The 'lost' Canadians

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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You’re not going to believe this. I had difficulty accepting it, but it’s true: A child born to Canadian military family serving overseas can be Canadian — but has no automatic right to a passport.

Lawrence Connelly was born in Germany in 1967 when his father was a firefighter in the Air Force. His mother was Canadian, and Lawrence was issued a DND certificate of birth, showing him to be Canadian. All pretty routine.

Skip ahead to the present. Lawrence is a teacher, lives in Orillia, works in day care, has no criminal record, pays taxes, has a Social Insurance Number, an OHIP card, driver’s license, pays into a pension fund, is married and has two kids. Can’t be more Canadian than that.

For a family vacation, Connelly planned to take the family to Disney World in the U.S. in August, and under new regulations after 9/11 applied in person for a passport. Until recently he could travel to the U.S. with just his identity documents.

Imagine his surprise when the Passport Office said there was no proof he was a citizen. Where was his Canadian birth certificate?
Connelly showed his DND card verifying his birth to a Canadian serviceman in Germany.

“Sorry, that’s not proof of citizenship,” he was told.

He showed his driver’s license, OHIP card, and other documents.

“Yes, we accept that you are a Canadian, but we can’t issue a passport unless you can prove you are Canadian,” he was told.
How does he do that, if the DND birth document isn’t acceptable proof?

“You can apply for citizenship — like an immigrant. It may take 10 months. Then you’ll get a card saying you are a citizen, and can apply for a passport.”

Lawrence Connelly couldn’t believe it. Nor could I. Here’s a guy who is born a Canadian but needs a card attesting to that fact, while I, also born Canadian, have a birth certificate but don’t have to carry a card attesting to my nationality.

Connelly is made to feel second-class.

“How can the Immigration and Citizenship office agree that I’m a Canadian, but insist that I have to prove it to get a passport?” And with a six or 10 month wait there goes his August vacation at Disney World.

Connelly has called people in Ottawa, and apparently nothing can be done.

He contacted his MP, Bruce Stanton (Simcoe North), who agrees that it is frustrating for Connelly, “but new security regulations have come into place since 9/11.”

Stanton thinks six months is the waiting time.

“The document issued to him by DND at his birth, isn’t proof of citizenship for a passport,” said Mr. Stanton. “It’s frustrating, but there’s a backlog of passport requests, so he’ll have to wait six months or so. Security is important.”

It strikes me that any number of Russian spies have acquired phony Canadian passports by taking names off tombstones in cemeteries. That seems easier than acquiring a DND certificate of birth. But times change.

While sympathetic to Connelly, Mr. Stanton says there’s nothing that can be done about the new security rules: “The document issued by DND at his birth was never intended to be proof of citizenship.” Oh? Tell that to kids born to military families.

Connelly says the passport people told him he should have applied when citizenship rules were changed in 1977 — “when I was 10 years old, for heaven’s sake.”

Perhaps Connelly would have gotten a more receptive hearing if he approached an NDP Member of Parliament.

“Funny, I’ve never before felt anything but Canadian, if I’m not considered Canadian enough for a passport, maybe I should ask for the taxes I’ve paid to be returned.”

It bothers him that he is expected to pay $85 to file for proof of citizenship, “and then pay for the passport on top of that — all because they accept that I’m a Canadian but not a citizen, and then won’t accept my proof of citizenship.”

Catch 22 , indeed!

So Lawrence Connelly joins the ranks of “Lost Canadians,” caught in a bureaucratic spider web from which there seems no escape. All because his parents served Canada overseas, unaware that someday their country would turn on their child.

Connelly apparently joins the ranks of an estimated 200,000 Canadians — war brides, their offspring and those born overseas to Canadian Armed Forces families — who are among “Lost Canadians” who have fallen through bureaucratic cracks and didn’t know it until they reached retirement age or applied for a passport.

The problem continues — for Canada and its “lost” citizens.




Passport office denies Orillia man is Canadian | Canada | News | Toronto Sun
 

Mother

New Member
May 25, 2012
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Stirling
That does not surprise me at all... Its another classic example of the system failing.
Someone dropped that ball on that one.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
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When my son was born in Canada, he automatically got a Ontario birth certificate. My wife being American, had to go through several piles of paperwork to get him his US certificate of citizen board abroad.
 

BruSan

Electoral Member
Jul 5, 2011
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This is nothing new; FIL was brought to Canada at the age of four in the 1920's and subsequently served in the RCAF during WWII seeing action as aircrew ceded to the RAF and was a Canadian citizen allowed to travel overseas many times vote etc., until Trudeau re-defined the description when he then became a non-citizen.

Stupid politicians and their moronic interference can sometimes make you angry, especially when you have the likes of Ruby Daliwhal or whoever trying to foment legislation making all her relatives eligible for full Canadian pension benefits after merely three years in the country.