Find out about recent news, events and happenings on the Quebec / Canada immigration scene. Gain ideas and strategies to help you with your Quebec / Canada immigration, settlement and citizenship project. Discover helpful links and resources to keep you informed and up-to-date. DISCLAIMER: All data provided is for informational / recreational use only! It is not meant to replace legal advice. If you are in need of legal advice, speak to a lawyer who can advise you.
Monday, 27 December 2010
A Beautiful Description of Canadian and American Friendship
I watched this video and really enjoyed it. It touched my heart and I hope that it does yours too.
Without any further ado...
Tom Brokaw explains Canada to Americans
If the link does not work, kindly go to: http://www.wimp.com/explainscanada/.
Tuesday, 21 December 2010
Friend, where will you be happy??
It's common knowledge in Montreal that some people have a sport of bashing Toronto, but I personally think that Toronto is truly a lovely city. As is Montreal.
And this is my point: here was a (native) Canadian, a Montrealer, who was moving all of 5.5 hours away, to a different Canadian city. Same nationality, language, currency, time zone, culture (though there are those in Quebec who would have my head for saying that the cultures are similar), way-of-life etc., and that didn't make one bit of difference to him. He was miserable in his new hometown! The reason is, I humbly submit, is because when we step outside of and beyond our regular comfort zone, a zone which we spend a lifetime building-up and perfecting, life gets tough. And my friend was unwilling to put-up with the challenge and that's what eventually caused him to high-tail it back to La Belle Province.
Now imagine that for someone who is moving to a new, well - everything! I won't start listing, but drawing on the categories mentioned above and by definition, an immigrant is shifting to a totally fresh experience and surroundings. Yes, of course, it's almost always something the he volunteers for and it is almost always a step up on so many levels, but it may still be a very daunting and scary proposition.
According to a 'life-satisfaction' study conducted last year by the Canadian Centre for the Study of Living Standards, together with the Institute for Competitiveness and Prosperity, a whopping 92.1% of Canadians over the age of 12 considered themselves to be either 'satisfied' or 'very satisfied' with their lives.
Furthermore, not only are we a content bunch per se, but in a different study conducted in 2007-08, Canada also ranked as fifth on the 'global happiness index', behind Costa Rica, Denmark, Norway and Ireland. (I wonder with what's going on in Ireland these days, if this rating would still be as accurate. As an aside, the U.S. came in as seventh.) Not too shabby at all!
Andrew Sharpe, the executive director of the Centre, gives his take on our Canadian joie-de-vivre: 'money can't always buy you happiness!' According to the study, household income ranks behind mental health; physical health; stress levels; a sense of belonging to a community; and even behind being unemployed, in being a determinant of an individual's happiness.
Kindly look at the table of 'Happiest Provinces & Territories' below. Notice where PEI ranks and where Ontario fits in! Does that tell you something about what makes people happy?? Idyllic PEI vs powerhouse Ontario?! Not-so-(financially)-rich PEI vs (financially)-rich Ontario?! Even very-healthy British Columbia ranks at number 9! Maybe the researchers are actually right about this stuff. Financial wealth is appealing, but it may not be the ultimate in people's lives.
A bit further down you'll find the 'Happiest Canadian Cities' table. Please note that Canada's three major cities are listed toward the bottom of the pile. In fact, Toronto is dead-last and Vancouver is just one up.
Mr Sharpe attributes these dismal results regarding the cities to two facts: 1) anonymity and invisibility of individuals residing in large cities [we're guessing here that that's a bad thing]; and 2) new immigrants tend to flock to these larger cities but may encounter difficulties in finding employment opportunities.
Happiest Provinces & Territories | |
1. prince edward island | 4.33 |
2. quebec | 4.30 |
3. alberta | 4.30 |
4. new brunswick | 4.30 |
5. nfld & labrador | 4.29 |
6. nova scotia | 4.27 |
7. saskatchewan | 4.27 |
8. yukon | 4.26 |
9. northwest territories | 4.26 |
10. nunavut | 4.26 |
11. manitoba | 4.25 |
12. british columbia | 4.24 |
13. ontario | 4.23 |
Happiest Canadian Cities | |
1. sherbrooke, qc | 4.37 |
2. brantford, on | 4.36 |
3. trois rivières, qc | 4.35 |
4. quebec, qc | 4.34 |
5. st john’s, nfld | 4.34 |
6. calgary, ab | 4.33 |
7. peterborough, on | 4.32 |
8. saguenay, qc | 4.32 |
9. sudbury, on | 4.32 |
10. halifax, ns | 4.32 |
11. guelph, on | 4.32 |
12. victoria, bc | 4.32 |
13. saskatoon, sk | 4.31 |
14. st john, nb | 4.30 |
15. capital region | 4.29 |
16. barrie, on | 4.29 |
17. kelowna, bc | 4.28 |
18. hamilton, on | 4.28 |
19. kingston, on | 4.27 |
20. kitchener, on | 4.27 |
21. regina, sk | 4.27 |
22. edmonton, ab | 4.26 |
23. montreal, qc | 4.26 |
24. london, on | 4.26 |
25. thunder bay, on | 4.25 |
26. moncton, nb | 4.24 |
27. winnipeg, mb | 4.23 |
28. abbotsford, nb | 4.23 |
29. windsor, on | 4.21 |
30. st catherines, on | 4.21 |
31. vancouver, bc | 4.20 |
32. toronto, on | 4.15 |
Tuesday, 23 November 2010
How I love thee, let me count the pixels!
Sadly, in an ideal world, this would not be a solution. However, for whatever the reasons, broken families are a reality and as a society, we must do whatever we can to lessen the harsh impact of the child's new home environment, where both parents are no longer habitually resident.
For example, a custodial parent may not unilaterally decide to pick up and move away with the child, far from the non-custodial parent, effectively depriving the latter of his/her ability to spend 'real time' with the child. Court approval would have to be accorded to the moving parent, in order to justify altering the other parent's rights and modifying the divorce agreement.
Finally, what if someone had hooked-up a 24-hour-a-day webcam connection to his/her family/school/place of work in Canada, would that satisfy the 'presence in Canada' requirements for Permanent Resident and/or Citizenship statuses?
If you want to live here as a permanent resident or become a citizen of this great country, it's not enough to do it 'virtually'. You have to experience the real deal.
In closing, we really ought to embrace these technologies whenever we can, depending though on the context of the given situation. Skype & Friends have the potential to make our lives so much richer in human experiences "to seek out new life and...to go where no man has gone before" (so to speak!), but can never replace the true meeting and bonding of human spirits.
Wednesday, 10 November 2010
Groundbreaking decision from Quebec Court of Appeal
![]() | ||||
Quebec Court of Appeal |
![]() |
National Assembly of QC |
This ruling has the potential to have an incredible impact on Quebec society. There are lots of common-law couples here and now that there is a possibility of having these relationships look and behave more like marriages, participants will have to be more aware and conscious of their decision to enter into such a state. For sure, many common-law relationships are of the long-term committed type; but there are also many 'shacking-up' common-law relationships too. All of these may soon be touched by new legislation. Family law as we know it will be changed forever.
The Quebec government must now decide whether to send its legislators back to the drawing board and make the law right or whether to appeal this decision to the Supreme Court of Canada.
Forward 20+ years and Quebec is now the common-law capital of Canada (and North America)! A whopping 35% of couples now live in couple-hood outside matrimonial bliss and 60% of children now born in Quebec are born to these relations. That's 6 out of every 10 children born! If the law's intention was to protect women exiting from a 'loving' relationship, i.e. a married one, can there be any justification today in ignoring the approximately 3.5 women (out of 10) of the common-law ilk, who may be left impoverished if suddenly found single?
On the other hand, who's to say which proportion of these common-law couples actually chose to be in an unregulated common-law setting! Perhaps it was a very clear, purposeful and obvious choice for them to remain in the common-law arena and specifically not to venture into the married side. I am sure that anyone would be willing to bet a dollar, that everybody today knows of this creature called 'marriage' (or civil union) and those who do stay clear of it, know perfectly well what they are doing! The fact is: getting married brings its own baggage and maybe maybe some just couldn't be bothered and/or wish to avoid it altogether.
Furthermore, anyone reading this post, contemplating coming to Canada, might well remember and be forewarned of the possible implications of his/her relationships once arriving here.
Finally, there is an incidental connection to immigration. Spousal sponsorship applications includes those living in married and in common-law relationships. Potential immigrants already have enough to worry about and hopefully the information provided above will give them a better and clearer insight of the intricacies of Canadian family styles.
(The photo file of the Quebec Court of Appeal is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license and is free to share with attribution.
Attribution for the photo of the National Assembly of Quebec: By dszpiro on Flickr [CC-BY-2.0 (www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons).
Monday, 1 November 2010
Changes to the Federal Skilled Worker program
Sunday, 24 June 2007
Do You Have Your Student Visa Yet?

Generally speaking, Canada allows non-Canadian visitors into her borders for short visits, usually for a period of up to six months at a time. Depending on country of origin, a person may or may not require a permit or visa to enter. Thus, for example, US citizens may normally enter Canada for a period of up to six months with no visitor visa necessary; Venezuelans, on the other hand, will require a visitor visa.
These 'temporary' guests are allowed to come and...visit. And that's it! They are not allowed to work and /or study, unless they have first received a special dispensation from the federal government for that purpose, namely a work or study permit. In this post, I would like to discuss study permits.
Coming to study in Canada can truly be an exciting and rewarding experience. In Quebec, our educational system has many fine world-class institutions, in good company with the better known international ones. Open up a Montreal Yellow Pages and a quick survey of schools will indicate that indeed, there is almost every kind of educational possibility available here in Quebec. Coupled with a sizable and varied international student body (last year about 25,000 persons came from around the world), studying here is an experience that can provide anyone with a great future and a lifetime of precious memories.
Furthermore, our bilingual French and English character acts as a true-life laboratory language experiment. (Just promise yourself that you will ignore and stay away from associated political overtones.) The fact is that there is no other city in the world that can rival our bilingual (or even multi-lingual) status. Even if you were to choose to live and function in a unilingual English or French environment, you could not help but be infected, one way or another, with the feeling of cosmopolitanism that one gets from living in a city that speaks these two beautiful international tongues.
And finally, who can forget the weather?! Ah, the weather! You have to accept it , to embrace it, to love it. Summers are great, but aahh...the winters! The snow, the snowstorms, the piles and piles of snow, the cold, the brutal cold. And yes, the skiing, the skating, the sledding and being the first to make footprints and imprints in the snow, anticipating that loud crunch under your boots. Or if you're not the sporty type and would rather prefer winter cocooning, well, there's lots of that too. How's standing inside your cozy living room late at night, staring out the window, basking in the heat pouring out of your radiator while nursing a double, steaming hot chocolate, mindlessly watching the cascading sheets of snow accumulate in artful and deliberate snow dunes, burying trees, cars and anything left helplessly outside. Or perhaps simply cultivating and nurturing relationships by just spending more time with friends and family indoors. Montreal is not your beach destination getaway. This climate builds character and really must be experienced.
OK, you're convinced. You're coming. Great!
However, in order to be able to come take advantage of the Quebec / Canada learning experience, you must first obtain a study permit if you are not a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident and to this there is some effort and focus involved. It's not as simple as coming to Quebec for a visit, deciding on a school, filling in the application, going off to some downtown government office and receiving the study permit that day. If only! On the other hand, it's not an impossible task to do either, but it does require will, patience and planning. There are many tasks and details to pay attention to, which eventually all come together in your application.
Planning is crucial because even when you think that you're on top of your application and that you've got your end covered pat, you might quite rudely discover that suddenly you have to contend with external, unforeseeable and development-delaying circumstances over which you have utterly and absolutely no control! For example, you're ready to send out your application, but need some small information / a letter from your intended school or your bank or whomever. Guess what? You call them, only to be told that they're closed / gone off on vacation for three weeks till the end of whenever / working on a reduced staff / can't find your file or some other willy-nilly excuse and you're left holding the bag. The government-person-type who will ultimately be processing your application at the receiving end is certainly reviewing many, many others as well and if you want your application to be processed properly and quickly, without getting stuck in the system, you want to be 100% sure that you have crossed your t's and dotted your i's. Your application must be complete and perfect.
Coupled with the above, according to statistical information provided by the CIC for the period of April '06 to March '07, it took an average of a minimum of 28 working days (which translates into much more time when you include those inevitable nasty statutory holidays, Saturdays and Sundays) to process a study permit. This number has to be higher prior to the start of the school year.
Also, you have to be in possession of your initial study permit before you come to Canada as a student. You cannot come in as a visitor and then obtain your study permit. It is regularly not possible to have an initial study permit request completed in Canada.
Unfortunately, I have been contacted by would-be students to Quebec, who have been stymied by such a lack of proper planning. Believe me, it's upsetting to see how distraught these potential students become when they encounter these otherwise avoidable delays. Thus, in order to avoid big-time aggravation and disappointment, as well as possibly missing those seriously crucial first days of school, when everybody else gets the best ofs, it it absolutely necessary to start thinking and acting on your study permit now, if you haven't already begun.
Very generally and in a nutshell, in order to get a study permit, a person must submit the following:
- all the completed forms and documentation;
- a letter of acceptance from the school which he/she plans on attending;
- proof that he/she has enough financial funds to cover the tuition; and living expenses and return transportation at the end of the studies for all family members;
- proof that he/she will be leaving Canada at the expiry of the study permit (don't worry - renewals are possible);
- a police certificate with a clean police record, if requested;
- a medical examination, if necessary; and
- additionally, Quebec-bound students must first obtain a CAQ or a Certificat d’acceptation du Québec (Certificate of Acceptance) from the Quebec government, before applying for a Canadian study permit.
As Quebec provides health insurance to all her citizens, it is necessary for a visiting student to also prove that he/she is in possession of valid health insurance.
Depending on where you are coming from will also determine where your application for the study permit must be presented.
Thousands of people come to Quebec / Canada each year, in many different capacities. You can too. Put down the suntan lotion and get crackin'. Good luck!