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Author Topic: Fairness Letter Of Medica Inadmissibility  (Read 2047 times)
owoblow
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Posts: 12
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« Reply #15 on: January 13, 2011, 08:29:45 am »

First let me say Congrats on your Visa Jadwig.

I work with an International Organisation. My plan is to land with my wife and kids first and then return to my job, so that after three years i will go back to Canada in other to fulfil the 2 out of 5 years requirement.

So you think it will hold ground? or what do you think.

Should i just show that i have international medical Insurance and then the statement of account not up to 50,000 USD though. Do you think this will suffice. Since my son actually only need Speech therapy. He attends a regular school and not special school.
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jadwig
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Category........: FSW1
Visa Office......: London

« Reply #16 on: January 13, 2011, 12:14:47 pm »

I am doing exactly what you stated...land with my wife and kids and return to my job for next three years. The only catch is that at no time during the application process did I indicate upfront that I have no intention of establishing in Canada immediately. If you present the argument that you will establish fully in Canada after the first 3 years, the question that comes to mind is how then would you continue to fund your child's needs after cutting off from your current job? or would your child no longer require intervention speech therapy at that stage?

My sincere belief is that your best option is to argue rather that your child's disability does not make him/her inadmissible on the grounds of excessive cost. You need to point out that your child will not require any extra care that would not normally be available to someone that is deaf or that requires speech therapy in Canada. As such, your child does not have 'extra' requirements and should not be compared with someone that does not have similar disability for the purpose of determining his admissibility. I suggested that you contact the Deaf Association in Canada because there's a link for immigration issues on their website. That suggests to me that they've probably had to intervene in similar cases in the past and I won't be surprised that there will be a court decision somewhere that you can refer to in supporting your position. If you make contact with them, you just might be surprised how much help they can be to you.
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Jadwig. (The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want)
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