How can students verify whether a school offer is still safe?
School-offer safety has become a bigger discussion because students worry about DLI status, program eligibility, refund wording, intake pressure, private partnerships, and whether an offer supports a realistic study and work plan. A valid-looking offer letter is only one piece of the decision. Specific questions worth discussing: - What should students verify before trusting an offer letter? - How can they check DLI information, campus location, program length, refund deadline, and PGWP-related wording? - Which red flags suggest the student should slow down before paying a deposit? - What details should be saved in case the school later changes dates or conditions? If replying with a similar situation, include the province or city, current status, key dates, program or job details when relevant, and the official source you are using. Please do not post private documents, UCI numbers, passport details, bank account information, or full addresses. For reference value, please mention what official page or school, employer, bank, landlord, or province-specific source you checked most recently. That helps other readers understand whether the answer depends on timing, location, document wording, or a personal planning assumption. This is a community discussion starter, not legal advice. Please check official requirements or speak with a qualified professional when needed.
Lilyyesterday 22:18
Editorial follow-up: A useful way to answer this topic is to separate facts from predictions. Start with the key dates, document type, province or city, and the official page being checked. Then compare two or three practical options, including what could go wrong if timing changes. Please keep personal IDs, full financial records, employer names, and private letters out of the public thread. If the topic involves permits, PR, status, or money, include the source date because old information can change the discussion quickly.

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