@MUSTAFACAN
Is there an update on your case? Did you hear from the minister? I received an email asking for my details so they could finally make a decision after 4 years but again it's been 3 months and no decision.
I would like to know how you renew your 1 yr PR card. Do you use the same application package as a regular PR card renewal? I am currently in Canada and have 2 citizen children.
@axelfoley
Did you hear anything after your 44(1) was issued? It’s been 4.5 years for me. Also, how do you renew this temporary PR card? What’s the procedure? Because the regular PR card renewal application will ask for days spent in Canada etc.
OVERALL:
The answer to the specific questions asked, "
how do you renew this temporary PR card?" and "
Do you use the same application package as a regular PR card renewal?" is essentially yes, use the application for a PR card, which is IMM 5444, and the corresponding checklist IMM 5644, to make the application. Be sure to COMPLETELY and ACCURATELY respond to all questions. Based on that information PLUS all the other information available to IRCC:
(1) IRCC will determine whether you are still a Permanent Resident, and if you are still a PR, then
(2) IRCC will decide whether to issue a five year PR card or another one-year PR card.
The latter appears to be the likely outcome, but as
@armoured notes the scarcity of detail regarding your situation makes it difficult to offer much comment about your case. Moreover, there could be a lengthy processing timeline for being issued a new card, including a one-year PR card. IRCC might proceed to finalize the inadmissibility hearing before deciding to issue a new PR card.
In particular, apparently your situation involves an unresolved inadmissibility report. This happens, BUT it is unusual. Moreover, when it does happen, the Minister's Delegate review of the 44(1) Inadmissibility Report for a breach of the RO ordinarily still gets done within weeks or a few months after the report was prepared. Situations in which YEARS go by without the MD's review, such as has been reported in this forum by
@MUSTAFACAN, are especially uncommon. These kinds of cases are very much driven by the specific circumstances in the individual case. There is little, very little about the outcome reported by
@MUSTAFACAN, that illuminates much at all about what is likely to happen in your case; at best it simply illustrates one possible outcome.
If you can afford it, it would be a good idea to obtain the services of a reputable immigration lawyer to help you going forward.
I . . . received an email that the minister's delegate will make a decision now for the report that was issued in 2019. asked me to send any documents i thought would help regarding where i had been in the past 5 years, in canada or outside and any ties to Canada. It's been 3.5 months to that also, they haven't gotten back to me.I have been in canada now for the past 7 months
Some Further Observations:
It is not clear if you are interested in observations beyond answering the questions about applying for a new PR card (whether one expects only a one-year or a five-year card).
BUT . . . if you are interested . . . some further observations . . .
It does not appear that you are in "
the same boat" as
@MUSTAFACAN, as you posted just about three years ago, but rather in a leaky, significantly less seaworthy one. Extent of respective presence in Canada, in particular, is way different, and that is something that can make a big difference in how things go.
Also note, in particular, that the posts you quote are MANY years old. The situation discussed by
@axelfoley is even far more different from yours (it involved an appeal following a Removal Order) in addition to taking place nearly eight years ago. While there have been subsequent updates to the situation discussed by
@MUSTAFACAN, as noted that situation is at the least very uncommon, and what happens in these kinds of cases will vary a great deal depending on the specific circumstances in the particular individual's case.
It is probably best, if you want to save your PR status, to
NOT LEAVE Canada while things are still pending.
Be aware that the fact your children are Canadian citizens does NOT guarantee you will be allowed to keep your PR status. While their best interests are a big factor, that is generally based on personal circumstances without considering whether Canada is in general a better place for them. For example, for the child who has been living outside Canada, that might tip the scales in the direction that child's best interests are met even if you lose PR status and the child will be relocated outside Canada.
As noted before, it would be a good idea to obtain the assistance of a good lawyer. If you are staying here in Canada, you could ride this out to see what a Minister's Delegate decides, and put off making a decision about hiring a lawyer until then. If a Removal Order is issued, and you want to stay, to keep PR status, you could then hire a lawyer to assist you in your appeal.
EDIT to ADD: Be sure to timely and appropriately respond to ALL requests from IRCC, and to make sure IRCC has valid contact information for you.