Balwant or anyone work permit related please help

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Subject: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help
  I am in US and applying for a Canadian work permit soon. I have a 2 year old son with developmental disability.

There is a question in the work permit application - "Do you or a have a family member who have any physical or mental disorder for which that person will require social/or health services other than medication?"
Do I have to answer this yes? If I answer this yes, would they reject my work permit?

Let me know.

Thanks

[14-09-2007,22:00]
[**.255.192.96]
canadaman
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
You would only answer this YES if the answer is YES.

Roy
www.cvimmigation.com

[14-09-2007,22:14]
[**.55.216.56]
Roy
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
My son is 2 years old. Do you know why they would have such a question. Thanks
[15-09-2007,00:12]
[**.255.192.96]
canadaman
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
because the Canadian medical system is stretched beyond the maximum and they do not wish to deliberately add to the strain. Age has nothing to do with it. If you child requires extensive support, then they will factor that in to your application.

at the time my grandparents came to Canada, the questions were the same. My relatives had a child who was disabled. They left him behind with and aunt and uncle rather than forfeit the opportunity to come to Canada. I am not sure that I could have done it, and I am glad my grandparents were not faced with that decision but the question is nothing new and I suspect the question is not exclusively Canada´s.

[15-09-2007,00:22]
[***.121.220.199]
sharon
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
Dear Canadaman,
You have to be truthful and answer YES.
The Immigration Dept. works in mysterious ways through it´s officers. If you can convinced the officer that the child would not be a burden to the medical system and you can afford all medical treatments, the officer may consider your explanations but I still think your chances are slim. Go ahead and try your luck. If you were applying for Permanent Residence, you may have a chance due to precedents but I have never experienced a similar situation with Work Permit.
www.canadaimmigrationbpa.com

[15-09-2007,01:14]
[**.158.145.205]
Balwant
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
Canadaman

Back to my first response you only have to say YES if the answer is YES! If the answer is NO the answer is NO.

You ask a question and give NO details so most who respond here think the answer is YES and your hiding that fact your child is very ill.

There are occupations that you may not even be asked for you and your family to take a medical and after your arrival the provincial health care program will kick in. If at that time your two year old or your two hundred year old child causes my tax rate to go up I and others will show you no sympathy.

Lets get this straight --- YOU WANT TO COME TO CANADA TO EARN A LIVING, YOU WANT TO COME TO CANADA TO HAVE YOUR CHILD TAKEN CARE OF MEDICALLY, YOU WANT YOUR PARTNER TO HAVE AN OPEN WORK PERMIT, YOU WANT ANY OTHER CHILDREN TO GO TO SCHOOL FREE AND YOU WANT TO TAKE ALL OF THIS, ALL BY LIEING ABOUT YOUR CHILD´S CONDITION.

If any person on a work permit brings a child to Canada and after three months of being here the child is involved in an accident or becomes ill every Canadian would say CURE THE KID! EVERY CANADIAN WOULD SHOW YOU SYMPATHY.

You know if your child is very ill at the time of application it should exclude you. Have your concious answer the question yourself!

Roy
www.cvimmigration.com

[15-09-2007,09:01]
[**.52.216.229]
Roy
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
ok let me get this straight. My son has a speech delay and I attribute that to developmental disability. He is not seriously ill.

But the question in the application is "Do you or a have a family member who have any physical or mental disorder for which that person will require social/or health services other than medication?"

I dont need any special services from the government. All I am asking is how do I answer this question. Thanks

[15-09-2007,14:34]
[**.255.192.96]
canadaman
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
who determined he has a developmental disability - Dr. Dad? Because his speech is slow? You know how many 2 year old boys struggle with speech delay????

Is this something he will grow out of with a little bit of help from an elightened Dad or school teacher or will he need doctors, operations, medical supervision, special housing???

A healthy kid who is slow with his vocabulary is not suffering from a ´developmental disability´. Shame on you!

[15-09-2007,14:58]
[***.121.220.199]
sharon
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
sorry, my vocabulary was wrong. I should have said "developmental delay"!!

But I got my answer I think.

[15-09-2007,15:03]
[**.255.192.96]
canadaman
(in reply to: Balwant or anyone work permit related please help)
my one nephew did not talk beyond grunts until he was almost 4 - he then came out with full sentences. Turns out he never needed to talk because his older brother always talked for him. My second nephew talked garble until he was 5. A few speech therapy classes and it was like magic - I could finally figure out what he was talking about. His sister talked circles around him at the same age. Both are now equally eloquent.

Be patient Dad, and don´t ever let him think there is something ´developmentally´ wrong with him.

yes, I think you got your answer.

[15-09-2007,15:56]
[***.121.220.199]
sharon
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