A slow clap can be regarded as being well let's just say not a very positive action.....hence why ridiculousI liked his detailed response and that was my reaction to it. Not sure why you would call it ridiculous...
A slow clap can be regarded as being well let's just say not a very positive action.....hence why ridiculousI liked his detailed response and that was my reaction to it. Not sure why you would call it ridiculous...
That was the complete opposite of what i wanted to convey. A slow clap because i was the first one to applaud and encourage the audience to do the sameA slow clap can be regarded as being well let's just say not a very positive action.....hence why ridiculous
Okay, you think it unfair, but here there is a real legal definition and issue; but as noted, I agree that for refugees the long processing time is a particularly serious issue. At any rate, I also note and agree that this is a REAL issue and refugees/refugees who are now PRs really should not use their home country passports to travel and certainly not return home.I think the definition of "availing yourself of your country's protection" is quite unfair in that it includes simply using the country's passport.
Let's cut to the chase: can you find a single example of someone who was refused on the basis of not showing intent after one year in the province of nomination? Or even six months, actually living in the province? Being questioned is not the same as being accused.But to go back to the wording in the official documents, when you accept a nomination, you are "indicating to both IRCC and that provincial or territorial jurisdiction that you are intending to reside in that province or territory and that you will comply with other related program requirements." "program requirements" being the intent to settle in the province. ...
I do know some people who moved from their province of nomination after 2+ years and were questioned in citizenship interviews for having moved. ...
And yes, there are PNP folks who move before citizenship and don't get in trouble for it.
Completely fabricated - again, the standard is that there must be evidence of misrepresentation (fraud). And you're wrong, the burden of proof here is on the government to show misrepresentation - any move to strip PR status can be appealed, and 'intent' to misrepresent at this stage is a high bar to meet for government. (This actually applies to all of these - with the possible exception of the refugee case, as using the home country passport is itself considered prima facie evidence [a form of proof] of intent to 'avail oneself of home country protection'.]Divorcing before citizenship would certainly raise questions, and whether reasons for divorcing are valid and what constitutes abuse can be subjective. Again, if questioned, the burden is on the PR to prove that no marriage fraud existed. And just because some people can divorce before citizenship and not face any negative consequences does not mean that doing so is not risky.
Again: show me a case where one who settled for six months elsewhere and moved to Quebec has had it challenged. One single case. Once a PR settles in Canada and shows good faith intent (of which settling elsewhere for six months is very decent evidence), there is NO limitation on ability to move within Canada in long term.FSW EE immigrants applied on the condition of intending to reside outside of Quebec, similar to PNP folks who applied on the condition of intending to reside in their province of nomination. Enforcement of the rule to reside outside of Quebec does seem to be enforced less often than the PNP requirements to stay in province, probably because it is less common for FSW folks to want to move to Quebec, and those who do, already have good French proficiency and integrate well enough not to draw attention. Still, the rules are the rules, and if you break them, you are taking risks, if not of rejection of citizenship application and/or revocation of PR status, then of at least more scrutiny and delays in your application.
Perhaps @glennchu has lived a thoroughly sheltered life and is not much familiar with the ways of the world, so simply knows no better, but it is far more likely this is just one more piling-on essentially-empty utterance of disdain, substantively bereft, informationally bankrupt.it has been discussed numerous times how unfair their process is. It is like communism - you cannot question and they do not feel like we deserve an answer or any transparency. Worst System Ever.
True enough, but that is not what this topic is about. It is about an unreasonable demand that recent online applicants, those who made applications this year, be processed before the scores and scores of 2019 and 2020 applicants who are still waiting. That, and begrudging the few (very few) applicants who have (for whatever reasons) benefitted from what appears to be superfast processing.Demanding to be treated fairly is not unreasonable.
Not sure why this has been so badly misinterpreted here, be that lack of reasoning skills or language ability, or willfully misleading, but this does NOT say what some here (including @mbaleine) claim it says.Lifting from ATIP from IRCC:
"Most importantly, this will also allow the Citizenship Program to concentrate on processing the aging paper inventory while building digital processing capacity and gradually transitioning to an electronic inventory. Not focusing on eliminating the paper inventory first and prioritizing processing of new e-apps would result in a large stagnant paper inventory with processing times reaching at least four years, if not longer."
That is not true. Whether a refugee can visit their home country is between the refugee and the home country. Canada does not restrict the international travel of any PR or FN.Let's start from the bottom, the refugees. They aren't even allowed to visit their home countries or even keep or renew their home country passports.
I am not sure why you are refusing to acknowledge IRCC's own memo which states that they would not process more than 5000 online applications for the fiscal year.To be clear, there is NO prioritizing of incoming paper applications over incoming online applications.
Those are being processed AHEAD of incoming paper applications; indeed, they are being processed ahead of many much older paper applications.This is how one looses credibility, I guess.
I am not sure why you are refusing to acknowledge IRCC's own memo which states that they would not process more than 5000 online applications for the fiscal year.
Already explained why this is a bad analogy. Worse, you haven't even clarified what the rules are (that you're claiming are being broken), and I've explained why intent is a much higher bar to meet and rarely used without clear evidence of that intent or a very obvious pattern showing knowledge as part of that intent. Even for the 'availment' case, the government no longer seems to automatically get the benefit of the doubt.Okay, you think it unfair, but here there is a real legal definition and issue; but as noted, I agree that for refugees the long processing time is a particularly serious issue. At any rate, I also note and agree that this is a REAL issue and refugees/refugees who are now PRs really should not use their home country passports to travel and certainly not return home.
This is however very much UNLIKE all of your other examples which are basically spreading fear and doubt where there should be none. Your information is wrong.
Let's cut to the chase: can you find a single example of someone who was refused on the basis of not showing intent after one year in the province of nomination? Or even six months, actually living in the province? Being questioned is not the same as being accused.
Remember: your original claim was that PNP types must stay in province until citizenship received. That's patently not true.
As for your point about 'rules', as you note, the rule is 'intent' - and while these things can be subjective, the bar to show someone purposefully misled (never intended to live in a place / reside in a province after actually living there for some period of time) is quite a bit higher.
Hence my test: please show me one case. Your speeding analogy is misleading here: not everyone gets caught for speeding every time, but I know lots of drivers who have got speeding tickets (or more specifically, I don't think I know a single driver who has never got a speeding ticket. Except maybe my Great Aunt who never, ever drove after getting her license.)
Completely fabricated - again, the standard is that there must be evidence of misrepresentation (fraud). And you're wrong, the burden of proof here is on the government to show misrepresentation - any move to strip PR status can be appealed, and 'intent' to misrepresent at this stage is a high bar to meet for government. (This actually applies to all of these - with the possible exception of the refugee case, as using the home country passport is itself considered prima facie evidence [a form of proof] of intent to 'avail oneself of home country protection'.]
Again: show me a case where one who settled for six months elsewhere and moved to Quebec has had it challenged. One single case. Once a PR settles in Canada and shows good faith intent (of which settling elsewhere for six months is very decent evidence), there is NO limitation on ability to move within Canada in long term.
And again: your original claim was cannot do so until getting citizenship. That is a farcically bad exaggeration and interpretation with ZERO evidence - and amounts to fearmongering.
An analogy is how most people who commit crimes or infractions do not get caught. Most people have driven above speed limits at times, but most of the time, they were not caught. Others have committed petty theft and not gotten caught. But just because most people don't get caught, or you haven't gotten caught yet, does not mean you aren't breaking rules or that you will never get caught.
That is not true. Whether a refugee can visit their home country is between the refugee and the home country. Canada does not restrict the international travel of any PR or FN.
But, it's a bit like selling your car, trading it in for a different one. You don't get to drive the car you traded in anymore. Refugee's choice. Those who reavail themselves of home country protection have, in effect, traded in Canada' protection for the home country's protection. This is STANDARD for the large number of countries who provide refugees and others with protected person status under the guidelines promulgated by the UNHCR. Has virtually nothing to do with Canada in particular.
That said, I have addressed the issue of applying cessation of protected person status (which is NOT a penalty, but rather a recognition of status, which again is as prescribed by and consistent with UNHCR guidelines, the standards applied around the world) to those refugees or protected persons AFTER they have become a PR. This is a change that the Harper government implemented in 2012. This is something I have been addressing at length and in-depth, for more than seven years now, here:
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/refugee-status-cessation-and-prs-applying-for-citizenship.333455/
It is a complicated subject. There are inherent injustices involved. Some more severe than others. So far as I know MP Jenny Kwan, NDP, remains the only one in Parliament much interested or active in regards to this matter. Her private member's proposed legislation has gone nowhere, but for those interested in engaging in advocacy regarding this particular subject, her office may be a good place to start.
This is still a misstatement (with the exception of the refugee/re-availment issue).Okay I don't have time for more lengthy discussions, but what I am talking about are the rules and what we are supposed to do to abide with our obligations as PRs and not risk losing our PR status or having our citizenship applications scrutinized and delayed extra if not refused. What one can actually get away with is another matter and has to do with the risk of getting caught, as well as what excuses or extenuating circumstances one has.
I talk about needing to obey these rules until citizenship because these are PR rules, with no time limit specified, and one is no longer subject to these rules only if one is no longer a PR (by obtaining citizenship or by having PR status revoked)
As I noted, I have addressed the impact of cessation on PRs with refugee or protected person status at length in this forum. A long way from the subject of this thread. (This is all way off topic.)I'm talking about the rules that PRs need to follow if they want to gain permanent status in Canada (i.e., keep PR status and get citizenship). If a refugee visits their home country or even renews their passport, they can get their PR status revoked. If they don't care about losing their PR status, then yes, they have freedom of movement. But we all are here in this forum because we want to get permanent status in Canada, so I think we can agree that we are all working on the assumption that we don't want to have our PR statuses revoked.
I don't know much about refugee treatment in other countries, but I find it quite unfair that in Canada, cessation of protected status means that PR status can also be revoked. That does not make PR status "permanent". The only way for refugees to get real permanent status in Canada is to get citizenship. I point this out as an example of why PR status in Canada isn't that amazing at all and why people are desperate to get citizenship. See the original messages I was addressed to that I quoted here
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/unfair-treatment-to-online-applicants-is-there-anything-we-can-do.776297/post-10202614
Regarding false information, the PNP rules are not clear or specific enough (time limit, also what needs to be done to prove the requisite intent), so we all really are guessing. Maybe for some/many people, 6 months is sufficient to show intent, but clearly for others, it is not. I don't have specific examples of people who had their PR revoked after spending 6+ months in province, but the fact that some people I know were questioned in citizenship interviews who had already passed more than 2 years in the province before moving strongly suggests that spending 2+ years in province is still not enough in and of itself. These people I know of did have valid reasons for leaving (e.g., job ended and could not find another job in province). But what if they did not have reasons deemed acceptable to the IRCC agent?This is still a misstatement (with the exception of the refugee/re-availment issue).
Because for every one of these cases (PNP, spousal, etc), the 'time limit' is that there must not be intent at the time one became a PR. And if there is no documentary evidence of misrepresentation of that intent (i.e. letters saying "this is a fake marriage for purposes of immigration), no other obvious external evidence to the contrary, and the PR shows at least some evidence of complying with the original intent - the most obvious of which is either residing in the intended province of settlement for (say) six months / residing with spouse (for spousal sponsorship), then "comply with these rules until citizenship" is absurd advice.
Again: find me a case, one case, any case, where the PR resided in province of settlement for six months and subsequently had their PR status challenged.
Whereas: if there is documented evidence of misrepresentation (mal intent) and/or the PR never complied with any part of the reason for immigration (eg moved immediately or never resided in intended province) - and of course IRCC learns of this - then that misrepresentation can basically never be fixed (or possibly may be 'fixed' by obtaining citizenship, don't know the legalities about whether it can be revoked aftewrads, although doubt there are many cases of that). It's the original sin that matters, not what happens eg one year after landing.
Repeat: you are spreading false information and exaggerating needlessly.
Not. one. single. case. Enough said.I don't have specific examples of people who had their PR revoked after spending 6+ months in province
Doesn't say anything more than that they were asked a question.but the fact that some people I know were questioned in citizenship interviews who had already passed more than 2 years in the province before moving strongly suggests that spending 2+ years in province is still not enough in and of itself.
There is no evidence - none - to support that.So I'm saying that the rule is that PNP folks are supposed to stay in province for as long as they are PRs.
To be clear: I have said that if there is evidence of fraud/misrepresentation, it may not be 'curable' at all. (I.e. potentially not for 'everyone'.)That does not mean that it is all right for everyone to leave the province after 6 months or even 2 years.
You can't draw a conclusion entirely about what was precisely meant in this oral argument, and certainly NOT about what a court (or tribunal like IAD) would conclude about whether this 'exchange' can be enforced without intent, or even whether this is fully compatible with the Charter.I think we can better understand the thought process of the government by reading the words of a prosecutor who describes "the process of being nominated through the PNP, and the priority processing those immigrants receive, as a privilege. In order to gain this privilege, they exchange their right, in a way, of settling anywhere in Canada."
So that others who read this but don't follow the link can understand the context and why I am saying you CANNOT overread a statement from that through to all cases:This was in the context of an immigration fraud case (that eventually was dropped)
... suggests that PNP PRs are not safe to move out of province until citizenship or if they are under extenuating circumstances