matthewc
Hero Member
- Jan 18, 2010
- 47
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Inland (CPC-Vegreville)
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 27.09.2006
- AOR Received.
- 05.12.2006
- VISA ISSUED...
- 11.02.2008
- LANDED..........
- 31.03.2008
Options:
1.a. Sponsor them, including details of H&C considerations, best interests of OP's child. Appeal if necessary. (Good likelihood this won't work, and OP could even be stripped of own PR status for misrepresentation.)
1.b. Wait for citizenship before sponsoring (might help add weight to H&C, and make it less likely OP would be removed).
2. Wife applies separately under skilled worker class. Less likelihood of causing problems for OP.
3. OP could voluntarily relinquish PR status, and file a new skilled worker application, including wife and child as dependents.
About assessing people who will never come to Canada - one of the main objectives of the IRPA is keep families together. If a spouse or dependent child isn't going to be allowed into Canada due to criminality or some other inadmissibility, then Canada also excludes the principal applicant, because allowing the applicant in but not the rest of the family would split up the family. An extension of that reasoning is why non-accompanying family members have to be examined, and their inadmissibility can affect the principle applicants - they may not want to be together now, but they might in the future.
1.a. Sponsor them, including details of H&C considerations, best interests of OP's child. Appeal if necessary. (Good likelihood this won't work, and OP could even be stripped of own PR status for misrepresentation.)
1.b. Wait for citizenship before sponsoring (might help add weight to H&C, and make it less likely OP would be removed).
2. Wife applies separately under skilled worker class. Less likelihood of causing problems for OP.
3. OP could voluntarily relinquish PR status, and file a new skilled worker application, including wife and child as dependents.
About assessing people who will never come to Canada - one of the main objectives of the IRPA is keep families together. If a spouse or dependent child isn't going to be allowed into Canada due to criminality or some other inadmissibility, then Canada also excludes the principal applicant, because allowing the applicant in but not the rest of the family would split up the family. An extension of that reasoning is why non-accompanying family members have to be examined, and their inadmissibility can affect the principle applicants - they may not want to be together now, but they might in the future.