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1_Soph_1

Full Member
May 15, 2013
26
0
Hi guys,

does anyone know when the family sponsoring for independent children will be available again?
My parents are permanent residents and I'm an independent child, currently living in Ireland. I just received a work & travel visa but would like to stay longer than the one yr.

Anyone any information or ideas?

Thanks!
 
I have seen nothing to indicate that any form of sponsorship for independent children will ever be available in the future. There may be provincial nomination schemes that allow it but not generic. When do you believe it was last available as an option?

See http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/sponsor/relatives-apply-who.asp for details.
 
Hi,

I think it was available in 2010 or 2011.

I checked today if I would be eligible for a permanent residency and it stated that I might be "eligible for the family sponsoring in the future" so I was wondering when that will be.
 
1_Soph_1 said:
Hi,

I think it was available in 2010 or 2011.

I believe you're thinking of children sponsoring their parents. There were no provisions for parents sponsoring independent children in 2010 or 2011.
 
If you were using the "eligibility test" quiz page, I would not trust it. I experimented with it yesterday and it's completely broken.

This is what the CIC page says as of today.

Who can be sponsored

Note: As of November 5, 2011, no new applications to sponsor parents or grandparents will be accepted for processing for up to 24 months. This temporary pause will allow us to focus on those applicants already awaiting a decision and reduce the backlog in the parents and grandparents category. This does not affect sponsorship applications for spouses, partners, dependent or adopted children and other eligible relatives. New applications received on or after November 5, 2011, will be returned to the applicant, including fees.

Learn more about the Parent and Grandparent Super Visa.

You can sponsor:

brothers or sisters, nephews or nieces, granddaughters or grandsons who are orphaned, under 18 years of age and not married or in a common-law relationship
another relative of any age or relationship but only under specific conditions (see Note below)
accompanying relatives of the above (for example, spouse, partner and dependent children).
Note: You can sponsor one relative regardless of age or relationship only if you do not have a living spouse or common-law partner, conjugal partner, a son or daughter, parent, grandparent, sibling, uncle, aunt, nephew or niece who could be sponsored as a member of the family class, and you do not have any relative who is a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident or registered as an Indian under the Indian Act.

Who cannot be sponsored

Other relatives, such as brothers and sisters over 18, or adult independent children cannot be sponsored.
However, if they apply to immigrate under the Skilled Worker Class, they may get extra points for adaptability for having a relative in Canada.
 
Ah, that's a pity!

I can't apply for the Skilled Worker as I don't have a full yr of work experience as a physiotherapist, so my only option would be to start studying something if I want to stay in Canada...
(or to find someone who would sponsor me)
 
1_Soph_1 said:
Ah, that's a pity!

I can't apply for the Skilled Worker as I don't have a full yr of work experience as a physiotherapist, so my only option would be to start studying something if I want to stay in Canada...
(or to find someone who would sponsor me)

Are you Irish? If so, you can apply for a Working Holiday visa (IEC)....
 
I think that is what she currently has, from comments in another thread.
 
Hi,

ya I received the work and travel visa but would like to stay longer than the one yr and eventually apply for the permanent residency.
 
I'm sorry, but I think, given your nationality and experience, you are going to find it hard to qualify unless you can persuade a Canadian company to go out on a limb for you and offer you employment under an LMO, (see http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/work/apply-who.asp ) then gain enough experience to try under the CEC line (See http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/cec/index.asp ).

Or you could just hook up with a Canadian citizen/PR and go for Family Class (but this might be considered to be a "marriage of convenience).

No doubt others on here have other suggestions.
 
Funny, that was my moms first suggestion as well ;)

When you apply for the Skilled Worker Visa, do they check with previous employers? What evidence do you have to show for the work experience?
I'll try to get the necessary experience in Canada under the work & travel visa.
 
I have a feeling that the IEC will not quite give you enough to qualify for CEC. It's close but not quite long enough.
Use the IEC opportunity to look for future possible employment using the LMO route.

Of course, given a years experience, you might decide that Canada is not your cup of tea.