Hi dpenabill,
i have three days USA trip and my exit is not reported in I-94 but my return is reported in CBSA record. I have included this trip in the calculator. Missing entry in I-94 will it have any concern during interview?
Thank you in advance!!!
Reminder: not an expert. Not qualified to give personal advice.
I do not understand the question. Or, I suppose, I do not understand why this is a question. What does a I-94 have to do with a citizenship application interview?
Reminder:
To the extent that IRCC accesses and examines other sources of information about an applicant, including information available to IRCC through CBSA databases (which these days may or may not include U.S. entry information), IRCC is primarily focused on identifying conflicting information (inconsistencies, incongruities, discrepancies, omissions), looking for any information which might signal that the applicant has either provided false information (or at least inaccurate information) or has omitted material information.
Just because the information provided by one source is not precisely the same as information provided by another source (just because CBSA information is not precisely the same as what the applicant reports in the presence calculation) does not mean there is conflicting information. Does not mean there is something which signals the possibility the applicant's information is not truthful.
If information from other sources confirms (verifies) information submitted by the applicant, that is mostly what matters. The applicant's account is sufficiently verified to justify relying on the applicant's submission.
If information from other sources fails to confirm (verify) information submitted by the applicant, that is what raises questions and concerns.
Thus, for example, if the CBSA travel history shows a border crossing event the applicant does NOT report, that causes some concern. That indicates the applicant has failed to report some information.
If, in contrast, the applicant's reported travel dates includes a trip that does not show up in the CBSA travel history, that tends to indicate a gap in CBSA history NOT an unreliable report by the applicant . . . with some exceptions, the exceptions being dependent on other factors, such as some circumstances which might suggest the applicant could have been traveling with a Travel Document the applicant has not disclosed.
The latter leads to . . .
Some Broad Observations About Assessing What Matters:
Context is huge. One data point alone is relatively meaningless. It is how a data point fits into the pattern of data points, or does not fit, that matters far more.
Individual details matter, sure, and in some contexts they can matter a lot. But their context is critical. There is a tendency to give way, way too much attention, to give too much importance, to specific facts or details, without recognizing the overriding influence and importance of where in the constellation of other facts that particular fact is located.
I am always hesitant to dismiss the importance of an individual detail, because ultimately this or that detail can be the linchpin . . . but what really matters is indeed how that detail holds together, or on the contrary separates, the parts of the whole.
A hundred applicants can sail through the process even though there is not, say, a particular passport stamp for a particular event . . . while for one applicant, the absence of that stamp can trigger the concerns which lead to non-routine processing, RQ, even an outright challenge to meeting the presence requirement.
So, a hundred forum participants can report that the absence of that stamp does NOT mean anything.
Or, perhaps none of them post anything at all, and the one other one posts: absence of that stamp causes RQ and a CJ hearing.
Such anecdotal reporting does not inform us of much at all. All we learn from most anecdotal reports is that it is POSSIBLE for something to happen given this or that particular circumstance. Could be a one-in-a-hundred possibility. Could be a nine-in-ten possibility. Odds are high, very high, overwhelming in fact, that other factors have a great deal of influence in how it goes, that how that one circumstance influences things is tied to and dependent on its relationship to a whole constellation of other facts and circumstances.
So even when a dozen different forum participants report much the same thing relative to the same factor, that merely suggests a somewhat greater possibility something similar COULD happen for another applicant. It does not illuminate what SHOULD happen, let alone what WILL happen. It just points to something that COULD happen.
A lot of other information is needed to form reliable conclusions about what SHOULD happen, about what is most likely to actually happen. A lot of information about the process, IRCC policy and practice, the rules and the law, is needed just to put into context any information about what happened to one or fifty individuals. And, even with a thorough understanding of policy, practice, rules, regulations, and laws, the range of potentially influential facts and circumstances is huge.
Sure, I Have Taken the Long Way Round to Say Something Simple:
It is impossible to reliably forecast how any particular detail is going to affect the process for someone.
With some obvious exceptions of course:
-- if an applicant applied based on 1098 days presence and failed to include a week long trip to the States in the calculator, the application will very likely be denied, and if IRCC identifies the error, it will almost certainly be denied
-- the bigger the error or discrepancy the more likely it will cause problems
-- more errors tends to increase the risk of a problem
-- omissions tend to loom larger than errors
(There are, of course, lots of other obvious examples.)