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Thanks for all your ideas and thoughts. I greatly appreciate it.
My grandpa still has his health card (red and white) in Canada. We may have to wait for 3 months.
I am applying his re-entry visa in China, base on H&C ground.
Meanwhile, I am interested to know how to get an US visa for him. Should I look into visitor visa for him?
Thanks for all your ideas and thoughts. I greatly appreciate it.
My grandpa still has his health card (red and white) in Canada. We may have to wait for 3 months.
I am applying his re-entry visa in China, base on H&C ground.
Meanwhile, I am interested to know how to get an US visa for him. Should I look into visitor visa for him?
Most likely they have deactivated his health card. They probably assume he is deceased due to age and lack of use for over a decade. They will have also have tried to contact him to update his health card to the new version when they were unable to contact him which could have triggered a hold or cancellation of his card.
Thanks for all your ideas and thoughts. I greatly appreciate it.
My grandpa still has his health card (red and white) in Canada. We may have to wait for 3 months.
I am applying his re-entry visa in China, base on H&C ground.
Meanwhile, I am interested to know how to get an US visa for him. Should I look into visitor visa for him?
@kathy2017 If by re-entry you mean PRTD do not do it. I recommend the land border route.
U.S. visa would be a tourist visa. Apply for this and see if he gets it. (It is an online application followed by an interview at the Embassy. Interview takes a few days to get. At the interview he will know if he has been approved or denied. After approval stamping takes a few days.)
Healthcare is of course an issue but that is independent of the re-entry question.
Basically if you want him in Canada now don't apply for a PRTD.
Not sure that a 95 year old who doesn't seem to have family in the US will actually be able to get a visa especially given he doesn't seem to have many assets. Worth a try I guess.
A correction to my previous post.
A 95 year old will not usually need an interview.
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