lot of relationship evidence gathered up and are pretty confident we will have a strong PRV application. Only issue is that we have to wait on things like the marriage certificate (we expect that maybe end of May or early June), her passport renewal with her married name (earliest available appointment for that at DFA Manila is in early July), and other docs like Police Cert / Medical Cert can be pushed out closer to the time we apply which I expect might be August timeframe, and then maybe 6 months before she gets her PRV best case. Much too loooong...
The main issue is, we really want to be together sooner, so I am considering whether we should try again for a temporary visitor visa for her. As always, the main requirement for TRV is to prove ties to her home country. Previously the following were the reasons for refusal, and remedies I'm thinking of that I'd like some opinions on:
1. Travel History - She has not travelled outside her country before.
Remedy: If she takes a short weekend trip to Guangzhou, China or some other visa-exempt destination, she will have a stamp in her passport and we can say she has visited other countries and Travel History should not be an issue. Of course, if the visa officer is cranky they may say we only did that to satisfy the requirement.
2. Financial Assets - their argument was that she hasn't enough money to support herself during her trip (before we were married), even though I stated in the Invitation Letter I would be fully supporting her financially during her visit. Given that we were not married, I guess this makes sense to focus on her financial situation.
Remedy: since we're now married isn't it reasonable to assume that we both support each other financially? So why should it matter if she doesn't have $10k Canadian in her bank account? Again, I would state that I will shoulder all expenses for her trip in the invitation letter.
3. Insufficient Ties to home country - she has no kids and no assets tied to her name like a house or vehicle. She has a good job as a high school teacher, but that didn't appear to make any difference last time.
Remedy: Is it worth putting her name legally on the deed of the house they live in (currently in her Father's name) to satisfy that requirement? This way she has a tie to an asset in her home country.
Additionally, I would consider paying more for a fully refundable round trip ticket and include the receipt as proof that she plans to return. If the visitor visa is refused at least we would be able to get a full refund. We also can state that we are planning to apply for PRV outland and she needs to return to Philippines to gather her remaining documents anyway. We don't want to have to wait so much longer for an inland application, even though we would already be together, it would cost more to perpetually renew her visitor status.
Looking forward to your opinions on this.
Thanks in advance
My wife and I got married this past April 7, 2016 in the Philippines so we are now in the phase of starting to gather the remaining documents to apply for permanent residence (outland). We've been in a Long Distance relationship for about 1 year and 4 months, and I've been to the Philippines 3 times to visit. Before we were married we tried to apply for Visitor Visa for her to visit me but were refused 2 times.
We have a lot of relationship evidence gathered up and are pretty confident we will have a strong PRV application. Only issue is that we have to wait on things like the marriage certificate (we expect that maybe end of May or early June), her passport renewal with her married name (earliest available appointment for that at DFA Manila is in early July), and other docs like Police Cert / Medical Cert can be pushed out closer to the time we apply which I expect might be August timeframe, and then maybe 6 months before she gets her PRV best case. Much too loooong...
The main issue is, we really want to be together sooner, so I am considering whether we should try again for a temporary visitor visa for her. As always, the main requirement for TRV is to prove ties to her home country. Previously the following were the reasons for refusal, and remedies I'm thinking of that I'd like some opinions on:
1. Travel History - She has not travelled outside her country before.
Remedy: If she takes a short weekend trip to Guangzhou, China or some other visa-exempt destination, she will have a stamp in her passport and we can say she has visited other countries and Travel History should not be an issue. Of course, if the visa officer is cranky they may say we only did that to satisfy the requirement.
2. Financial Assets - their argument was that she hasn't enough money to support herself during her trip (before we were married), even though I stated in the Invitation Letter I would be fully supporting her financially during her visit. Given that we were not married, I guess this makes sense to focus on her financial situation.
Remedy: since we're now married isn't it reasonable to assume that we both support each other financially? So why should it matter if she doesn't have $10k Canadian in her bank account? Again, I would state that I will shoulder all expenses for her trip in the invitation letter.
3. Insufficient Ties to home country - she has no kids and no assets tied to her name like a house or vehicle. She has a good job as a high school teacher, but that didn't appear to make any difference last time.
Remedy: Is it worth putting her name legally on the deed of the house they live in (currently in her Father's name) to satisfy that requirement? This way she has a tie to an asset in her home country.
Additionally, I would consider paying more for a fully refundable round trip ticket and include the receipt as proof that she plans to return. If the visitor visa is refused at least we would be able to get a full refund. We also can state that we are planning to apply for PRV outland and she needs to return to Philippines to gather her remaining documents anyway. We don't want to have to wait so much longer for an inland application, even though we would already be together, it would cost more to perpetually renew her visitor status.
Looking forward to your opinions on this.
Thanks in advance