Significant Changes Coming to the Spousal-Sponsorship Program

Fresh off his efforts to crack down on crooked consultants, and having just introduced legislation to deter “bogus refugees,” Jason Kenney, the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, is now focusing his scopes on deterring sham marriages.  He has made (or is in the process of making) two significant changes to Canada’s spousal-sponsorship program.  While both of his reforms will have its critics, the changes are likely to have the overwhelming support of the Canadian public, and continue the Conservative government’s trend of harmonizingCanada’s immigration system with other Western democracies.

The first change is a five-year sponsorship bar for recently sponsored spouses.  A previously-sponsored spouse will now be barred from sponsoring a new spouse or partner for the first five years that the previously sponsored spouse is a permanent resident.  The government’s objective is to prevent an individual who has been sponsored from divorcing the sponsor and shortly thereafter getting married and sponsoring someone else.

This change took affect on March 2, 2012.  If you were in the process of preparing a spousal-sponsorship application, and this change applies to you, then I’m sorry toinform you that there was no grace period. You will (likely) have to wait until you have been in Canadafor five-years before you can sponsor your spouse.

The second change is the introduction of conditional residency for certain spouses.  Spouses or common-law or conjugal partners who are in a relationship of two years or less with their sponsor will soon be subject to a period of conditional permanent residence.  The condition would require the sponsored spouse or partner to cohabit in a conjugal relationship with their sponsor for a period of two years following the acquisition of permanent residence status.  If this condition is not met, then the permanent resident and his/her dependents will lose their status inCanada, and be subject to removal proceedings.

There are two exceptions to the conditional permanent residency rule.  The first is if the sponsor and the sponsored spouse have a child together.   The second is if the sponsored spouse can demonstrate that he/she suffered abuse or neglect.  Abuse can be physical (assault and forcible confinement), sexual (sexual assault), psychological (threats and intimidation), and financial (fraud and extortion).   Neglect consists of the sponsor’s failure to provide the necessaries of life.

Implementing conditional permanent residency is expected to be an expensive endeavor.  Indeed, the government anticipates that the quantitative costs will exceed the benefits.  The Conservatives believe that it will cost $11-million to implement conditional permanent residency during its first ten years.  The costs include investigating cases of alleged fraud, taking enforcement action against those found to be non-complaint with the condition, and increased admissibility hearings and appeals.

The Conservative believe that the benefit will be $5.5-million during the same period.  The savings are expected to come from a reduction in spousal-sponsorship applications.

An additional benefit will hopefully be that Citizenship and Immigration Canada will be less scrutinizing of spousal-sponsorship applications.  In 2010, 46,300 couples submitted spousal-sponsorship applications.  Sixteen percent of applications were refused, primarily because the couples did not satisfy CIC that their relationships were genuine.  While some of the 84% of couples that were approved were likely sham marriages that slipped through the cracks, it is probable that an even greater number of genuine marriages were rejected.

The Immigration Appeal Division meanwhile recently released statistics showing that as of September 30, 2011, 6,399 spousal-sponsorship appeals were underway acrossCanada.  Each of these appeals takes up a serious amount of time and resources.

Presumably, once conditional permanent residency is in place Citizenship and Immigration Canada will be able to reduce the scrutiny that it apples to spousal-sponsorship applications.  For example, one would hope that an officer who has concerns about the genuineness of a relationship but is unsure will ultimately approve the application knowing that the principal applicant will have to cohabit in a conjugal relationship with the sponsor for two years or face removal.  Such a shift in mentality could greatly reduce processing times, save money, and decrease the burden on applicants.

Of course, whether or not there is actually a decrease in the burden on applicants will depend on how the government implements conditional permanent residency.  The proposed regulatory change is unclear as to whether immigrants have to be proactive in getting the condition removed, or whether the passage of time makes it automatic.  I shudder to think that all couples encompassed by the rule will have to submit new applications establishing the continuing genuineness of their relationship

Because of that is the case, then conditional permanent residency will be a far more expensive endeavor than the government is predicting.

Court Discusses Parameters of Spouse or Common-Law in Canada Class

Canadians wanting to sponsor foreign nationals have to decide whether they want to apply as a member of the Family Class or as a member of the Spouse or Common-Law Partner in Canada Class.

To be a member of the Spouse or Common-Law Partner in Canada Class, applicants must:

  1. be the spouse or common-law partner of a sponsor and cohabit with that sponsor in Canada;
  2. have a temporary resident status in Canada; and
  3. be the subject of a sponsorship application.

Said v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1245 recently confirmed an important point for people considering applying under this class.

You have to be cohabiting.  If there is no cohabitation then there is no possible sponsorship.  There is no requirement for immigration officers to consider whether a marriage is genuine if the couple are not cohabiting.

Family Class Undertakings

On June 10, 2011, the Supreme Court of Canada released its decision in Canada (Attorney General) v. Mavi.  The case involved an appeal from numerous Ontario residents regarding relief from the sponsorship undertakings that they had signed to sponsor a family class member.

Potential immigrants under the family class are only eligible to apply for permanent residency once a Canadian citizen’s or permanent resident’s application to sponsor them has been approved.  Family class immigrants are not assessed independently on their ability to support themselves, as is the case with other immigrants.  The burden of showing sufficiently financial wherewithal lies with the sponsor.

I have yet to witness a case where a client showed concern about the sponsorship undertaking.  Usually the undertaking is treated as a joke, and sponsors normally tease their spouses / family members about not becoming “welfare bums”.  However, as the cases of the individuals in Mavi show, breaches of the sponsorship undertaking can often lead to huge debts.  Mavi involved individuals in the following circumstances:

  • Mr. D sponsored his fiancee in 2002.  When she arrived in Canada she refused to live with him or marry him.  Mr. D tried to have his former fiance deported, however, her appeal was successful.  Unbeknown to him, she later went on social assistance.  In 2007, the Ontario government informed him that he owed $10,510.65 for breach of the undertaking.
  • Ms. E sponsored her father, mothers, and two brothers in 1995.  Her husband was a co-signatory.  She later left him because of abuse.  She went on social assistance afterward, as did her father, and one brother.  In 2006 she was informed that she owed the Ontario government $94,242.16 for breach of the undertaking.
  • Mr. G sponsored his mother in 1999.  He subsequently lost his job.  His mother applied for social assistance.  In June 2007 he was informed that he owed $54,426.39.
  • Mr. H’s wife arrived in Canada in 2006.  She briefly lived with him, then cut off contact.  Unbeknown to him, she later remarried, and then went on welfare.  In 2007, he was informed that he owed the Ontario government $10,547.65 for breach of the undertaking.
  • Ms. H sponsored her mother, who shortly after had a stroke.  She applied for benefits for her mother’s institutional care.  She later learned that she owed the government $54,559.99.
  • Mr. M sponsored his father in 1996.  After his father arrived, they had a falling out.  In 2005 he learned that his dad had gone on social assistance.  He owed the Ontario government $17,818.08.
  • Mr. Z’s spouse arrived in Canada in 2000, only to leave a few weeks later and remarry.  In 2007, Mr. Z found out that she had gone on welfare, and that he owed the Ontario government $22,158.02.

The provincial governments are generally very strict about enforcing these obligations, and the courts too have not been very forgiving.  In paragraph 41 of the Mavi decision, Justice Binnie noted that:

Family reunification is based on the essential condition that in exchange for admission to this country the needs of the immigrant will be looked after by the sponsor, not by the public purse.  Sponsors undertake these obligations in writing.  They understand or ought to understand from the outset that default may have serious financial consequences for them.

The court then went on to articulate some principles that underlie sponsorship undertaking debt collections.  Before signing the sponsorship undertaking, sponsors should therefore be aware of the following principles which I have pulled out from the judgment:

  • The government has the ability to delay enforcement action having regrading to the sponsor’s circumstances and to enter into agreements respecting terms of payment.  As the court noted in paragraph 59, “the amount and terms of repayment are within the discretion of the government decision maker. An agreement requiring a sponsor to pay $20 a month on a $20,000 debt may never result in the full amount being paid, but it would nonetheless be an agreement which the government is authorized to make”.
  • The government does not, however, have the ability to simply forgive the debt.  Section 135 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations simply does not allow for write-offs, but only “deferred enforcement” along the lines of the above point.
  • The deferral of enforcement can be ended if the sponsor’s financial circumstances change.  The decision notes the example of a sponsor winning the lottery.
  • Prior to filing a certificate of debt with the Federal Court, the government must notify the sponsor of its claim, provide the sponsor with an opportunity to explain in writing his or her relevant personal and financial circumstances that are said to mitigate against immediate collection, to consider any relevant circumstances brought to its attention (while keeping in mind that the undertaking was the essential condition precedent to allowing the sponsored immigrant to become a permanent resident), and to notify the sponsor of the government’s decision regarding how it is going to collect the debt.
  • In carrying out the obligations above, the government does not have an obligation to provide written reasons.
  • There is no hearing, and no appeal procedure.
  • In the case of “rogue family members”, or family-class immigrants that have cut off contact with their sponsors, the government does not have a duty to advise sponsors that the rogue family member has started to receive social assistance.  Pursuant to paragraph 76, “the risk of a rogue relative properly lies on the sponsor, not the taxpayer”.

British Columbia and Sponsorship Default Debts

In British Columbia, the Ministry of Finance, Non-Tax Collections collects unpaid sponsorship default debts on behalf of the Ministry of Social Development. I have had experience contacting them on behalf of individuals before, and my experience has been that they already follow the principles articulated in Mavi.  They are quite flexible when it comes to scheduling payments over a period of time, however, they are unwilling / unable to simply forgive amounts owed.  When I advised one representative that my client simply could not pay, the respond was not surprising: “declare bankruptcy”.

Individuals that are contacted by the Ministry of Finance are provided with the opportunity to explain their financial circumstances, and to arrange a payment schedule.

If payments are not made, then the Ministry may take the following actions:

  • place a notice of Crown Debt on your property;
  • issue a demand on your wages, bank account or other accounts;
  • set off funds owed to you by the provincial or federal government;
  • issue a Small Claims Action (less than $25,000) or a Supreme Court Action (over $25,000);
  • file a Payment Order or Default Order in Small Claims Court or Supreme Court; and/or
  • seize and sell your assets.

 

 

 

Should Family Class Applicants have to Pass an English Language Test

Canada’s family class and the spousal sponsorship program have recently been hit with two significant changes that are largely based on immigration programs found in other Western nations.  The first recent change is the proposed introduction of a sponsorship bar, which prohibits recently sponsored spouses from sponsoring a new spouse for three years after they land in Canada.  The second is a proposed change to move towards conditional permanent residency for sponsored spouses who have been in a relationship for less than three years with the person that sponsored them.

Given that the current Conservative government appears to be basing much of its changes to Canada’s immigration system on what other Western countries are doing, it is worth exploring another feature of many European countries’ immigration system that is absent in Canada.  This is the requirement that family class applicants either pass a language test or a test on their respective destination country’s culture in order to immigrate.

On June 9, 2010, for example, the United Kingdom introduced language tests for foreign spouses.  Under the program, all non-European immigrants to the United Kingdom must pass a basic English language test before being granted a visa.  The rules apply to anyone wanting to join their spouse or partner in the United Kingdom.

Effective November 15, 2010, meanwhile, a similar requirement was introduced in Denmark.  Applicants under Denmark’s family reunification program must pass an immigration test before they can immigrate.   The test is an oral one consisting of a language section and a knowledge section.  There are 70 questions, consisting of 40 language questions and 30 culture questions.  Applicants are required to get 30 out of 40 of the language questions correct, and 21 out of 30 of the Danish society questions correct in order to pass the test.  The questions on Danish society are asked in Danish, and applicants must answer in Danish.  The immigration test must be taken in Denmark, and applicants are required to travel to Denmark in order to take it.

On May 15, 2011, Søren Pind, Denmark’s immigration minister, announced that an exemption was being considered for spouses from developed countries.

Both Denmark and the United Kingdom based their laws on similar requirements in France, Italy, Germany, and the Netherlands.

I should note that I am not suggesting that the Conservative Government is going to move towards either introducing an immigration test for the family class, or for exempting nations of developed nations from that test.  There is nothing to suggest that the Conservative Government is even considering any of the above programs from the UK and Denmark.  However, an understanding of other systems provides a useful comparative perspective that could be interesting and potentially relevant in the future.

CIC to Speed Up Processing of Successful Family Class Appeals

d.neuman

One of the frustrations people who successfully appeal family class decisions to the Immigration Appeal Division (“IAD”) often face is that there is a significant delay between when the IAD allows an appeal and when a mission abroad resumes processing.  This delay is often several months.

Citizenship and Immigration Canada has recognized this issue, and has introduced a pilot project to address it.

After a successful appeal, the processing of a Family Class Application for a Permanent Residence Visa will no longer be sent back to the original embassy, but rather will resume at Case Processing Pilot – Ottawa.

The implementation of the pilot project will take place in two phase.

From now until September 2011, all family class appeals that are allowed will be forwarded to CPP-O.  CPP-O will create a file, conduct security checks, and forward the file to the respective visa office for processing.

Starting in September, CPP-O will conduct security checks, and then triage the files into relatively low admissibly risk files and complex ones.  For a relatively low risk files, CPP-O will process the entire file, and print the Confirmation of Permanent Residence.  Files that are identified as having complex admissibility issues will still be forwarded abroad.

Although the change is largely procedural, applicants who are successful at the IAD will undoubtedly feel a substantial benefit if the expected several months reduction in processing time happens.

Sponsorship Bar on Recent Sponsored Spouses

By: carol.am

Fresh off the heals of announcing an intention to introduce conditional permanent residency for spousal sponsorships, the Canadian government has introduced regulatory changes creating a sponsorship bar for permanent residents who arrived under the spousal sponsorship program.

Currently, people who sponsor a spouse are prohibited from sponsoring another spouse for the three years that their sponsorship undertaking is in effect.  There is no corresponding bar on the person who was sponsored.

This led to situations where people who had been sponsored would arrive in Canada, divorce their sponsor, return to their home country, get married to someone else, and then almost immediately sponsor a “new” spouse.  This cast doubts onto the legitimacy of the spousal sponsorship program.

To address this issue, the Canadian government has introduced regulatory changes that will prohibit an individual who arrived in Canada under a spousal sponsorship program from sponsoring another spouse for five years.

This will essentially end the situation described above.  However, is five years too long?

Interested persons have 30 days to comment on the proposed change.

Spousal Sponsorships and Criminal Convictions

By Chau Kaur

Citizenship and Immigration Canada has proposed regulatory changes regarding who will be prohibited from sponsoring a member of the family class due to previous criminal convictions.  Before discussing the proposals, it is worth reviewing the current law.

It is also important to note that the failure of a sponsorship application does not mean that the application under the family class will fail.  They are two separate things.  If you do not understand this, then please contact me.

Currently, an individual is barred from sponsoring a member of the family class where the individual has been convicted of an offense of a sexual nature against anyone, or of an offense that results in “bodily harm” against a specific member of their family.  For the purposes of an offence that result in bodily harm, the listed family relationships include:

  • a relative (related by blood or adoption) or family member (spouse, common-law partner, dependent child, dependent child of a dependent child) or conjugal partner of the sponsor; and
  • a relative or family member of the sponsor’s spouse, common-law or conjugal partner.

The sponsorship bar is in effect until the individual is either pardoned or acquitted, or where five years has elapsed since the completion of an imposed sentence.

Under the proposed changes, anyone who has been convicted of an indictable offense involving the use of violence punishable by a maximum term of imprisonment of at least 10 years or an attempt to commit such an offense will be barred from sponsorship.

As well, for the purpose of an offense that results in bodily harm, the listed family relationships will be expanded to include:

  • former family members of the sponsor;
  • former family members of a family member or conjugal partner of the sponsor;
  • current and former family members of a relative of the sponsor or the sponsor’s family member;
  • former conjugal partner of the sponsor, as well as current and former family members of the conjugal partner’s relatives;
  • a child under the current or former care and control of the sponsor, their current or former family member, or conjugal partner;
  • a child under the current or former care and control of a relative of the sponsor or a current or former family member of that relative; and
  • someone with whom the sponsor dates or has dated, whether or not they live together, or a family member of that person.

Once again, it is also important to note that the failure of a sponsorship application does not mean that the application under the family class will fail.   If you are concerned about this, then please contact me.

Conditional Permanent Residency for Spousal Sponsorships

By Hammer51012

The Canadian government has quietly put out a notice in the Gazette requesting comments on a proposal to introduce a conditional permanent residence period of two years or more for sponsored spouses and partners in a relationship of two years or less with their sponsors.

The proposal would amend IRPR to introduce a specified period of conditional permanent residence for spouses and partners sponsored as members of the family class or spouse or common-law partner in Canada class.  It would apply to spouses and partners who have been in a relationship with their sponsor for two years or less at the time of the sponsorship application.  The condition would require that the sponsored spouse or partner remain in a bona fide relationship with their sponsor for a period of two years following receipt of their permanent residence status in Canada.  Only cases targeted for fraud would be reviewed during the conditional period.  Permanent residence could be revoked if the condition of remaining in a bona fide relationship was not met.

The period of conditional status under consideration could be two years, or longer, from the time that the sponsored spouse or partner becomes a permanent resident in Canada.

Given concerns about the vulnerability of spouses and partners in abusive relationships, a process for allowing bona fide spouses and partners in such situations to come forward without facing enforcement action would be developed if a conditional permanent residence period were introduced.

The move would bring Canada’s policies into line with those of other countries, such as the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia, all of which already employ a form of two-year conditional status for those in new relationships.

The Notice states that questions and requests for additional information, as well as comments regarding this Notice of Intent, may be directed to Justine Akman, Director, Social Policy and Programs, Citizenship and Immigration Canada, 365 Laurier Avenue W, 8th Floor, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 1L1, 613-941-9022 , 613-941-9014 (fax), justine.akman@cic.gc.ca (email).