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info@Mansouri-Immigration.com
Phone Number: +1 604 468 5747
Fax Number: +1 778 627 2843
1177 West Hastings Street
Unit 1220
Vancouver, BC Canada V6E 2K3
Toronto Office: 100 King Street West, Suite 5600, Toronto, Ontario M5X 1C9
Canada Immigration FAQ
An appeal is a request to make a new decision on a case. At the IRB, the Refugee Appeal Division (RAD) exists to hear appeals of RPD cases. In your appeal, you must show that the RPD made mistakes in its decision. These mistakes can be about the law, the facts, or both. The RAD will decide whether to confirm or change the RPD’s decision. It may also decide to send the case back to the RPD to be heard again, giving the directions to the RPD that it considers appropriate.
An appeal to the RAD typically doesn’t involve an actual hearing. Most RAD appeals are paper-based. The RAD member makes a decision on the basis of the RPD record (file), and the evidence provided by the parties (you and the Minister, if the Minister intervenes). In certain circumstances, the RAD may allow you to present new evidence that the RPD did not have when it made its decision. If the RAD accepts your new evidence, it will consider the evidence in its review of your appeal. It may also order an oral hearing to consider this new evidence.
The Refugee Appeal Division (RAD) hears appeals after a claim for refugee protection is denied by the Refugee Protection Division (RPD). You may be permitted to appeal if the RPD has rejected your claim.
The RAD can also decide an appeal made by the Minister on a positive RPD decision.
The RAD is separate and independent from the RPD.
If the judge issues a written decision this will usually take about one month, but may be longer depending on the work load of the particular judge. Altogether an appeal before the Immigration Appeal Division is likely to take between six months and two years.
To file a residency obligation appeal, you must submit:
- A completed Notice of Appeal form for each person in your family affected by the decision.
- Two copies of the decision from the overseas visa office.
If the appeal on residency obligation is allowed, the IAD will set aside CIC’s decision and the person will keep his or her permanent resident status. If the appeal is dismissed, the person will lose permanent resident status.
How do you start a residency appeal?
To file a residency obligation appeal, you must submit:
- A completed Notice of Appeal form for each person in your family affected by the decision.
- Two copies of the decision from the overseas visa office.
There is no age limit to study in Canada.
Yes. You may bring your spouse, common-law partner and also dependent children.
Do I need a valid job offer to be eligible for BC PNP’s Skills Immigration stream? Yes, unless you are applying to the International Post-Graduate category. The job offer must be full-time and indeterminate (permanent, or with no set end date) and from an eligible B.C. employer.
A Provincial Nomination does not guarantee Permanent Residence. There are statutory requirements that an individual must meet in regards to health, security, and authenticity of documents before CIC will approve the Permanent Resident status.
To qualify for this category, you must: have accepted a full-time, indeterminate job offer (a permanent job, or one with no set end date) from a B.C. employer. The job must be in a National Occupational Classification (NOC) skilled occupation (Skill Type 0 or Skill Level A or B).