user828 said:
Flagpoling is basically landing without leaving Canada, i.,e you get your permanent resident while you are in Canada but for landing purpose, you need to leave Canada and re-enter so USA is closest, and you drive down to the border and tell them I want to flagpole, so they technically refuse entry to the USA and let you make a u-turn to enter Canada and the formalities are completed there
Above can be done by making appointment with immigration office INSIDE Canada too but going to US for flagpoling is much faster and instant
You can try and apply for PR if you qualify, or work permit or marry a Canadian ( if genuine and need to stay with her for 2 years else PR will be revoked )
[quote author=user828]I believe you misunderstood what Flagpoling is, its only when you are in Canada as tourist, work permit and you get permanent resident, so to complete the formality there are 2 choices
1) Leave Canada ( via Flagpole ) and enter. Flagpole is itself an administrative refusal where you are not entering USA anyway
2) Make appt with Immigration Officer INSIDE Canada
It's not for Tourist Visa, it only let's you in Canada with Single/multiple entry and max 6 months stay and after that you need to either extend it or leave Canada and come back ( from USA ) provided you have USA visa and re-enter and then its upto Canadian Immigration officer to let you in or not --> bit of a risky thing
You might want to study up on Skilled Workers PR, frankly there is no easy way from Tourist Visa to Work Permit to PR -- that too.if you get a visa? its quite tough for young single male to get visa and that too you need to show very strong ties to home country
P.S Do you even need a visa? what country are you from[/quote]
Hi Guys,
Just came across this post...
I'm in the same boat with
realtwenty.
We (me & my wife) have a multiple-entry tourist visa; and we're also planning to take that approach: travel to Canada on Tourist visa; look for work... then hopefully; once a job has been offered, secure a work permit or PR. Good thing that
Flagpoling was explained here coz I was wondering how to do that
![Big Grin :D :D](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
so thanks. The nearest country with no visa requirement for a Philippine passport is somewhere in the Caribbean or in South America so thanks for the tip
![Big Grin :D :D](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
...
Note to self:
once job secured, apply work permit/pr, go to US border; tell them: "I want to Flagpole"... (hope they won't hang me to a flagpole, literally
![Big Grin :D :D](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
)
We've already visited Toronto last Christmas, but my stay was just short while my wife is still in Toronto w/ her sister... hopefully she'll be able to secure a work permit. I'll be making a return trip there sometime March; that'd be spring so hopefully it won't be too cold to move around. I'm targeting Manitoba, but I'm open to wherever there's an offer for the .Net Developer w/ 9 years experience or offer for any job at all as long as a work visa can be applied for. My visa is valid until November this year; so I could still stay in Canada until March, 2014 (visa extended) and hopefully should be long enough time to get a job.
Thanks again guys...
Once again.... Note to self:
once job secured, apply work permit/pr, go to US border; tell them: "I want to Flagpole"
... magic word:
Flagpole