my employer doesnt know a thing about immigration. All he will do is to provide a letter.........Infact i will be writing the letter and he will just sign it because he trusts me so much lol
so thats it right? Just get a letter........fill out the forms and apply and boooom she will get the permanent residency??
It can't be this easy..........i'm definitely missing something here...plzzz help
First of all, what you are proposing is fraud. It is a misrepresentation to CIC that your sister will have a job offer, when you know she won't, and it can lead to rejection of the application plus a ban from Canada for 2 or more years (even for visiting). Not only your sister but your company and anyone who participated in this fraud (including you) can get in big trouble for this. If you are not a citizen of Canada you can even lose your PR and be deported. Is it worth the risk when your sister can just submit an honest application?
Second, it is not as simple as writing up a job offer. The employer must first attempt to find a Canadian to do the job. Then they must submit proof to some Canadian agency that they they tried to find a Canadian but couldn't, and get a Labour Market Opinion which is an official statement from some government agency that they can hire someone from outside Canada. Then finally the offer letter and LMO must be submitted with the FSW application, along with all of the other necessary documents.
my employer doesnt know a thing about immigration. All he will do is to provide a letter.........Infact i will be writing the letter and he will just sign it because he trusts me so much lol
No - it's nowhere that easy. The employer also needs to obtain an approved LMIA. You should look into the requirements for the LMIA your employer has to obtain. It's quite an involved and long process and includes paying a processing fee of $1000.
No - it's nowhere that easy. The employer also needs to obtain an approved LMIA. You should look into the requirements for the LMIA your employer has to obtain. It's quite an involved and long process and includes paying a processing fee of $1000.