The following observations are NOT meant to be critical. Rather, they are meant to highlight a distinction which for SOME prospective applicants, those wrestling with WHEN it is time to make the application, could be an important distinction.
Which is to acknowledge that the contrast in your two recent posts is appreciated because focusing on them respectively helps illuminate what can be, for many, an important distinction. These are the kinds of reporting and discussion which should help all of us better understand the way things work. (So please do not feel as if I am criticizing you; you really have offered an excellent opportunity to better illuminate the distinction.)
I am referencing the following posts:
I called IRCC and asked, they confirmed that any day under implied status is still considered.
I was in implied status for my work permit before I got my PR, and all my days were counted with no problem.
For purposes of this particular discussion, recognizing I know nothing about the details in your situation (other than what you have been reporting, including
no test invite yet even though it is approaching two years), confirmation that "
days in Canada with implied status count toward meeting the physical presence requirement for grant citizenship" is NOT the same as a determination confirming any individual applicant's presence calculation.
An IRCC help centre call agent's statement that days with implied status count
merely restates the rule. It is not a decision in an individual case. Not a determination as to any individual's claim to credit for implied status.
(Slight tangent: Which also illustrates another significant clarification which often warrants a reminder: the help centre call agents are NOT authorized to evaluate or judge the facts in an individual case, let alone offer conclusive decisions. Their primary role is to state the applicable rules, with what is "applicable" being as best they can discern depending on how well the caller states the relevant question. To a very limited extent the call centre agents can also access an individual applicant's GCMS file and report SOME details about what is in the file, but beyond general level observations, like "the application is in process," they rarely offer useful information and often give default answers that are at best cryptic, like "the application is waiting for background clearances," which in some respects is almost always a truthful statement given that until there is a Decision Made the status of background clearance is usually outstanding EVEN though meanwhile the application is actually in queue for this or that particular next step.
Again, the help centre agents are NOT authorized to offer any advice let alone any judgments about an individual's case. Their role is predominantly about providing a telephonic version of answers to FAQs.)
In any event . . .
In any event, "
I called IRCC and asked, they confirmed that any day under implied status is still considered" DOES NOT support the statement: "
I was in implied status for my work permit before I got my PR, and all my days were counted with no problem."
Unless and until you have been interviewed it is NOT likely (not at all likely) there has been a definitive verification of your presence calculation. It is
premature, prior to the interview (and still at least somewhat premature any time prior to there being a positive Decision Made), to conclude what "
days were counted with no problem."
That is NOT to suggest a problem is at all likely. Probably NOT. Probably NO problem. Indeed, I have NO doubt you will in fact get credit for the days you had implied status, but to be clear that is
assuming you
correctly declared such days. Again, that is the rule, how it works.
When applying for citizenship, however, and in particular when deciding it is time to apply, which is the context for the discussion here, there can be (depending on individual circumstances) a big difference between what days to include in the presence calculation as days to be given credit toward the physical presence requirement VERSUS when it is prudent to apply based on days the prospective applicant CONFIDENTLY KNOWS he or she can RELY on those days actually being counted.
One example of a potential issue, and it is just ONE example among many relative to this, is the above discussion about an application to restore status. In particular,
@canuck_in_uk and
@trk1 both offer important clarifications about applications to RESTORE status, which is specifically relevant to the OP's query here. Which is an aspect of the OP's query I did not address even though it is, in the context of the OP's query, an important aspect: Time in Canada during which an application to restore status is pending does NOT constitute time in Canada with implied status (and may not even if the application is granted).
But it nonetheless points to the broader issue, a concern which lurks in any case relying on credit for time in Canada the applicant had implied status . . . which, more to the point, is about time in Canada the prospective applicant
BELIEVES he or she had implied status.
In many situations it is EASY to confidently know that, during this or that period of time, an individual actually did have implied status. Prospective applicants can ordinarily rely on such days counting, and they may comfortably decide it is OK to make the application even though their margin over the minimum does not fully cover those days . . .
but my impression is that any such period of time will ordinarily be a rather short period of time, significantly shorter in time than the number of days the individual had formal, explicit status evidenced by the dates in a visa, permit, or visitor's record. So, even in these situations the prudent PR may elect to wait longer and build a margin covering any such implied status days. (The underlying reason for this has to do with what "implied" status is about, it being IMPLIED and NOT formally stated in any records.)
BUT in many other situations it is just as EASY to conclude one had implied status during a period of time that IRCC records might NOT verify the individual had implied status. Here the emphasis really is focused directly on what "implied" status is about, it being IMPLIED and NOT formally stated in any records. When someone was in Canada during a time they had "implied" status, typically there is NO direct record of their status during that time. To determine if in fact the individual had implied status requires examining various records and INFERRING, from the details in those records, the individual had implied status.
It appears more than a few prospective applicants, and some applicants with applications in process, make mistakes in what they INFER (since there are no direct records to confirm) when they had implied status.
The discussion here illustrates one: potentially inferring one had implied status during the time an application to restore status was pending. An application relying on implied status for time an application to restore status was pending is likely to fail UNLESS the individual applied with a margin large enough to cover that period, large enough to have a number of days over 1095 after deducting the days for which the applicant mistakenly thought he or she had implied status.
It warrants noting that AOR does NOT guarantee the applicant's accounting of days present will be determined to actually meet the presence requirement; recognizing that in some circumstances applications have been returned as incomplete apparently because IRCC records do not confirm claims for this or that pre-PR time. (The most common example of this appears to involve applicants who were in Canada as a visitor, which is status that SHOULD count, but there is no formal documentation as to that because the individual was simply waived into Canada upon presenting a visa-exempt passport.) Since the burden of proof is on the applicant, the validity of the applicant's declarations, including as to having implied status, can be and ordinarily will be assessed later in the course of processing the application in the local office.
In any event, the underlying problem is rooted in the lack of a formal record documenting implied status. If implied status is readily inferred from the client's GCMS records, OK, NO problem. And this will often if not usually be the case. BUT since there is no direct record documenting the dates of implied status, how much a prospective applicant might RELY on those days is something prospective applicants should consider very carefully . . . of course in the presence calculation all days IN Canada the applicant knows he or she was IN Canada AND had status, including implied status, should be reported. These observations are about deciding WHEN to apply, what days to RELY on (not just report) as counting, which is about how much of a margin to have before making the application.
And another aspect of this should NOT be underestimated let alone overlooked, which is one referenced by
@trk1 in particular, and in addition to determining if one actually had implied status, determining the precise dates on had that status.
@trk1 addresses this in the context of an application to restore status, but it is a relevant consideration for any situation a prospective applicant is including days in Canada with implied status.