Pusser
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 32
- Points
- 530
Ostrozac said:In general, you're going to have to be married to accompany a service member on an OUTCAN posting, otherwise you run into all kinds of residency, healthcare, visa issues, etc. Plus, part of the OUTCAN screening is an interview where they talk about family situation -- if his paperwork says he has a child but no spouse then the first question is "what is your child care plan when you're in Europe?"
Culture varies widely -- living in the UK is very different from living in Romania. There are many posting locations, all with their own differences.
The government of Canada has a moving contract -- they book your movers and pay for them, you don't choose the company.
You don't necessarily need to be married to accompany your common-law spouse on an OUTCAN posting. The CAF doesn't really care. HOWEVER, the host country might. If they don't recognize common-law relationships, then you could be denied any spousal benefits offered to visiting forces, INCLUDING any required visas (which could effectively kill your chances of joining him overseas. Rather than trying to fight this, it would be a lot simpler for all concerned if you simply got married before the COS date.