+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445
Greatness, you might get quicker answers if you post your question in a new thread about fingerprints.

This is a thread to thank the veterans here who have helped us newbies. :D
 
Greatness said:
Hi everyone? why do cic ask.for fingerprint ? When I summit a police clearance. I got a letter stating.


This letter refers to your application for permanent residence under the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class.
It has been determined that you meet the eligibility requirements to apply for permanent resident status as a member of the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class. However, a final decision will not be made until all remaining requirements for becoming a permanent resident have been met. These requirements include medical, security and background checks for you and, if applicable, all of your family members, both in Canada and abroad, even if they are not applying to join you in Canada at this time. You cannot become a permanent resident
until you and all your family members have met these requirements. In order to continue processing your application in Canada further information is required. You must complete/submit the following information to the Case Processing Centre: [X] As part of this application process, you are required to provide a set of your fingerprints. Please check the following CIC website for further details: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english//resources/manuals/bulletins/2009/ob116.asp#appA or contact the Call Centre, toll free, at 1-888-242-2100. Please take this letter to a service provider and arrange to have your fingerprints taken as soon as possible. The information requested above must be received at this office by 30 April 2014. If these items are not received, your application for permanent residence may be refused and no further consideration will be given to your request for permanent residence unless a new application, including fees, is submitted. You may now apply for an open work permit, which will allow you to work in the occupation and location of your choice. You may also apply for a study permit. If applying for a study permit please ensure you include a letter from the educational institution you plan to attend. The letter should outline the type of course or program for which you are registered, the start date and the expected completion date. To obtain the correct forms please visit the Citizenship and Immigration Canada Internet web site at [http://www.cic.gc.ca] or contact the Immigration Call Centre at the number indicated below. Passports for yourself and your family members must be valid for the duration of your stay in Canada

They want you to provide them with a set of fingerprints to run a RCMP background check. It is a different thing than your original police clearance that you provided when you sent your application in. If I had to hazard a guess, I would say it is likely related to someone in Canada that shares your name and they want to ensure they separate you from them. Just get the prints done and sent in asap.

Good luck.
 
I still lurk around here trying to be helpful while I count down the days to filing my citizenship application. Getting PR was just one step...
 
HoneyEllis said:
I still lurk around here trying to be helpful while I count down the days to filing my citizenship application. Getting PR was just one step...

Congratulations for deciding to go `all the way'.

Quick question:
Is it true that to become a Canadian citizen, you have to recall each and every time you crossed the border into Canada???
 
Ponga said:
Congratulations for deciding to go `all the way'.

Quick question:
Is it true that to become a Canadian citizen, you have to recall each and every time you crossed the border into Canada???

You have to keep track of all your absences from Canada. You have to fill out a form where you list every trip where you left Canada. You have to provide the exact date of departure and when your returned. During your interview, they will check your passport for any stamps you have there and if you do, match it up to the list your provided for accuracy. Also, they may pick a particular entry and ask you for the details of that trip. I kept a detailed spreadsheet where I kept track of all my travels with exit/entry dates, destination, and purpose of the trip listed.
 
keesio said:
You have to keep track of all your absences from Canada. You have to fill out a form where you list every trip where you left Canada. You have to provide the exact date of departure and when your returned. During your interview, they will check your passport for any stamps you have there and if you do, match it up to the list your provided for accuracy. Also, they may pick a particular entry and ask you for the details of that trip. I kept a detailed spreadsheet where I kept track of all my travels with exit/entry dates, destination, and purpose of the trip listed.

Yikes! Does that mean any trip across the border (ever) or only those that occur AFTER PR?

If it's the latter, there's hope, because I'm not PR yet...so I can prepare my own spreadsheet (good idea btw).
 
If it wasn't for the help on this site i would have given up and just went back home to join my husband. I can't thank you all enough for the time you spend helping out us newbie's . I'm sure ,no i know i would have torn my hair out without you guys. Every time i get into a panic you guys are their for me with out any judgement what so ever, even with the paranoid question i ask sometimes not just once but twice LOL . :-*
 
You need the travel details for any of the days that you are using in your citizenship application (you need 1095 days in Canada) so if you become a PR and NEVER leave Canada you can apply after 3 years exactly. If you've been out of Canada you need to have made the 1095 days, so it might be 1100 days since you became a PR and you subtract the 5 days you spent outside Canada. You need the travel details for those 5 days outside Cananda.
An absence is overnight, so if you took a day trip across the border to go shopping, that doesn't count as a day outside Canada.

Also, some people can claim credit at 50% of pre-PR days toward citizenship, depending on their situation / presence in Canada before that got PR. So in that case, if you were in Canada for 6 months pre-PR, you could claim 3 months toward your citizenship (and then apply for citizenship after 2yr and 9months as a PR). Does that make sense?
So it might be a good idea to keep tracking your trips!
Also, you might want to check out the citizenship page in the 'settlement' issues section - that's where I've found out this stuff :)
 
HoneyEllis said:
Also, some people can claim credit at 50% of pre-PR days toward citizenship, depending on their situation / presence in Canada before that got PR. So in that case, if you were in Canada for 6 months pre-PR, you could claim 3 months toward your citizenship (and then apply for citizenship after 2yr and 9months as a PR). Does that make sense?
So it might be a good idea to keep tracking your trips!

Note that you can indeed claim credit at 50% of pre-PR days... as long as you had residency status in Canada like work or study permit. Days in Canada as a visitor do not count at all. I was here on a work permit before I became a PR so I was able to use some of those days at 50% for my citizenship requirement.
 
Reading on the forum became such a habit that I would feel weird to just STOP completely. :-D I most likely have this forum to thank for the fact that I landed when I did (didn't include medical or police certificate with app, not as a choice, but because the process made me stupid...read and learned a lot here, and opted to do both before they were requested, and therefore got AIP/DM on the same day in October) and that I know, for a fact, that I've got my PR card in hand and can go on a long-planned trip to Spain with my husband and his family in less than two months.

I imagine I'll lurk here for a long time and share what little bit of wisdom I've picked up. I've had a most rewarding private correspondence with two people, and a good evening of "brain-picking" with a foreign national friend who lives here, in which I've been able to share the info I've learned.