hopelives Posted August 6, 2009 Report Share Posted August 6, 2009 (edited) If my wife is successful, she wants to come home with me after we finish traversing the country, of course I have not purchased a ticket, but I hope I can. Here is the tricky part, my family and I return through Canada, and one of the criteria for avoiding a Canadian transit visa is the following: " persons lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence who are in possession of their alien registration card or can provide other evidence of permanent residence;" Will we have enough to meet the criteria? Any Canada experts eh? thanksJ Edited August 6, 2009 by hopelives (see edit history) Link to comment
dnoblett Posted August 6, 2009 Report Share Posted August 6, 2009 (edited) A visa to the USA is NOT a Green-Card, she needs Green-card to enter Canada. A person holding only a CR-1/IR-1 or K-3 visa will need a transit visa for Canada. Edited August 6, 2009 by dnoblett (see edit history) Link to comment
Guest shutterbug Posted August 6, 2009 Report Share Posted August 6, 2009 (edited) If my wife is successful, she wants to come home with me after we finish traversing the country, of course I have not purchased a ticket, but I hope I can. Here is the tricky part, my family and I return through Canada, and one of the criteria for avoiding a Canadian transit visa is the following: " persons lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence who are in possession of their alien registration card or can provide other evidence of permanent residence;" Will we have enough to meet the criteria? Any Canada experts eh? thanksJ Had you asked the question a week ago, the answer would have been a clear "No". The transit visa is free of charge but one does have to turn in an application. Here is the turn-around time in Beijing: http://geo.international.gc.ca/asia/china/...g-times-en.aspx On July 30, new rules were put in place. If your group will be transiting through Vancouver, she can pass through without a transit visa, assuming she is arriving on Cathay Pacific Airways from Hong Kong or Phillipine Airlines from Manila. http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/man.../2009/ob142.asp The rules referenced above aso list Beijing, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Taipei as possible embarkation point. In reality however, Taipei where China Airlines is based, is out for obvious reasons, and neither Air China nor Air Canada (the only airlines authorized to fly non-stop between the two countries) is a participant at this time. All things considered, she may be better off getting a transit visa... Edited August 6, 2009 by shutterbug (see edit history) Link to comment
hopelives Posted August 7, 2009 Author Report Share Posted August 7, 2009 If my wife is successful, she wants to come home with me after we finish traversing the country, of course I have not purchased a ticket, but I hope I can. Here is the tricky part, my family and I return through Canada, and one of the criteria for avoiding a Canadian transit visa is the following: " persons lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence who are in possession of their alien registration card or can provide other evidence of permanent residence;" Will we have enough to meet the criteria? Any Canada experts eh? thanksJ Had you asked the question a week ago, the answer would have been a clear "No". The transit visa is free of charge but one does have to turn in an application. Here is the turn-around time in Beijing: http://geo.international.gc.ca/asia/china/...g-times-en.aspx On July 30, new rules were put in place. If your group will be transiting through Vancouver, she can pass through without a transit visa, assuming she is arriving on Cathay Pacific Airways from Hong Kong or Phillipine Airlines from Manila. http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/man.../2009/ob142.asp The rules referenced above aso list Beijing, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Taipei as possible embarkation point. In reality however, Taipei where China Airlines is based, is out for obvious reasons, and neither Air China nor Air Canada (the only airlines authorized to fly non-stop between the two countries) is a participant at this time. All things considered, she may be better off getting a transit visa... I just read about the new policy on their website, unfortunately our original plan was to fly through Vancouver but now we are going straight through to Toronto, might need to reconsider and change my flight, if we get approved Thank so much for the processing times, I was under the impresion it took longer. Link to comment
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