Then get the Government to change it then if you’re losing sleep over it . Until that policy is changed, it’ll be applied as it stands.
To get the government to change it, you need cases where people specifically get refusals so that those can then be challenged.
So that's exactly what I'm doing. Albeit at a distance because I'm not losing sleep over it, and not personally affected by it.
And btw , I never mentioned they were “ laws”, I specifically mentioned policy / regulations.
You did refer to regulations, and also rules. The point still stands: rules/procedures/policies, where in conflict with law, should be changed. And in direct response to your question above ("You IMPLYING that the rules shouldn’t be followed ?"), my answer remains valid: yes, where it contradicts law.
If the Government wasn’t so lax at the border in enforcement of the RO , which at 2/5 years residency is a joke, we wouldn’t be having these examples of people not being here for years, returning, and expecting to be welcomed with open arms .
Here we get into 'policy': one's opinions can differ on what the relative benefits might be of more or less strict enforcement of the RO itself (and believe it or not, I don't have a fixed opinion on that - there are trade-offs and I'd probably be fine with a somewhat more strict approach, ideally if some other procedural issues and speed of processing were also fixed).
But I honestly don't believe that ANYONE with a brain could possibly advocate for or believe that keeping someone who is in Canada legally as a PR from working by denying them a SIN number is a good policy. Bluntly, it's an astoundingly stupid approach, in addition to contradicting the law and the charter - it just pushes people into underground work, prevents them from establishing themselves, contributes to more illegality, poverty and dependence on welfare and charity, with precious little effect on RO compliance. The only reason it persists is it probably effects less than a thousand people at any given time (this is very much a guess).
"Enforcing" a slightly more strict residency obligation in this way (if that's the point, and personally I don't believe it is that intentional a goal behind it - I suspect it's instead the unintended consequences of some other policy objective) is the worst possible way to go about it. (Well, the worst yet, anyway)
Think RO and/or RO enforcement should be stricter? Okay - that's a reasonable position, I can respect that. Do it at the border or before, though.
But once CBSA and/or IRCC ('the govt') has admitted someone via a recognized legal procedure and therefore they're here legally, preventing them from working is a zombie policy that serves no purpose. As well as being, IMO, contrary to the law.