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dagget42

Newbie
May 6, 2018
9
0
Hey all,

I'm kind of at a loss what to do right now, was hoping for other thoughts. My partner and I applied for a supervisa for my parents in October, 2021 and we received a notice a few months ago that we were approved but only for approximately 15 months!

We pored over our applications with our lawyer and even double (and triple) checked for stupid errors like not noticing passports expiring right away or something. There was nothing wrong, we did everything by the book.

So, we requested a reasoning, and were told it was granted per the officer's discretion. More forcefully we then requested the notes under an ATIP request but again, there was nothing of substance to justify it in those notes and they repeated the exact same language "the visa was granted as per the officer discretion" language. Nothing regarding surveillance, health issues, expiring documents, misrepresentations, etc.

Meanwhile, my parents have had several visitor visas to Canada before (that they used), they just renewed for a second 5-year US visitor visa, and have regularly travelled North America and Europe. They own property and operate a business in our home country and support my grandparents and two brothers still living at home. They're under 60 and have no major health issues. My partner and I both have stable, generous incomes. Something is wrong but they just won't tell us.

Obviously I'm never going to reapply for a supervisa after how long it took and how much money it took for such a lackluster result but I'm worried now even if I apply for visitor visas there's something that is clearly an issue that isn't being expressed. But since it isn't in the notes and because the supervisa application was technically granted, my lawyer told us there's basically no path to appeal it with IRCC so I guess I just have to waste time and money trying with visitor visas and hope for the best?

Any thoughts? Kind of at a loss here. Huge waste of time and money.

Thanks!
 
Have them visit and apply for an extension.

That's definitely something worth trying. It'd be a small compensation for what we were hoping for if we did get it but it certainly couldn't hurt to try I guess. I'm still worried about something poisoning their applications in the eyes of officers though :\
 
What is their country of citizenship and do they live in the same country? When do their passports expire? Supervisa shouldn’t be incredibly costly. The big cost may be doing the medical exams in some countries. There is no need to use a representative and even if you use one you shouldn’t be paying much to apply for a TRV.


It looks like you may be a US citizen as well. Having you been living and working in Canada over the past numerous years?
 
From which country your parents belong?