ama1978 said:I personally was receiving assistance for some time up to the month I left to marry my husband. I was working but my hours were all over the place so it was kind of a back up for me. I received just slightly over $1,000 for the entire year. When I applied for sponsorship (10 months after marrying my spouse and off assistance) I included the letter I wrote to OW cancelling my benefits as well as the letter received from OW stating my benefits were cancelled. My sponsorship took 86 days for approval when others were being approved in 28 days. I called many times and when they finally noted the account it was because they were waiting for documentation from OW stating that I was no longer receiving it. So even though I sent all the documentation ahead of time, they still conducted their own search into it. Option C was provided. I personally would get off as soon as possible and find a means to support yourself. Even having waited as long as we did there were still long delays for us. And it was not a main source of income for me.
Yes you are right. Actually in the other case linked to above, the welfare office actually made a mistake and did not remove the person's name from their recipient list after he requested to stop payments. So when CIC checked with the office, his name was still showing active as currently receiving assistance, hence the reason he was rejected. It did seem strange to me that CIC wouldn't be doing their own checks on this internally, so your story helps clarify that.
I think it's safe to say that if anyone has been receiving assistance at anytime within the past year, you can expect delays in sponsorship approval. But you won't actually be rejected in the end as long as your official records with the welfare office show you stopped receiving it before an app was submitted. The approval in your case vs the rejection in the other case, shows how important it is to make absolutely sure your records with the welfare office are up-to-date and accurate.