Immigration
IRCC no longer accepting ready to travel webforms from expired COPR holders
Expired Confirmation of Permanent Residence (COPR) holders have been advised not to use the webform to contact the immigration department, according to a government media release issued on January 5.
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada‘s (IRCC) new program delivery update says that expired COPR holders who are ready to travel to Canada should no longer be contacting the department through the webform or processing office email.
IRCC says they will contact clients once they are approved to come to Canada.
In July 2020, IRCC asked expired COPR holders to use the webform to notify them if they were ready to land in Canada. COPRs are issued once an immigration applicant is approved for permanent residence. Typically, these approved permanent residents just need to arrive in Canada and complete the landing process.
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However, coronavirus measures wreaked havoc on people’s plans to travel in the first few months of the pandemic. Though Canada’s borders were still open to people who had COPRs approved before March 18, many people were unable to travel due to reduced flights or other factors in their home countries.
During this time, many people’s COPRs expired before they were able to travel to Canada, and foreign nationals cannot come to Canada with expired documents. This rule has been in place since before the pandemic.
So IRCC announced a new webform process in July, which would allow expired COPR holders to request an authorization letter to come to Canada. Once they got the official letter they could use it to board a plane.
Though the ready to travel webform process was launched in the summer, IRCC did not start sending out authorization letters until September. IRCC’s assistant deputy minister, Daniel Mills, suggested that there were about 10,000 cases of expired COPR holders while speaking at a federal immigration committee meeting in the fall. By November, IRCC had contacted about 6,000 of them and had issued 500 authorization letters.
Many expired COPR holders said that they had completed multiple webforms stating they were ready to travel. Those who were not issued the letter received generic responses saying that their file was in processing. With no ability to travel to Canada and no timeline on when they would get their authorization letter, many expired COPR holders were stuck in limbo, unable to make plans in their home country or in Canada.
An IRCC spokesperson had previously told CIC News that the department had opted to issue authorization letters individually rather than en masse “given the health and safety risks.” They also need to confirm that passports and medical exams are still valid, since the validity of the COPR is tied to these documents.
CIC News is waiting on further comment from IRCC and will update the story when new information becomes available.
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