+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445

ColorMePanda

Hero Member
Sep 12, 2009
341
26
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
I got both a stamp in my passport and visitor record. Is this bad?
Does this mean since I have a Client ID that I will have a hard time the next time I want to enter Canada?

PLEASE ANSWER. This concerns me...:(

Plus I also applied for an extension. Does this make things look worse?
 
I am currently waiting on the news of my extension for visitor visa in the mail and am waiting on the applications for outland PR to be mailed since we have no ink in the printer here.

Anyway, we were planning to fill in as much as we could for both parts of the application for now and if my extension is refused then I will go home and get the medical exam and police clearances. I was planning to come back up here with all my documents after receiving the police clearances and going over the rest of our applications together before mailing it off.

I just need to know how slim my chances are of getting back here?
I have only flown here once.
I will be flying back here alone.
My partner and his family are going to support me again when I come up.
However, I don't have any job down home or anything else I could get besides a return ticket home to prove I will leave within a few months.
 
An extension doesn't hurt you. Why would you think it would be refused? You're an American so unless you've committed a crime or something you should really stop thinking negatively.

Correct me if I am wrong but you are not eligible to apply until November? You have LOTS OF TIME to get all this organized.
 
rjessome said:
An extension doesn't hurt you. Why would you think it would be refused? You're an American so unless you've committed a crime or something you should really stop thinking negatively.

Correct me if I am wrong but you are not eligible to apply until November? You have LOTS OF TIME to get all this organized.

Yeah but don't alot of people get refused if they see that you don't intend to leave.
I did put a date I thought I would leave by. However, the CIC agent I think miss informed me and led me to believe that I didn't need to include everything on the document checklist and I also forgot to include the document checklist itself. I also didn't include a copy of my passport or visa...I thought that all of these would be reasons as to why I be refused.

And yes, but I am the only one putting all of this together and it is stressing me out.
And I have to wait on money that we don't have now.

If I get to stay past our one year cohabitation mark and leave to go home for a few months, are we still eligible as common law partners?

Also, I have heard people being turned down for PR because when they crossed the border because they didn't mention they were in a common law relationship at the time so they saw it as misrepresentation on their application. Well what if they didn't ask or they did ask and you weren't sure at the time what common law was? Will that be reason for a refusal?

Can you clear these up for me, so that I may relax and not ask anymore questions for a while unless they pertain to a question itself on the application? Thanks.
 
So you filled out and sent an incomplete application for a TRV? Ok, now I know why you think it will get refused. If they refuse you, you have 30 days from the date of the refusal to leave Canada.

Yes, if you make it to the one year date then you can apply as common law. So good luck with that.

You are confusing other types of applications with this! People are refused PR because their sponsor, who are also PR's, did not include them as their spouse or common law partner when they (sponsor) originally applied to become a PR of Canada. This has NOTHING to do with your situation.
 
rjessome said:
So you filled out and sent an incomplete application for a TRV? Ok, now I know why you think it will get refused. If they refuse you, you have 30 days from the date of the refusal to leave Canada.

Yes, if you make it to the one year date then you can apply as common law. So good luck with that.

You are confusing other types of applications with this! People are refused PR because their sponsor, who are also PR's, did not include them as their spouse or common law partner when they (sponsor) originally applied to become a PR of Canada. This has NOTHING to do with your situation.

Thanks for clearing that up for me.
I filled out the whole application though. Dumb CIC agent for making believe different. I should have been smarter but it was my first time applying for an extension. I was unsure of anything at that point.