After the Interview
I had to mail my medical results to the consulate, and apparently Canada Post does this free of charge! I had to log into the same service I used to register my interview back in December, and print a couple pages to send with my envelope. Even though I wasn’t asked to, I also photocopied the “refusal worksheet” I was given at the consulate, and included that too. It seemed prudent. I took my medical results and my passport to the post office in Saskatoon, and the person there knew exactly what to do. I felt reassured because he had obviously done this before.
He said normally he sends them to Vancouver, and since Vancouver doesn’t handle family-based immigration, I assume he normally processes employment visas or work permits or other things. He said he’d see me next week because that’s how quickly they’re usually processed. I said that if it was next week, that would be an insane miracle. Part of me knew that he didn’t know what he was talking about (since family-based immigration is definitely more permanent), but the other part was a smidge hopeful that he’d be right, and that it wouldn’t be months.
Interestingly, the sheet with instructions the consular officer gave me said I should allow about 6-8 weeks for a response from the consulate. So with her suggesting it would be months, the Canada post agent saying it would be a week, and with a piece of paper saying it would be 6-8 weeks...I basically had no idea when I was going to get it.
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