The situation for Manoo is complicated in itself, and for discussion purposes here even more complicated because it is not clear exactly what decisions have been made or what the precise status of the case is. (Which I why I keep emphasizing the need to go over these things with the lawyer.)@dpenabill:
So, out of curiosity, if the renewal and subsequent review of RO of PR status is based on 5 years prior to the date the application is received by IRCC, how does the time after that date play into the renewal and RO process? My understanding (and I may be incorrect in my understanding) is that the current review is based on the time the OP spent in Canada prior to April 4, 2016. So are the subsequent days after April 4, 2016 taken into consideration by IRCC during the review process, or are they constrained by the policies and procedures laid out for them? In the OP's case, it's been well over a year since his application was submitted to IRCC, so in making a determination, is all the time prior to October 16, 2017 that is considered, or is it the time up to April 2014 (and I do understand that the time since April 2014 is relevant in appeals, just trying to get my head around how it is affecting the OP's situation). I would think that the review would be constrained to the time up to the application date, otherwise you could find yourself outside of the RO requirement in some situations or in a favourable situation depending if the review period is fluid. A PR could find themselves out of compliance if the had attained the 730 early in the 5 years prior to applying if the period continues to be fluid, would they not?
And there is some confusion and complication in that how IRCC processes these cases, in practice, is not clear. I have, for example, seen reported cases (official decisions) in which a PR appealed a decision denying issuance of a PR card, lost that appeal, and thus lost PR status. Unfortunately, however, the actual procedure followed was not clearly explained. My best understanding of those cases is that the PR was abroad while the appeal was pending, and that probably made a huge difference.
Summary: PR RO compliance can be examined on any day. The day it is examined determines the five year period for calculating compliance. For assessing eligibility to be issued a PR card, PR RO compliance is based on the date the application was made. For determining whether to issue a 44(1) Report, PR RO compliance is based on the date the examination takes place. If a decision is subject to later review, the five years that count are still based on the date the decision was based upon.
In particular, if a PR has an application in process, PR RO compliance for purposes of that application will be based on the date of the application. BUT in the meantime, the PR can still be examined as of any other day, the day the PR makes a PR TD application, the date the PR arrives at a PoE, the date the PR is interviewed and examined for PR RO compliance. The latter, it appears to me, is how Manoo came to be issued a 44(1) Report.
For purposes of later review, the five year time period which was assessed in the decision being reviewed continues to be the relevant five years . . . even if the review takes place years later. So, when a MD determines whether a 44(1) Report was valid in law, the date of the examination resulting in the issuance of the Report continues to set the five year period. And that remains the date through the appeal process.
An effort, perhaps a bumbling effort, to more thoroughly explain this:
What I think you might be mixing up a bit is the fact that compliance with the PR Residency Obligation can be examined any day versus the assessment of PR RO compliance as of particular days for particular purposes.
For purposes of deciding whether to issue a PR Travel Document, for example, compliance is assessed as of the day the PR TD application is made. If there is a negative decision which is reviewed, that continues to be the date that compliance is based on.
This is probably true for a PR card application as well. For sure, eligibility to be issued a new card is based on compliance with the PR RO as of the day the application was made. And, if there is a negative decision which is reviewed, that continues to be the date that compliance is based on.
But there is a huge difference in the impact of a negative PR TD decision, which terminates PR status, versus a decision to deny issuing a new PR card. The latter is something I have rarely seen reported. And as noted, the few decisions I have seen regarding this involved individuals who were abroad.
What appears to be far more common is that if IRCC recognizes that a PR has applied for a PR card and is not in compliance with the PR RO, unlike the situation for Manoo (where the application sat in SR for a long while before there was a formal PR RO determination), IRCC will ordinarily promptly proceed to make a PR RO determination sooner rather than waiting. (This is why I have so often emphasized, in discussions about SR, that SR is most likely about something other than compliance with the PR RO.) The PR will be issued a Questionnaire and called for an interview, or just called in for an interview.
If the PR is determined to not be in compliance with the PR RO as of that day, the day the interview takes place, the PR will likely be issued a 44(1) Report. The issuance of the 44(1) Report itself based on an assessment for the previous five years as of the day of the interview.
Thus, for purposes of determining eligibility to be issued a PRC, yes, the relevant dates for assessing compliance are based on the date the application was made. BUT, so long as the PR has not been issued a Report, for purposes of assessing the PRs status the PR is entitled to count days in Canada up to the day it is assessed.
So, if SR takes two years, and the PR has remained in Canada in the meantime, technically the PR can be denied a new PRC if at the time the application was made the PR was not in compliance, BUT IRCC cannot then terminate the PR's status . . . so usually IRCC grants a new card rather than making the PR file a new application.
That is, unless the PR has already been issued a 44(1) Report, or was denied a PR TD, in order to assess the PR's compliance for purposes of issuing a 44(1) Report, that has to be done based on the day of that examination. This is because the days since the application for the PRC, days which have in fact been spent in Canada, count.
That takes us back to the fact that compliance with the PR Residency Obligation can be examined any day, which can be apart from the assessment of PR RO compliance as of particular days for particular purposes. Technically the PR may not be eligible for a new PRC but, if the PR has stayed in Canada enough since making the PRC application, the PR is not subject to being issued a 44(1) Report.
Example based on April 2016 PRC application and October 2017 interview:
For purposes of the PRC application, the five years that count are indeed April 2011 to April 2016.
But, as long as this individual has not been issued a 44(1) Report or Removal Order or been denied a PR TD, if IRCC interviews the PR in October 2017 any decision to then issue a 44(1) Report must be based on the date of THAT examination, which would be the five years between October 2012 and October 2017.
This is comparable to a PR who has a PRC application in process, wallowing in SR say, and in the meantime the PR goes abroad. If that PR applies for a PR TD, compliance with the PR RO is assessed based on the date that application is made, not the date the PRC application was made. Similarly, if this PR travels via the U.S. and arrives at a Canadian PoE, and is then examined for PR RO compliance, the five years that count are based on that day, there at the PoE, again not the date the PRC application was made.
Generally, we do not see negative decisions denying a PRC application. (Which is not to say they do not happen, just that this is not how it ordinarily goes.) Usually IRCC will proceed with the process to assess and issue a 44(1) Report sooner rather than later, particularly when it is apparent that the PR is in breach of the PR RO (which is why the consensus so adamantly cautions PRs with PR RO compliance problems to wait until they are in compliance before applying for a PRC or to sponsor family). If the PRC application goes into SR, and there are no issues other than PR RO compliance, as long as the PR remains in Canada the PR gets credit for days in Canada, and eventually these PRs are given a new PR card (again, unless there is a negative decision based on other inadmissibility grounds). But the practical reality is that many, many of these PRs go abroad or remain abroad while the PRC application is in SR. In which case IRCC typically waits until the PR applies for a PR TD, or arrives at a PoE seeking entry into Canada. In these instances, PR RO compliance will be assessed based on the date of the PR TD application or date of arrival at the PoE.
Overall: a PR may be in compliance with the PR RO on the date the PR applies for a PRC. But if the PR then goes abroad, and is no longer in compliance with the PR RO, IRCC will proceed to terminate status. In contrast, a PR might not have been in compliance with the PR RO on the day the PR applied for a PRC, but as long as the PR stays in Canada and is in compliance by the day the PR is interviewed, the PR gets to keep PR status.
And I am afraid I have made a crumpled mess of an already wrinkled shirt.