A Primer in Proof of Physical Presence:
Addressing an off-topic query in "PRTD documents check list - supporting documents for residency obligation - while i was in Canada last 5 years"
Acknowledging this has been explained . . . and here giving it one more shot . . . in THREE parts.
PART I . . . CBSA travel history is NOT much evidence of presence:
Remember, the primary source of "real evidence" of presence, and which is what is submitted with a PR card, PR TD, or citizenship application, is the PR's testimonial report that the PR was present IN Canada all the days between a reported date of entry and the next reported date of exit -- the PR's reported travel history is a statement to the effect: "I entered Canada on such-and-such date and was present in Canada until I left on such-and-such date."
You state::
NO. And this warrants repeating: NO, the CBSA travel history is NOT the only real evidence to show when a PR "was in fact IN Canada," and indeed, the CBSA travel history offers very little evidence of presence in Canada at all, let alone much evidence, let alone "the only real evidence."
To try to explain this I considered using your example in which John Doe reports three trips:
But calculations of days are off. And the concurrence of the "To" date for the Paris trip and "From" date for the Rome trip is unrealistic. Remember, "To" is date arriving in Canada; "From" is the date of exit from Canada.
So, slightly modified version:
John Doe is reporting three trips totaling 390 days absent from Canada. If that is accurate, and IRCC accepts it as such, that means John Doe was present in Canada 1436 days (includes counting leap year day) in the relevant five years.
Small word here, "if," but big, big implications. Two big, important premises here:
Note that IRCC's consideration of CBSA travel history is to see if that indicates any reason to question or doubt the PR's reporting, to see if that history shows any omission or inaccuracy in what the PR reported . . . to assess whether to accept and rely on the PR's account.
If there are only, at worst, minimal discrepancies between the PR's and the CBSA travel history, and there is no other indication the PR's account is suspect, IRCC will still accept the PR's travel history as accurate (except for a citizenship application with minimal or no margin above the requirement threshold, where a precise counting of days may be required).
Again, the "real evidence" of presence here is the PR's testimonial report that the PR was present IN Canada all the days between a reported date of entry and the next reported date of exit -- the PR's reported travel history is a statement to the effect: "I entered Canada on such-and-such date and was present in Canada until I left on such-and-such date."
In contrast, the CBSA travel history routinely accessed by IRCC, showing dates the PR entered Canada, is minimal evidence. In particular, in this example, the CBSA travel history accessed by IRCC will be real or direct evidence of just THREE days presence in Canada:
That is it. The CBAS travel history will ONLY evidence those three days as present in Canada.
If IRCC expands its consideration of travel history information to include CBSA information as to exit dates, in addition to entry dates, the CBSA travel history will then be direct evidence of just SIX days presence in Canada:
There is NO real or direct evidence in that history to show that John Doe was present in Canada any other days. Real evidence of actual presence for just six days falls rather short, way, way short, of showing the PR was in Canada at least 730 days (let alone 1095 days for a citizenship application). The real importance of this CBSA travel history is whether or not it is consistent with and supports what the PR has reported in the application.
Again, the primary, REAL evidence of presence in Canada, is the PR's reporting which, again, is in effect a testimonial statement they were IN Canada from a reported date of entry to the next reported date of exit.
IRCC does not blindly rely on this. For PR card and citizenship applications PRs are required to provide their address and work history for the full five years (even though there are no work-related requirements), so that IRCC can compare that information with the travel history. For a PR Travel Document application PRs are also required to submit two items, two pieces of evidence, showing their residency in Canada.***
And that usually suffices. For PR card applications that is usually enough to immediately approve the application and issue a new PR card.
Beyond that, if and when there are questions or concerns about the accuracy and completeness of the PR's account . . . Leading to PART II . . . Residency Case Proof of Presence
***Note: One difference for a PR Travel Document application versus a PR card application is that a PR abroad without a valid PR card (thus in need of a PR TD to return to Canada) is PRESUMED to NOT have valid PR status. See Section 31(2)(b) IRPA here: https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/I-2.5/page-5.html#h-274660 . . . that said, the additional "supporting" evidence required with the PR TD application is relatively minimal, just two things to show the PR had a residential address in Canada during the relevant five years.
Addressing an off-topic query in "PRTD documents check list - supporting documents for residency obligation - while i was in Canada last 5 years"
Acknowledging this has been explained . . . and here giving it one more shot . . . in THREE parts.
PART I . . . CBSA travel history is NOT much evidence of presence:
Remember, the primary source of "real evidence" of presence, and which is what is submitted with a PR card, PR TD, or citizenship application, is the PR's testimonial report that the PR was present IN Canada all the days between a reported date of entry and the next reported date of exit -- the PR's reported travel history is a statement to the effect: "I entered Canada on such-and-such date and was present in Canada until I left on such-and-such date."
Your query and related discussion is NOT "over-analyzing," but rather is actually, if anything, under-analyzing. More likely misunderstanding.If Appendix A does not apply to PR that is in Canada, has not been outside of Canada for more than 1095...and is applying for a new PR card having provided travel info that they are declaring meeting, or exceeding 730 days in Canada, one could deduce that the exit/entry Travel History is really all that is needed for those PRs; no need to add anything in terms of supporting documents.
However...
What credence do most supporting documents really give? A PR's DL would show their address, but how does that guarantee that the PR was even in Canada? A DL is usually valid for 5 years, but that doesn't, in and of itself, guarantee that the person will remain in Canada for 5 years, right?
Same could be said for most of the other types of documents, even banking statements, especially if there is no activity shown other than online activity (i.e. no ATM withdrawals near their Canadian residential address, or anywhere in Canada).
Yes, I realize that I will be accused of `over analyzing', or hypothesizing, but because the only real evidence that would show that the PR was in fact IN Canada, in terms of meeting the R.O., would seem to be...travel history that CBSA has access to and shares with IRCC. Otherwise, why would Appendix A (supporting documents) not be a requirement for a PR card renewal inside Canada?
You state::
". . . the only real evidence that would show that the PR was in fact IN Canada, in terms of meeting the R.O., would seem to be...travel history that CBSA has access to and shares with IRCC."
NO. And this warrants repeating: NO, the CBSA travel history is NOT the only real evidence to show when a PR "was in fact IN Canada," and indeed, the CBSA travel history offers very little evidence of presence in Canada at all, let alone much evidence, let alone "the only real evidence."
To try to explain this I considered using your example in which John Doe reports three trips:
From | To | Your location(s) (city, country/territory) | Reason for absence | If “Other” please add Reason | Days |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018/01/01 | 2018/01/15 | London, United Kingdom | Other | Vacation | 12 |
2020/01/01 | 2020/01/15 | Paris, France | Other | Vacation | 12 |
2020/01/15 | 2021/01/15 | Rome, Italy | B | 364 |
But calculations of days are off. And the concurrence of the "To" date for the Paris trip and "From" date for the Rome trip is unrealistic. Remember, "To" is date arriving in Canada; "From" is the date of exit from Canada.
So, slightly modified version:
From | To | Your location(s) (city, country/territory) | Reason for absence | If “Other” please add Reason | Days |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018/01/01 | 2018/01/15 | London, United Kingdom | Other | Vacation | 13 |
2020/01/01 | 2020/01/15 | Paris, France | Other | Vacation | 13 |
2020/03/15 | 2021/03/15 | Rome, Italy | Other | Caring for ill parent | 364 |
John Doe is reporting three trips totaling 390 days absent from Canada. If that is accurate, and IRCC accepts it as such, that means John Doe was present in Canada 1436 days (includes counting leap year day) in the relevant five years.
Small word here, "if," but big, big implications. Two big, important premises here:
-- IF John Doe's reported travel history is accurate, and
-- IF IRCC accepts it as accurate
Note that IRCC's consideration of CBSA travel history is to see if that indicates any reason to question or doubt the PR's reporting, to see if that history shows any omission or inaccuracy in what the PR reported . . . to assess whether to accept and rely on the PR's account.
If there are only, at worst, minimal discrepancies between the PR's and the CBSA travel history, and there is no other indication the PR's account is suspect, IRCC will still accept the PR's travel history as accurate (except for a citizenship application with minimal or no margin above the requirement threshold, where a precise counting of days may be required).
Again, the "real evidence" of presence here is the PR's testimonial report that the PR was present IN Canada all the days between a reported date of entry and the next reported date of exit -- the PR's reported travel history is a statement to the effect: "I entered Canada on such-and-such date and was present in Canada until I left on such-and-such date."
In contrast, the CBSA travel history routinely accessed by IRCC, showing dates the PR entered Canada, is minimal evidence. In particular, in this example, the CBSA travel history accessed by IRCC will be real or direct evidence of just THREE days presence in Canada:
2018/01/15
2020/01/15
2021/03/15
That is it. The CBAS travel history will ONLY evidence those three days as present in Canada.
If IRCC expands its consideration of travel history information to include CBSA information as to exit dates, in addition to entry dates, the CBSA travel history will then be direct evidence of just SIX days presence in Canada:
2018/01/01 (date of exit, so present in Canada that day)
2018/01/15 (date of entry, so present in Canada that day)
2020/01/01 (date of exit . . . )
2020/01/15 (date of entry . . . )
2020/03/15 (date of exit . . . )
2021/03/15 (date of entry . . . )
There is NO real or direct evidence in that history to show that John Doe was present in Canada any other days. Real evidence of actual presence for just six days falls rather short, way, way short, of showing the PR was in Canada at least 730 days (let alone 1095 days for a citizenship application). The real importance of this CBSA travel history is whether or not it is consistent with and supports what the PR has reported in the application.
Again, the primary, REAL evidence of presence in Canada, is the PR's reporting which, again, is in effect a testimonial statement they were IN Canada from a reported date of entry to the next reported date of exit.
IRCC does not blindly rely on this. For PR card and citizenship applications PRs are required to provide their address and work history for the full five years (even though there are no work-related requirements), so that IRCC can compare that information with the travel history. For a PR Travel Document application PRs are also required to submit two items, two pieces of evidence, showing their residency in Canada.***
And that usually suffices. For PR card applications that is usually enough to immediately approve the application and issue a new PR card.
Beyond that, if and when there are questions or concerns about the accuracy and completeness of the PR's account . . . Leading to PART II . . . Residency Case Proof of Presence
***Note: One difference for a PR Travel Document application versus a PR card application is that a PR abroad without a valid PR card (thus in need of a PR TD to return to Canada) is PRESUMED to NOT have valid PR status. See Section 31(2)(b) IRPA here: https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/I-2.5/page-5.html#h-274660 . . . that said, the additional "supporting" evidence required with the PR TD application is relatively minimal, just two things to show the PR had a residential address in Canada during the relevant five years.