i have spend 1090 days since 28-Sep-2014 , as I m
Thanks
@dpenabill for detailed answer , I have more than 1060 days of physical presence in Canada in last 5 years ,I am in US for last 8 months and I have been to Canada 3-4 times for couple of days in last 8 months , since I am based in Detroit so i can drive to Windsor to apply for PR application but it will be just for sake of applying from Canada.
Also ,I am working in same company for last 7 years , its just that they moved me to US office for one project and I am still paid in Canadian dollars ,so i can explain all this in my application and attach bank statement and paystubs .. .do you think that will be sufficient?
Concur with
@Hurlabrick . . . based on what you report, there should be little or no problem.
It may seem silly to make a trip just to make the application from within Canada, but that is probably the better approach. (I can fully appreciate why anyone would avoid crossing the border there as much as practical; I do not know how things go for you, but it in addition to almost always running into lengthy border crossing lines going into the states in that area, it seems like we encounter a more difficult than usual, more difficult than reasonable, examination, two out of three times there . . . enough so I have reduced how often I go that way to the states to just once a year or so.)
If the company you work for is a Canadian company meeting certain criteria, it is possible (perhaps likely), the time you are abroad on a project as assigned by the company would count toward meeting the PR Residency Obligation. The PR card application does not ask for this information, however, if the PR otherwise meets the PR RO based on actual presence in Canada (it only asks for it if the PR was in Canada fewer than 730 days in the relevant five years). So whether it technically qualifies or not tends to have little relevance . . . except . . . even if the company does not specifically meet that criteria, and if you appear to be well-established and settled in Canada, and your work is clearly based/centralized in Canada, odds are VERY good there will be few or NO wrinkles in an application for a new PR card.
Thus, you probably do NOT need to include anything in the PR card application beyond what is specifically requested. A very brief statement explaining the work abroad is a temporary assignment pursuant to your employment in Canada would not hurt and might quell any concern, but again what you describe here appears to be circumstances in which things should go as smoothly as such things are wont to go.
Many seem to think including additional "proof" with applications for a PR card or citizenship will help. There is very little evidence to support that. If more evidence, more proof, is needed, IRCC will ask for it . . . and there are scores of reports that this happens, that IRCC still requests those things, even when the PR included such evidence and information in the original application. This is based on anecdotal reports AND some reports derived from official sources containing decisions in actual cases.