IRCC revised AIP “Other situations” guidance: post‑submission job or employer changes require updated provincial endorsements and IMM 0157 submitted via the IRCC Web form, with officers recording changes in GCMS and issuing a 90‑day PFL/hold if documents are missing. Provinces will reassess employer designation after ownership changes and applicants must maintain valid work authorization to avoid refusal.
Soheil Hosseini
June 5, 2026
Jurisdiction
Federal
Week
Week 23
Impact
Low
Programs Affected
IRCC updates Atlantic Immigration Program guidance to clarify employment changes, employer ownership and processing steps
Date: 2026-06-05 | Source: IRCC | Program affected: Work Permit (impacting AIP permanent residence processing)
Summary: IRCC has refined its Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP) guidance on “Other situations,” adding clearer rules for employment changes, employer ownership transitions, and officer processing steps to ensure consistent assessments and maintain program integrity. IRCC has issued a program delivery update for the Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP) to improve clarity and alignment with program requirements. The revised “Other situations” guidance sharpens expectations around post‑submission changes and the documents applicants must provide, while setting standardized processing steps for officers. Key additions clarify that when an AIP applicant’s role changes with the same employer—such as modified duties, position or TEER code—applicants must submit an updated provincial endorsement certificate and an updated Offer of Employment (IMM 0157) via the IRCC Web form. If only the job title changes, officers may still request an updated endorsement to reflect revised job information. For applicants who change designated employers, IRCC requires an updated provincial endorsement and updated IMM 0157. In all cases, applicants are reminded it is their responsibility to maintain valid work authorization and confirm if a new work permit is required. The update also addresses changes in employer ownership. Following a sale or transfer, the province will reassess the employer’s designation and related endorsements. Notably, a province may:
- maintain designation, de‑designate, or
- continue supporting an endorsement even if the employer is no longer designated.
Processing will proceed under one of two outcomes: the province revokes support and endorsement, or the province continues support. Operationally, officers must record changes in GCMS, including updating the “Provincial endorsement letter” field, which now accommodates 250 characters for change‑of‑employer information. If IRCC is notified of a change without required documents, the AIP PR application will be placed on a 90‑day hold and a procedural fairness letter (PFL) will issue; failure to respond within 90 days will result in refusal. A new AIP PR application is not required; officers update the file in GCMS and may liaise with the province as needed. The guidance reiterates applicants must promptly notify IRCC via the Web form of any changes, including family composition. Because only the principal applicant is named on the endorsement, a new or amended endorsement is not required for family composition changes. IRCC also confirms concurrent applications: if an applicant becomes AIP‑endorsed after applying in another category, they must submit a new AIP application. Fees may be refunded only if the initial application has not entered processing. Only one permanent resident visa can be issued. Independent analysis:
- Positive impacts: The clarified document checklist and standardized officer steps should promote more consistent decision‑making and reduce avoidable refusals. Allowing provinces to support endorsements after ownership changes provides continuity for workers and employers during corporate transitions. The explicit 90‑day PFL window enhances procedural fairness.
- Potential drawbacks: The extra requirement to obtain updated endorsements and IMM 0157 forms can slow processing and increase administrative burden, especially during TEER changes or employer transitions. Applicants face heightened refusal risk if they miss the 90‑day deadline. Changes in TEER may alter AIP eligibility (language, education, job offer duration), potentially leading to ineligibility for some applicants. Work permit implications remain critical; failure to maintain status can disrupt both employment and PR processing. Stakeholders should review the updated AIP “Other situations” guidance, ensure prompt Web form notifications, and secure required provincial and employer documents swiftly to avoid processing holds.
Tags: IRCC, Atlantic Immigration Program, AIP, Program Delivery Instructions, Work Permit, TEER, NOC, Endorsement, Employer Ownership, Designated Employer, IMM 0157, GCMS, Procedural Fairness Letter, Canada Immigration News
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