Hi Friends,
My wife and I live in the US and are trying to acquire Certificates of Canadian Citizenship for our kids. I am American but my wife is dual US-Canadian and so although our kids were born in the States our understanding is that they are birthright citizens of Canada as well as the US.
The process seems straightforward enough but we're running into trouble with copies of the supporting documents. Copies of documents like the kids' photo IDs and my wife's proof of Canadian citizenship must be "certified". The Canadian Immigration website has some specific requirements for certifying documents and says that in the US a notary must certify them. But notaries in the state where we live (North Carolina) have balked at doing this - they say they are only allowed to affirm that the person who signs any document(s) is in fact that person, and that's all they can do. Maybe other states have different laws re: notaries but that seems to be the case here in NC. So I'm very confused as to who can actually certify these documents and how I would go about doing this. Certainly for something like a birth certificate you can request a certified copy from the issuing authority, which for us would be the Register of Deeds in the county where they were born. But that doesn't help us for (for example) the copy of my wife's proof of Canadian citizenship or the kids' photo IDs. We have US passports for them and the Canadian Immigration web site says photocopies of those are OK but again we would run into the problem of how to get them certified.
Has anyone else run into this situation?
Not sure what to do here.
Best,
km
My wife and I live in the US and are trying to acquire Certificates of Canadian Citizenship for our kids. I am American but my wife is dual US-Canadian and so although our kids were born in the States our understanding is that they are birthright citizens of Canada as well as the US.
The process seems straightforward enough but we're running into trouble with copies of the supporting documents. Copies of documents like the kids' photo IDs and my wife's proof of Canadian citizenship must be "certified". The Canadian Immigration website has some specific requirements for certifying documents and says that in the US a notary must certify them. But notaries in the state where we live (North Carolina) have balked at doing this - they say they are only allowed to affirm that the person who signs any document(s) is in fact that person, and that's all they can do. Maybe other states have different laws re: notaries but that seems to be the case here in NC. So I'm very confused as to who can actually certify these documents and how I would go about doing this. Certainly for something like a birth certificate you can request a certified copy from the issuing authority, which for us would be the Register of Deeds in the county where they were born. But that doesn't help us for (for example) the copy of my wife's proof of Canadian citizenship or the kids' photo IDs. We have US passports for them and the Canadian Immigration web site says photocopies of those are OK but again we would run into the problem of how to get them certified.
Has anyone else run into this situation?
Not sure what to do here.
Best,
km