Post on 30-Dec-2015
description
Giving Credit Wher
e Credit is Due
As a Canadian immigration lawyer, I can be frequently heard swearing under my breath (or sometimes at much louder volumes) about Canadian immigration policy.
In a country with an aging population and a low birth rate, you’d think that the government would be interested in helping families to live together in Canada and raise children.
If you are sponsoring a spouse and the two of you live in Canada, you can expect it to take more than 2 years before the sponsored spouse obtains permanent residence.
What if one spouse happens to fall out of
status?
That spouse may not be able to access health care, or may have to pay tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars to access health care.
A child born in a province like Alberta
is not automatically entitled to health care
in this province!
Worse?
Improvements?
Women, children, and Canadian families are still being screwed over by government
policies.
Citizenship and Immigration Canada! Their plight is now
significantly less bleak.
Want to know more?
www. calgaryimmigrationlawyer.com