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Canadian Spousal_Common Law Sponsorships (1)

If you are married or have lived for one year in a common law relationship with a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, you may be eligible for sponsorship.

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Canadian Spousal_Common Law Sponsorships (1)

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  1. Canadian Spousal/Common Law Sponsorships FAMILY CLASS• APR 09, 2018 If you are married or have lived for one year in a common law relationship with a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, you may be eligible for sponsorship. Are you married to a Canadian citizen (CC) or permanent resident (PR), or are you in a one-year common law relationship with either? Are you thinking you might like to start the sponsorship and application process? This article is intended to give some broad perspective and some tips as you get ready for that next stage of your life. We encourage you to consider using an authorized representative to assist in you in your Canadian permanent residency quest and ensure that the representative is

  2. authorized to provide immigration advice as per Section 91 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. If you are indeed married or have lived for one year in a common law relationship with a CC or PR, you may be eligible for sponsorship. There are requirements for both the sponsor and the applicant and, perhaps most importantly, the marriage/relationship must be deemed as genuine and not for the purposes of gaining admission to Canada or acquiring immigration status under Canada’s immigration laws. Marriage The marriage must be valid in the jurisdiction where it took place and must be valid under Canadian law. If a person was married before, a divorce that is valid under Canadian law must have taken place for the current marriage to be valid (unless of course the person was a widow or had their marriage annulled). Be sure to check with a Canadian family legal expert if you are unsure about the validity of your marriage, since “Persons below a certain age cannot marry in Canada without parental consent. To be recognized for immigration purposes, foreign national’s spouses must be 16 years of age” (OP 2, section 5.28, page 23). Common Law For Canadian immigration purposes, a common law relationship exists when two persons have resided in a conjugal relationship for at least one year. The two individuals in the relationship must be able to prove that they have lived together in a relationship as described – that is, they must show that it exists based on “facts.” Two room-mates sharing an apartment together would not count as a common law relationship. Couples who are

  3. in a common law relationship need not be divorced from previous spouses if they have been separate and apart from their previous spouses for at least one year (and that make sense because they must have lived in their new common law relationship for at least one year!). *There is another type of relationship called “conjugal”and more information can be found on that in OP 2 **Same-sex relationships must meet the same parameters under marriage and common law relationships. Spousal sponsorship can be pursued in two ways – from either inside or outside Canada. For the former, this sponsorship process is called the “Inland Spousal/Common-law Sponsorship Class” and the sponsor and applicant must be residing together inside Canada. The outside Canada sponsorship usually occurs when the sponsor is in Canada and the applicant is living outside of the country. The exception to this rule is for Canadian citizens who can sponsor their spouse while living outside of Canada. The CC spouse must prove they will return to Canada, together with their sponsored spouse, once the immigrant visa has been issued. Sponsors Must: ● be at least 18 years of age ● be a PR or CC living in Canada ● not be in prison, bankrupt, under a removal order, or charged with a serious offence ● cannot have sponsored another spouse within the last 5 years ● demonstrate an ability to support the applicant and sign a contract with the Canadian government that the applicant will not be a burden on the Canadian taxpayer. There is no financial test to be met, but

  4. the sponsor must demonstrate an ability and willingness to “keep” their end of the contract The Applicant or Sponsored Person Must: ● be at least 16 years of age ● not be too closely related (consanguinity). In Canada, applicants may not marry their grandparents, parents, siblings, half siblings, children, or grandchildren (OP 2, section 5.29, page 23) ● not be criminally inadmissible Click here to read the full article

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