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dankboi

VIP Member
Apr 19, 2021
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11,099
London, United Kingdom
Category........
FSW
An overview of Canada’s PNP immigration results for November 2021


Canada’s Provincial Nominee Programs (PNP) issued nearly 3,000 invitations to apply for provincial nomination during the month of November.

Nearly every Canadian province and territory, with the exception of Nunavut and Quebec which operates its own immigration programs has its own Provincial Nominee Program (PNP). Having their own immigration programs allows provincial governments to select immigration candidates who meet their local labour market needs and to manage the regional settlement of the immigrant population within their jurisdiction. Each province adopts its own criteria for selecting foreign workers eligible for Canadian permanent residence under its respective PNP.

The PNP complements federal immigration programs and enables Canadian provinces to play a key role in the selection of immigrants.

Since its launch in 1998, the PNP has become the second main route to permanent residence in Canada. Between now and 2023, PNPs alone are expected to result in more than 80,000 immigrants per year being admitted as permanent residents.

November 2021 PNP-Focused Express Entry Highlights
Each province that operates the PNP has at least one stream that is aligned with the federal Express Entry system—Canada’s main economic immigration pathway.

So far this year, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has been holding PNP–specific Express Entry draws, on average, every two weeks.

In November, IRCC conducted two Express Entry draws targeting PNP candidates, issuing 775 ITAs on November 10, and another 613 on November 24.

Since mid-September, IRCC has been holding draws under the PNP category only. There have been 23 PNP-specific draws so far this year through which 13,000 candidates received invitations.

During the month of November, Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) did not issue any invitations through its PNP streams. This suggests that the province may have reached its nomination allocation quota for 2021.

The following is a summary of draws by province, listed in order from most to least invitations in November.

British Columbia
Over the past month, British Columbia held a total of six draws and invited 861 candidates to apply for a provincial nomination through the Express Entry British Columbia and Skills Immigration streams closely matching the number of invitations issued every month since the beginning of the year.

Manitoba
The province of Manitoba held two draws through the following three streams: Skilled Workers in Manitoba, International Education Stream, and Skilled Workers Overseas this past month. The draws were held on November 1 and November 18 with a total of 849 Letters of Advice to Apply issued of which 143 were issued to candidates who declared a valid Express Entry profile.

Saskatchewan
In November, the Saskatchewan Immigrant Nominee Program (SINP) held the largest invitation round of the year through the Express Entry and Occupations In-Demand sub-categories of the International Skilled Worker Category issuing a total of 633 invitations to apply for a provincial nomination. This round of invitations was the first time that invitations were issued in both subcategories after a one-month break.

The SINP also announced that it will launch a new pilot program in December 2021 to help employers recruit international talent for certain in-demand occupations. Sectors with the highest demand for labor include healthcare, manufacturing, agriculture, agricultural technology, construction, hospitality, and retail. To be eligible, candidates for the new Hard-To-Fill Skills Pilot project must have a permanent, full-time job offer, meet a minimum level of proficiency in an official Canadian language, and meet minimum education and work experience requirements.

Alberta
So far in November, the Alberta Immigrant Nominee Program (AINP)’s Express Entry Stream held one invitation round. The AINP held the draw on November 9 and invited 200 candidates with CRS scores of at least 343.

Prince Edward Island
Prince Edward Island held a large pre-scheduled draw on November 18 and issued a combined 188 invitations to immigration candidates. Most of the invitations, 172, were issued to Express Entry and Labour Impact candidates. The remaining 16 invitations went to Business Impact candidates who had a minimum point threshold of 67. PEI held 11 draws so far this year, bringing the total number of invitations issued to 1,729.

Nova Scotia
On November 18, Nova Scotia added three new eligible occupations listed under the Occupations In-Demand stream, including food & beverage servers (NOC 6513), food counter attendants (NOC 6711), and light-duty cleaners (NOC 6731).

Newfoundland and Labrador
In November, Newfoundland and Labrador released the results of the first three draws held under the Priority Skills Newfoundland and Labrador stream. So far this year, the Newfoundland and Labrador Provincial Nominee Program (NLPNP) invited a total of 663 candidates to apply for a provincial nomination.
 

Marco Mendicino

Star Member
Nov 25, 2021
149
116
Ottawa
NOC Code......
4168
Lol dude for the millionth time SHUT YOUR C**T no one cares about your opinion, apparently you are the only one lived in Canada you don't see me quoting my whereabouts every opportunity I get. We all get it you are a vagrant living in the streets of Toronto stealing wifi from Tim hortons to post your dreary fucking life on this forum each and everyday.
Man, you are very good at imagery. I giggled at this like a little girl
 

Santaclause

Star Member
Jan 29, 2020
156
89
All, are you supposed to declare all bank accounts at multiple banks or just the multiple accounts at the bank which holds your PoF funds?
 

dankboi

VIP Member
Apr 19, 2021
3,687
11,099
London, United Kingdom
Category........
FSW
All, are you supposed to declare all bank accounts at multiple banks or just the multiple accounts at the bank which holds your PoF funds?
your country of birth gives you the right not to declare your bank accounts to anyone. for the purpose of pof you need to declare the bank accounts with deposits alone. if canada wants to know more of your background, then ircc will request the financial institution of your country and you will be given the notification.
 

Nabeela 1989

Star Member
Aug 1, 2019
53
16
Looking at this week’s progress,one can safely say that pprs flow has not stopped however I haven’t seen that much re-medical requests in this week like the weeks before.
I hope it doesn’t stop due to the new variant.
 

RSub

Champion Member
Aug 23, 2021
2,106
2,639
USA
Category........
FSW
Visa Office......
CPC Ottawa
AOR Received.
12-11-2020
All, are you supposed to declare all bank accounts at multiple banks or just the multiple accounts at the bank which holds your PoF funds?
Thats a grey area. Some don’t declare all bank accounts because they don’t wanna expose their debt. Not sure if IRCC will ever find this out.
 

EscoBlades

Champion Member
Jul 22, 2020
2,105
1,715
Toronto
Category........
CEC
All, are you supposed to declare all bank accounts at multiple banks or just the multiple accounts at the bank which holds your PoF funds?
You declare the one that holds the funds you wish to present in support of your application. That said… IRCC can make requests for statements of other accounts in your name (if discovered, and where applicable). The requests could be made directly to the applicant, or pulled from the financial institution if necessary.
 
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Ar12345

Star Member
Nov 11, 2020
184
243
You declare the one that holds the funds you wish to present in support of your application. That said… IRCC can make requests for statements of other accounts in your name (if discovered, and where applicable). The requests could be made directly to the applicant, or pulled from the financial institution if necessary.
They can’t pull your financial/tax records or credit history from a financial institution without your permission. They don’t have the access/jurisdiction to do that and they are not automatically privy to that info from any financial institution unless it’s a national security/criminal issue where there’s a legal case to get that info without your consent. They don’t even have any PR applicants’ SSN/tax ID info lol. No bank will just turn over records without a legal process. Even for your Canadian citizenship application, they ask your consent to view your CRA tax records as part of the application. If you don’t provide consent, you’ll be rejected. Similarly, they’ll ask you whatever additional records they want if they suspect anything. If you don’t provide them, you’ll be rejected.

Regarding people hiding debts and stuff from POF (the thing I’m sure a LOT of applicants do), they have other ways to probe that if they want apart from request your credit report etc. For example, I think it’ll be a sticky misrepresentation situation if someone has civil judgements and they find out about them through public court records. Or if a credit collector from your home country finds and sues you once you’re in Canada. Or if you apply for a security clearance in Canada and they probe your 5-10 year credit history and find issues at home.

Misrepresentation is a big deal. One could be a naturalised serial killer like the Russell Williams and keep his citizenship. But if they are found guilty of hiding or misrepresenting info in PR immigration applications, future citizenship will be revoked. So it’s best to just provide them all the bank accounts and debts lol
 
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