Thank you! So that initial visa is traditionally done in your home country?Promises are easy to make. Your friend may well find that that some of the requirements may be skirted, but others cannot. Usually you learn this well into the process when your paperwork gets help up because something is lacking - you then have no choice but to pay extra and jump through additional hoops to fix the problem.
The residency process is supposed to begin in your home country by getting a visa for the specific purpose of applying for residency. You are supposed to show this visa to immigration who enter into their computers the purpose of your visit being to apply for residency.
Later on in the process someone checks all your documents, apostilles, dates etc. Problems at this stage usually means having to get new documents to replace those that are not acceptable. For some this means a trip home to get finger printed or apply for a more current document in person.
I'm not saying the offer made to your friend is not possible but it could be problematic. For something as important and lasting as residency, it may be more prudent to follow the rules and the processes and not run the risk of getting caught up in a paper chase or finding your residency invalidated at a later date for procedural irregularities. Trust me, this is something you only want to do once.
Like buying a Rembrandt only to find out sometime later that it is not what it appears to be and is in fact quite useless. Residency is the foundation upon which your life here is built. If the foundation is not secure, neither is all that it supports.
I did not know they reopened that program. Is there a thread or a link about this reopening?Hey guys,
I got mine without going home 3 years ago when they opened up the scheme to get everyone legal status in the country (can remember the name. Its a bit of a round about way of doing it but I got mine (no going home, no blood test or X-rays etc). The first year you just get a non resident visa in your passport - then I got a call saying I could go and get my cedula. (a year after that I went to get my temp residency...)
Its so easy to do and basically free (apart from photos and photocopies). I just heard this program has been opened up again for a few months! I think you had to of been living here for over 2 years or so but if you are looking to get your residency now is the time to apply!
Chris
CloseIts called the National Foreigner Legalization Plan (PNRE)..
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It's called the National Foreigner Regularization Plan
Btw that program ended in 2015
The PNRE plan is closed. A lot of people that entered the plan got a carnet or a visa in their passports. Those were all expiring last August, so DGM extended the expiration for one year(Aug 2018) for those who are already in the plan. DGM is not accepting any more people into the plan.
It did but I have heard they have opened it up again for a few months - it might be called something else but it is possible now
They extended the expiration date of the carnets and visas for those ALREADY in the plan. DGM put out a notice and said specifically they are not accepting any more.
They already have about 280,000 in the plan that, while they have a "legal status" and some even have a cedula, they do not yet have residency and DGM has no idea what to do other than to "extend and pretend".
Well I think we will have to just disagree on this one - I was in the plan - I have got my temporary residency now - not an extension. As I said this is new... I went to pick it up last week (and yes I have had a cedula before that for a year). No extend and pretend...
What they say and do doesn't always match...
Well I think we will have to just disagree on this one - I was in the plan - I have got my temporary residency now - not an extension. As I said this is new... I went to pick it up last week (and yes I have had a cedula before that for a year). No extend and pretend...
What they say and do doesn't always match...
Yes, some people have received their cedulas. Did you get a residency card?
There are about 250,000 Haitians in the plan that still don't have the documents required to get residency. Some of them don't have birth certificates and some can't even prove who they really are.
DGM doesn't know what to do about it, so they've extended it for one more year to give these people time to get the required documents.