hello friends
i landed Jan 2015 and stayed here at canada until feb 2016 and left to back home. i came back here last year december 2018 and continuously living here. i have applied for pr renewal last week (sent the application) after calculating that i met more than 730 days eligibility.
would it be there any secondary review they go for or i can get my new pr card soon? please share your ideas.
It is very difficult to forecast who will encounter non-routine processing for a PR card application, noting that Secondary Review is just one of the types of non-routine processing for which PRs
cutting-it-close appear to have an elevated risk.
Obviously you are
cutting-it-close since you have been abroad more than you have been IN Canada since landing, and even more so since you were abroad for nearly three years since leaving Canada nearly four years ago. So it is easy to perceive at least some elevated risk for non-routine processing which might delay how soon you are issued and delivered a new PR card.
How much so is impossible to calculate.
That said, given the length of your absence since landing, you will be
cutting-it-close, in terms of compliance with the Residency Obligation, for at least another year plus some. And this is rather apparent just glancing at your presence-absence history (apparent given the near three year absence). Whether this will trigger an IRCC processing agent or officer to refer a PR card application to non-routine processing is unknown but, given how obviously close you are cutting it, I suspect it involves some negative risk.
In any event, this situation warrants a caution about leaving Canada in the coming year or so.
Even if you get a new PR card, you will still need to mostly STAY in Canada for around another full year (basically you need to mostly remain in Canada until you have been IN Canada two years since returning in December 2018).
Thus . . . a longer explanation . . .
Caution re ongoing Residency Obligation:
The underlying Residency Obligation issue lurking in your scenario is that you now have a rather small margin for staying in compliance with the RO. Basically you need to stay IN Canada for much of the coming year to stay in compliance, recognizing that come January the days you were in Canada in 2015 begin to fall outside the relevant five years and will no longer be credited toward RO compliance.
Indeed, the number of days credit you have today, toward compliance with the RO, will remain essentially the same (or go down if you leave Canada in the meantime) until February 2021.
That is: Your current credit already includes all the days between now and the anniversary of the day you landed this coming January (under rule for first five years), so between now and then you do not add any additional days credit for days you stay in Canada . . . but of course you can lose credit if you leave Canada in the meantime.
Then, after the anniversary of the day you landed this coming January, days in Canada five years ago will no longer count, so basically for each day after the fifth year anniversary of landing you gain a day for staying but also lose a day (until the anniversary of the day you left in 2016). Which means that between now and the end of next year, you cannot gain any additional credit toward compliance but will lose credit if you leave Canada during this period of time.
And this in turn warrants a
REMINDER: if at any time after this coming January you have been OUTSIDE Canada for more than 1095 days within the previous three years (as of ANY day), that will constitute a BREACH of the PR RO. And this applies EVEN IF YOU HAVE OBTAINED A NEW PR CARD in the meantime. Obtaining a new PR card DOES NOT RESTART the clock.