I do not have lawyer-referral information. But can say the odds of successfully appealing are probably better if you can find and retain the assistance of a good Canadian immigration lawyer.Received email letter response today, PRTD request declined with reason (1) No compliance of RO in last 5 years and (2) H&C Ground are not sufficient to consider. Option given to file Appeal within 60 days. Please advise whether to opt hearing by reaching within Canada with fresh PRTD application after filing appeal? Do suggest Immigration lawyer's name/detail with time frame, cost and probability of success.
If you intend to appeal, filing that is not complicated and should be done without waiting for help from a lawyer. Absolutely imperative to file the appeal on time.
Probability of success is very difficult to assess even when all of the relevant factors are clearly known. To have even a vague, general idea if there is much of a chance of success, depends in large part on the number of days IN Canada within the previous five years PLUS reasons why you did not return to Canada sooner.
As @canuck78 referenced, obtaining a PR TD pending an appeal almost always depends on whether you were physically IN Canada within the previous year. This would not be a "fresh" PR TD application; it is a special TD specifically to allow a PR to be in Canada pending the appeal, enabling the PR to attend an appeal hearing; and, again, this is routinely granted if the PR has been IN Canada within the previous year, and otherwise not.
Time wise: Not yet. Not for a PR TD denied on grounds the PR failed to comply with the Residency Obligation.Since your PRTD has been denied, you are no longer a PR!
Decision denying PR TD for RO breach does not take effect for sixty days, the time period during which the PR has a right of appeal.
If an appeal is timely filed, PR status continues PENDING the outcome of the appeal.
Thus, for example, within this sixty day window, or pending an appeal, they can still come to Canada and are entitled to entry into Canada. This can be done either:
-- applying for a special TD, which allows a PR to come to Canada pending an appeal; such TD is routinely issued to a PR who has been in Canada within the previous year; for a PR who has not been in Canada within the previous year, application for the special TD is typically denied but might be granted, noting I do not know the factors for getting a TD in this latter situation
-- traveling via the U.S. for those who have U.S. status allowing this
Of course it is better to come and stay in Canada pending an appeal, if possible.
Sorry that my language there (you are obviously quoting a post of mine) was probably a little confusing. The decision denying the PR TD is the decision that terminates PR status, but of course PR status is not terminated unless and until the decision takes effect. It does not take effect immediately. It does not take effect so long as there is a right of appeal. Thus, it does not take effect for at least sixty days, the time within which there is a right of appeal, and will not take effect if there is an appeal for as long as the appeal is pending.-- if the PR TD is denied, that is a decision terminating your PR status, so you would need to appeal that in order to have a chance to save your PR status; you will be given 60 days to make that appeal (and this applies even if you manage to travel to Canada via the U.S. and are allowed into Canada . . . if the PR TD has been or is denied, that terminates your status unless you appeal and win the appeal)
If, of course, the decision is set aside on appeal, it never takes effect.
Going back to what you quoted from me: " . . . if the PR TD has been or is denied, that terminates your status unless you appeal and win the appeal." (Emphasis added to the conditional "unless.") Still true, but not immediate.