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incendiary

Newbie
Mar 7, 2015
3
0
Been doing a lot of reading on sponsorship visas. GF and her son are from Australia, I'm Canadian. She doesn't qualify for any of the pmp or or visa's so sponsorship is the only option.

Dating for over 2 years and lived together for 4 months before her visa ran out. She asked an immigration advisor about other options and was told she would be denied with pmp or the other work / study ones.

I would be stating our conjugal start as the move in date so we have 4 months there. After she moved back home the soonest I could apply would be July as this would equal the year. I'll probably wait longer to make sure everything is lined up.

Common law won't work since we were together long enough. I could get a working holiday visa for AUS (1 year) but it's financial/ carrier suicide to do that with my current job (it's really good).

We don't want to get married just for some paperwork to prove that we're committed. It just seems like a bit of a sham at that point and neither of us see a point. I don't know how immigration takes on that point of view but after being married once (that's all cleared up and done) it just seems like a waste of money.

In reading through everything for the assessment and it seems like I need to prove that we're in a committed marriage like relationship. - Messages, phone calls, Skype, email, photos, trips back and forth, holidays etc. That ones easy. Other items are life insurance, joint bank accounts and tying your finances together. (I don't agree with tying finances together but they seem to think this is a good thing).

The hard one is proving the immigration barrier. She knows she doesn't qualify for any other visa's so should she just apply anyways to prove that it won't work? I'd rather not abandon my career here because this is where we want to set up.

I've got 8 months to a year to build evidence of our relationship. Am I wasting my time? Or do I have a chance - even if it may be slim?

Thanks for listening to a first time poster
 
You would be wasting your time.

There is no barrier to you getting married, and you mention that you could get a visa for Australia which would enable you to establish common law.
 
She could come as a visitor for 6 months, then apply to extend her stay, so you could become common-law.

Conjugal is for those who absolutely cannot live together and cannot get married. You can do both, but choose not to.
 
MilesAway said:
She could come as a visitor for 6 months, then apply to extend her stay, so you could become common-law.

Conjugal is for those who absolutely cannot live together and cannot get married. You can do both, but choose not to.

Exactly what MilesAway said.
 
MilesAway said:
She could come as a visitor for 6 months, then apply to extend her stay, so you could become common-law.

Conjugal is for those who absolutely cannot live together and cannot get married. You can do both, but choose not to.

This.
 
Conjugal has zero chance of succeeding.
 
well that sucks. So our options are get married or figure out some way to have her live here for a year and not work.
 
incendiary said:
well that sucks. So our options are get married or figure out some way to have her live here for a year and not work.


yup ... some of the Australia application have been really fast .
 
MilesAway said:
She could come as a visitor for 6 months, then apply to extend her stay, so you could become common-law.

Conjugal is for those who absolutely cannot live together and cannot get married. You can do both, but choose not to.

So this might have to be the method I use so I can have the outcome I want (living here vs aus). So from what I've read she can come over on a 6 month visa, but then normally has to leave. How difficult is it for her to extend to a year? Has anyone tried this and had success?
 
incendiary said:
So this might have to be the method I use so I can have the outcome I want (living here vs aus). So from what I've read she can come over on a 6 month visa, but then normally has to leave. How difficult is it for her to extend to a year? Has anyone tried this and had success?

Usually its very easy. When initial 6-months visitor status is almost up, can just apply ($100 application fee) to extend for another 6 or even 12 months.

Or she could try leaving and re-entering Canada, and upon re-entry she would usually just get another 6-months status.