i also applied on H&C, without meeting RO, and i was staying outside canada. SO i entered via US border into canada.
i got the PR card renewed for 1 year but also reported as inadmissible under section 44(1) due to no complying to RO obligations.
as per my lawyer.. i should stay here for 1 year ... and then repply for PR .. and chances are that i will get 5 years PR after that... she told me once i get the 5 year pR card again then the report to minister is meaningless and gets waived off.... is that right ?
- Can some one guide.. what are the issues when you have 1 year PR but also reported as inadmissible ?
- can i still avail health benefits ?
- will i face issues from employers in searching the jobs
I realize that I have elsewhere responded to your queries and said that your lawyer is a far better source than me or anyone here.
That is not always true. It is usually true. It is usually true by a big margin. But we do see some serious discrepancies between what we know and what some lawyers have sometimes said.
@YVR123 has a key aspect right. And likewise
@canuck78 as to this: "
Since you have been reported as inadmissible time in Canada will not count towards PR or citizenship. Time will only count if your in admissibility hearing is positive."
Which is to say that until the 44(1) Report is actually set aside (either by a Minister's Delegate or by the IAD if a MD issues a Removal Order and you win an appeal), days in Canada do NOT count toward meeting the PR Residency Obligation. Here too, I previously affirmed the lawyer's suggestion that being in Canada pending further proceedings would help, and that is true, but I also said that helps mostly in the sense it avoids the negative influence remaining outside Canada would have.
I
do not concur in the view expressed by
@canuck78 about your lawyer (assuming it is a lawyer, not a "consultant") in regards to them not knowing what they are talking about. In this respect it is certain it is
@canuck78 who does not know what they are talking about because there is NO way to extrapolate much at all about the competence of your lawyer based on the little bit of advice you have clearly, at best, paraphrased and shared here.
Even assuming your version of what the lawyer said is accurate (an assumption which very often is not warranted), many lawyers will couch advice to clients in a way that is not precisely an accurate statement of the law or rules or how things work procedurally, and do this deliberately for a variety of reasons. Often this is to comfort, reassure the client, to reduce the client's anxiety. In this situation it could also be about emphasizing the importance of coming to Canada and STAYING, a combination of suggesting it is OK to relax, odds are good it will go OK, if you get here and stay, and in a year things will be in a better place.
The caveat, the caution, is that there is no guarantee how things will actually go from here. As said elsewhere, how these things go depends on the particular facts and circumstances in the individual PR's case. Numbers looming largest. Reasons for remaining abroad also looming large. And, as it appears for you, continued absence from Canada after making the PR card application, looming large as a serious negative factor, which again will be even more negative unless you return to Canada to stay.
Additionally, as
@YVR123 noted in regards to information referenced and linked in that post, the actual procedure involved will not make you eligible for a 5 year PR card in a year UNLESS the 44(1) Report is set aside. While we have seen some of these cases sit in limbo for lengthy periods of time, what is likely to happen is the MD makes a decision in the not too distant future, resulting in either:
-- the 44(1) Report being set aside, in which case you could apply for and will likely be issued a 5-year card, OR
-- the issuance of a Removal Order, which you would need to appeal to save your PR status
Overall, I cannot estimate or even guess what chance you have to keep your PR status. But I can say that your chances will likely be very poor or not at all likely if you do not come to Canada to stay in the meantime.
An addendum of sorts: Perhaps I am unnecessarily biased, but I trust lawyers way, way more than "
consultants."