A little background first. My girlfriend (from Taiwan) and I have been in a committed relationship for three years. For this past 10 months, we have been cohabitating in Toronto in a common-law relationship. On July 31, 2009 we will have lived together for one year, so we are readying a common-law sponsorship application that we will submit as soon as possible so that my girlfriend can become a permanent resident.
My girlfriend will be living with me and attending the University of Toronto (U of T) next year. If a student of U of T can provide evidence that they are applying to become a permanent resident and can show that they have received preliminary/provisional acceptance/approval, or approval-in-principle, they can get permission to pay (cheaper) domestic tuition. We were planning on filing an outland application (in either Buffalo, USA or Taipei, Taiwan).
My questions:
1) Outland sponsorship applications do not really have an approval-in-principle stage. I talked to the appropriate people at U of T about this issue today and they are not overly familiar with the details of the immigration system (especially sponsorship cases), so their answers regarding what type of document my girlfriend would require to obtain domestic fees were vague at best. If we were very fortunate, my sponsorship approval letter from CPC-Mississauga might be sufficient. What does the sponsorship approval letter actually say? Does anybody have a sample?
2) What letters are sent to the sponsor/applicant? I know of the sponsorship approval/rejection letter (to the sponsor) and the AOR (to the applicant). Any other letters that come prior to the very end of the immigration process that we might be able to use to convince the U of T people?
3) How likely is an interview? If you show lots of evidence that the common-law relationship is real and continuing, would you say there is still a greater than 50% chance of needing an interview? Who sets the interview date? Can the applicant move this date around by a few weeks? Is the date set over the phone? The reason I ask is because we could send our application to Taiwan (fast processing times), but it would be inconvenient and expensive for my girlfriend to have to go to an interview in the middle of her semester at U of T! If she had to attend an interview, could she hop on a plane to Taiwan, attend the interview, and then literally hop on a plane coming back to Canada the next day? I know it would be exhausting, but would it be possible?
4) Our one year cohabitating together is July 31, 2009. Do you think we could file a little before that date? We will be travelling back to visit my girlfriend’s family from July 2 – 27, 2009. Could we submit before we leave on vacation or is that risky?
My girlfriend will be living with me and attending the University of Toronto (U of T) next year. If a student of U of T can provide evidence that they are applying to become a permanent resident and can show that they have received preliminary/provisional acceptance/approval, or approval-in-principle, they can get permission to pay (cheaper) domestic tuition. We were planning on filing an outland application (in either Buffalo, USA or Taipei, Taiwan).
My questions:
1) Outland sponsorship applications do not really have an approval-in-principle stage. I talked to the appropriate people at U of T about this issue today and they are not overly familiar with the details of the immigration system (especially sponsorship cases), so their answers regarding what type of document my girlfriend would require to obtain domestic fees were vague at best. If we were very fortunate, my sponsorship approval letter from CPC-Mississauga might be sufficient. What does the sponsorship approval letter actually say? Does anybody have a sample?
2) What letters are sent to the sponsor/applicant? I know of the sponsorship approval/rejection letter (to the sponsor) and the AOR (to the applicant). Any other letters that come prior to the very end of the immigration process that we might be able to use to convince the U of T people?
3) How likely is an interview? If you show lots of evidence that the common-law relationship is real and continuing, would you say there is still a greater than 50% chance of needing an interview? Who sets the interview date? Can the applicant move this date around by a few weeks? Is the date set over the phone? The reason I ask is because we could send our application to Taiwan (fast processing times), but it would be inconvenient and expensive for my girlfriend to have to go to an interview in the middle of her semester at U of T! If she had to attend an interview, could she hop on a plane to Taiwan, attend the interview, and then literally hop on a plane coming back to Canada the next day? I know it would be exhausting, but would it be possible?
4) Our one year cohabitating together is July 31, 2009. Do you think we could file a little before that date? We will be travelling back to visit my girlfriend’s family from July 2 – 27, 2009. Could we submit before we leave on vacation or is that risky?