Canadian Immigration: Lock-in Dates
Please be aware that this article is accurate as of January 29,
2006 This article is intended to be used as general information
only, not as legal advice.
Question:
I am applying as a skilled worker. I have two sons, aged 21 and
22 years of age, who I want to add as my dependent children on
my application.
My application takes one and a half years to process, and by the
time the immigration officer finally makes a decision regarding
my case, you sons have finished their schooling, are no longer
financially dependent on me, and are aged 23 and 24.
Are my two sons still eligible on my Canadian immigration
application as "dependent children"?
Answer:
Yes.
Dependent Children
Non-Canadians are allowed to apply to immigrate to Canada in the
"skilled worker" category, which assesses an applicant's ability
to immigrate to Canada based on a combination of many factors,
including work experience, education, and language ability.
Applicants in the skilled worker category are allowed to include
their spouse and their and dependent children on their
applications, in order to allow their spouse and dependent
children to immigrate with them to Canada, if their application
is successful.
For the purposes of skilled worker applications, "dependent
children" are defined as including (among other factors),
children who are less than 22 years of age, or children who are
22 years of age or more, but who have been substantially
financially dependent on their applying parent since before
reaching age 22, and who has also been, since before age 22, in
school on a full-time or continuous basis.
However, one important factor which is not defined in the
statutory rules is exactly when information regarding dependents
is "locked in", or be "frozen" on the application form. In other
words, will a child's age and financial dependency be calculated
as of the application date, or as of the immigration officer's
decision date, or as of some other date?
Lock-in Date for Age
The Canadian immigration officials (Citizen and Immigration
Canada, or "CIC") has internal policies regarding the locking-in
of age for children. Their rules make the lock-in date for
dependent children of skilled workers the date of the
application.
The CIC policy manual gives the following definition of lock-in
date:
Lock-in date
The lock-in date is a reference point used to freeze certain
factors for the purpose of processing applications. Neither the
Act nor Regulations define it. It does not overcome any
requirements of the Act and Regulations applicants must satisfy
when an officer admits them...
Refugee and Economic class: Lock-in (of age) occurs when a visa
officer has accepted a submission as an application...
This policy does not conflict with jurisprudence in this area
(jurisprudence over-ruling CIC policy in cases of conflict).
Therefore, in the example above, your youngest son would
continue to be eligible as your dependent child, even a year an
a half after the date of application, for he was 21 at the time
of the "lock-in" date for age.
Lock-in Date for Financial Dependency - NEW
In contrast to the lock-in date for age, in the past CIC
maintained that the lock-in date for financial dependency was
the date of the application being decided.
Therefore, in the example above, according to former Canadian
immigration policy, your oldest son would not be eligible as
your dependent child as of the day that an immigration officer
made a decision on your file, one and a half years after you
applied, for at that time he was no longer financially dependent
on you, despite his financial dependency on the date of your
application. Combined with his age, he would thus no longer be
considered a "dependent child".
However, this has now changed, at least for the time being. In
Hamid, a Federal Court of Canada court case decided in December
2005, the court held that, in the absence of a contrary
statutory requirement, the lock-in date for financial dependency
for the dependent children of skilled workers is the day of
application. The court in Hamid explained that the lock-in date
for age logically should also apply to that of financial
dependency - that there is no principled reason for an applicant
to be penalized for a delay in processing, for this is beyond an
applicant's control.
Therefore, since Hamid, an applicant's children may be
considered dependent children, and therefore allowed to remain
on the applicant's application for a longer period of time.
Keep these points in mind
The following points are very important to keep in mind:
- This article is accurate as of January 29, 2006. The law
changes often, so be sure that you are aware of the most current
law. Please be in touch with me at any time in order to request
information regarding the current law. I can be reached at
skalman@canada-immigrate.ca.
- The new rules regarding the lock-in date for financial
dependency applies to applicants under the skilled worker class
only - it does NOT apply to applicants under the family class.
- The lock-in date applies for applications that are complete
and in compliance with all statutory requirements. In other
words, until an application made properly and fully, there is
not lock-in date.
- Hamid will likely go to the Federal Court of Appeal, and once
the case is heard at that court, there may be a decision that a
different lock-in date is more appropriate than the date of
application.