Hello,
Can anybody help me with this situation: I have a pr and have been for 18 months in the 5 past years in canada.my card was expire june 2019 .my wife has pr and my son is citizen.now my father is sick and want to go and visit him.can i renew my card? For example H AND C GROUNDS.
Thanks
I have been here every year and now i am living with my family.My original country is Iran .we can not a US visa these days.one of my friends applied for pr renewal and write a letter that his father was sick and attached to the form.then he got a new card !! Would this possible? Or he is not honest with me.
Yes, you can make an application for a new PR card and assert H&C reasons, hoping that IRCC will allow you to retain PR status DESPITE the breach of the PR Residency Obligation. As others have tried to explain, this is about PAST actions and the reasons for those actions. That is, you are currently NOT in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation. Thus you are NOT currently eligible to be issued a new PR card UNLESS that breach is, in effect, WAIVED. So you present H&C reasons explaining why your breach of the RO should be waived.
THIS IS RISKY. There is NO guarantee IRCC will conclude your reasons for not complying with the RO are sufficient to allow you to keep PR status. Rather than issue you a new card, IRCC could schedule you for an interview to conduct a Residency Obligation compliance examination, and if you are NOT in compliance as of the date of that interview, issue you a 44(1) Report for Inadmissibility and a Removal Order (which you can appeal; thus even though such a decision terminates PR status, it does not do so immediately, and you keep status pending an appeal).
THE SAFEST approach is to STAY in Canada long enough to get into compliance. Then it should not matter if you have a new PR card or not. If you travel abroad you should be able to apply for and obtain a PR Travel Document to make the trip back to Canada, since as of then you will be in compliance with the RO.
You can also gamble and simply travel abroad and when you are ready to return to Canada apply for a PR Travel Document in which you assert the H&C case. The longer you stay in Canada before you make that trip, and then the sooner you seek to return to Canada after going abroad, the better your odds of getting H&C relief and being issued a PR TD so you can return to Canada.
NO one here can reliably forecast how your H&C case will go. Anecdotal experiences, like that your friend had, only illustrate that it is POSSIBLE your H&C case could have similar results. It is NO guarantee, NONE at ALL, that how it went for your friend is how it will go for you. As many tales of woe told in this forum illustrate, relying on H&C reasons is RISKY.
As long as your spouse remains in Canada, and is not on social assistance (with distinctions for what sort of social assistance), and is in compliance with the RO, you have a fall back option: losing PR status and having your spouse sponsor a new application for PR. Thus, for example, if traveling to attend to your parent is a compelling priority for you, you can make that trip and then when you are ready to return to Canada apply for a PR TD and assert your H&C case. As long as you do that within LESS THAN a YEAR from the date you leave Canada, even if that application is denied, you can still get a special PR TD to return to Canada pending an appeal. Once back in Canada if you stay, that increases the chances of a successful H&C appeal, but even if you lose the appeal, you and your spouse can then make an inland spousal PR application which would mean you could continue to remain in Canada and, eventually, should be given new PR status.
There are more than a few wrinkles in what I have described. This can get complicated, difficult, and rather messy. It probably warrants spending the money to at least CONSULT with a competent and reliable immigration LAWYER to go over the details.
The inescapable BOTTOM-LINE, nonetheless, is that any PR who is not in compliance with the Residency Obligation RISKS losing PR status if the PR engages in transactions with IRCC like making an application for a new PR card or applying for a PR TD from abroad, or with CBSA attendant returning to Canada (and for the PR not in compliance, the fact the PR has a valid PR card does NOT eliminate this risk . . . even if you have a new PR card, if you are NOT in compliance with the RO when you arrive at a PoE to come into Canada, there is a risk of being examined, reported, and issued a Departure Order). H&C cases are almost always TRICKY and usually rather DIFFICULT to successfully make. Yes, many succeed. But many more do not.