How is it not a problem be short of days when the application is received? In cases of common law it’s 1 year as of the date of application and that seems to be the standard IRCC applies to everything....the date of application. If that was the case I could apply for citizenship before the required days on the assumption I’ll be in Canada when the processing is done.
As I stated in my post, and have similarly observed before, the PR card application is
NOT like a citizenship application, or any of the many other immigration related applications for which the application date definitively establishes the time period for calculating presence in Canada.
I explained why. I stated:
"WHY? The days you have stayed in Canada after sending in your PR card application count toward meeting your Residency Obligation."
CAVEAT: The calculation can be more complicated if days five years old are falling out of the relevant five years at the same time, such that even though days in Canada after applying count, those days are offset by days five years ago which are no longer counting; which appears could be the issue for the OP here.
I further stated:
This is not like a citizenship application, where the days that count are fixed as of the date of the application. Days in Canada after applying for a new PR Card do count.
An attempt to unravel the multitude of variables and contingencies underlying this inevitably wanders way deep into the weeds. But the glossy version is not so complicated:
-- The applicable statutes and the applicable regulations make it clear that days a PR is in Canada count toward RO compliance. The only exceptions are prescribed in the IRPA Regulations, Section 62(1)(a) and Section 62(1)(b), pursuant to which days in Canada will NOT count AFTER a 44(1) Report is issued, or AFTER a PR TD application is denied.
-- And, in particular, Section 28(2)(b)(ii) IRPA specifically provides "it is sufficient for a permanent resident to demonstrate at examination . . . that they have met the residency obligation in respect of the five-year period immediately before the examination."
Thus, when a PR appears for an interview scheduled as a result of an investigation into RO compliance, triggered by a PR card application (or by some other transaction with IRCC, such as an application to sponsor a family member's PR visa application), there is no legal basis for NOT counting the days the PR has been in Canada up to
the day of the examination.
And that is the way it actually works. As can be seen in the actual cases.
And, actually, the general approach taken by IRCC is more generous than that. PRs are actually given the benefit of which five year period is better, since in the "paper review" phase, if it is determined the PR was in compliance on the date the application was made, that ends the investigation, and the file is returned to CPC- PRC to issue a new card. In particular, the applicable Operational Manual guidelines state:
"This means that clients, who met the residency requirement at the time the application was filed but who may no longer meet this requirement by the time an officer reviews the application, would not be penalized for any delay between the time the application is filed and the time that an officer reviews the application."
But in the "paper review" the officer may also "
take into account the five-year period immediately prior to the time that the application is reviewed by an officer," which means that if the PR is in compliance based on counting days in Canada up to that day, that too will warrant a positive decision, and the file can be referred back to CPC-PRC for the issuance of a new PR card.
Thus, if there is a positive decision in the local office based on the paper review, there is no need to even conduct an interview. PR card issued.
If the local office cannot make a positive decision "
based on the information at hand," meaning in the paper review, THEN the applicant should be called in for an interview. Since up to that point no 44(1) Report has been issued, and there is no visa office determination that the PR has failed to comply with the RO, again the PR must be given credit for days in Canada in the five year time period immediately prior to that examination.
And again that is the way it actually works.
What this looks like in actual cases tends to be messy, because these cases do not get to the appeal stage without complications. Again, they do not even get to the interview step, let alone a negative decision resulting in a 44(1) Report and Removal Order which is appealed, IF the paper review shows the PR met the RO on the date the application was made, or it shows the PR was in compliance by the date of that review. So the known actual cases tend to be far more focused on the H&C factors or unusual circumstances such as cases involving principles of
res judicata.
Just a sample selection for reference:
In all these cases, consistent with how it works generally, the RO determination was based on the five year time period
up to the day of the interview and not the date the PR card application was made. In the latter case however, in Wysozki, the panel refers to the "initial" review based on the date of the application, but for the RO determination made attendant the interview, the PR was given "
the benefit of the five year period preceding the interview" (note, even with credit up to the interview, Wysozki was still well short of compliance and the case was mostly about H&C factors). The way it reads in the decision one might think that was an act of charity. But this is precisely the process outlined in the Operational Manual, and giving the PR "
the benefit of the five year period preceding the interview" is what is specifically prescribed by Section 28(2)(b)(ii) IRPA. No act of charity.
Further Observations:
I want to avoid getting bogged down in the weeds about one particular aspect of this, but feel it needs mentioning: Being in compliance with the RO is technically NOT a valid eligibility requirement. But the guide for PR card applications lists meeting the RO as an eligibility requirement.
Note, however, the guide also states that to be eligible the PR must "
be physically present in Canada," which similarly is technically NOT a valid eligibility requirement to be issued a PR card (and the Federal Court has ruled that IRCC cannot deny a PR card application on the sole grounds that the PR was outside Canada at the time the application was made).
In any event, neither the applicable statutes nor the applicable regulations provide for denying a PR card application on the basis that the PR was NOT in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation. And that is ordinarily, by a big margin, NOT how IRCC goes about it . . . rather, IRCC follows the process I describe above . . . referral to local office, investigation, if needed an interview, if then determined to not be in compliance there is a 44(1) Report and the procedures which follow the issuance of a 44(1) Report. In the meantime, IRCC will issue a one-year card.
Overall, the PR card application itself does not result in a negative decision based on RO non-compliance UNLESS and UNTIL AFTER the loss of PR status is FINALLY adjudicated.
AN IMPORTANT CLARIFICATION:
To be clear, I totally agree with
the conventional wisdom, which is well-founded: for a PR who is in breach of the RO who is able to return to Canada without being Reported, stay and WAIT until getting into full RO compliance BEFORE engaging in any transactions with IRCC including any PR card application.
So for those who ask about applying for a new PR card any time before they are in compliance with the RO, the best answer is simple:
DO NOT DO IT.
But this thread arose out of the situation where the PR DID DO IT. And trying to sort out where things go from there.