
Permanent Residency
Federal and provincial economic streams, family sponsorship, humanitarian applications, citizenship, and PR card renewals.

A boutique Canadian immigration practice for refusals, misrepresentation findings, and permanent residency matters that require more than a completed form. Direct representation by an RCIC - IRB, on every file.
The firm accepts a limited number of retainers each month. The work below reflects where the practice is concentrated and where our representation is strongest.

Federal and provincial economic streams, family sponsorship, humanitarian applications, citizenship, and PR card renewals.

Procedural fairness responses, reconsideration submissions, and post-refusal strategy where the record itself must be rebuilt.

Family class matters prepared with the genuineness, dependency, and inadmissibility evidence officers actually look for.

Profile architecture, CRS positioning, ITA response, and post-ITA documentation — handled as the regulated proceeding it is.

Criminal/medical inadmissibility, temporary residency permits, and refugee protection claims before the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB).

Employer-specific permits, LMIA-supported applications, post-graduation work permits, and specialized exemption streams.

PP Immigration Inc. is a single-counsel practice. Mandi Gill is the RCIC - IRB of record on every retainer — from intake through filing, procedural fairness, and decision. There is no junior handoff, no associate model, and no shared roster.
The practice is structured for the work that requires it: refusals, s. 40 findings, inadmissibility, and PR matters where the evidentiary record will determine the outcome.
Names abbreviated and identifying details withheld in keeping with our confidentiality obligations under the CICC Code of Professional Conduct.
After a second refusal I had been told the file was unsalvageable. Mandi read the GCMS notes line by line, identified what the officer actually relied on, and built a submission around it. The next decision was approval.
She was the first person who told us, in writing, what was realistic and what was not. The rest of the engagement matched that standard exactly.
Our matter involved a procedural fairness letter and a tight response window. It was handled with the seriousness — and the documentation — that the situation required.
Concise, source-referenced notes on recent draws, operational instructions, and policy shifts. Written for applicants and counsel — not for traffic.
Category-based selection continues to dominate the cycle. Healthcare and STEM remain in scope; bilingual draws hold the lowest cut-off.
IRCC has revised its public service standard. Files with deficient genuineness evidence continue to draw extended secondary review.
Five additional NOC codes — including AI specialists and cybersecurity analysts — are eligible under the Foreign Worker stream as of this draw.
Schedule a confidential consultation with the RCIC - IRB of record. You will receive a written assessment of your matter and a recommended course of action within two business days.
Every retainer follows the same four stages. You receive written documentation at each one, so the position of your file is never in question.
A confidential, fee-based intake. We review your history, prior submissions, and the question that brought you to counsel.
GCMS notes obtained where relevant. We evaluate the file against current IRCC operational instructions and case law — and tell you, in writing, what we think.
Evidence gathered, legal submissions drafted, and procedural risks addressed before filing. Nothing is sent until it has been reviewed by the consultant of record.
We file, track, and respond to every officer request through to decision — and represent you on procedural fairness or reconsideration if required.