Wherein lies the answer to the current imbroglio? My sense is the answer is largely rooted in avoiding even domestic travel let alone international travel for now, and otherwise waiting for things to get back to the new normal, whatever the new normal will be.
A trip is either essential or not. Non-essential travelling is restricted regardless of the status. What is left is essential. The answer could not be rooted in avoiding unavoidable trips.
I do not portend to know how this or that individual can best navigate the current situation. I know we (personally) have already had to make some difficult decisions. I apprehend many others are facing far more difficult decisions than me.
What I do recognize is that the current situation imposes some rather severe, and in some respects draconian limitations in what individuals can do.
Those who are waiting for IRCC to send them a renewed PR card, are probably in for a rather long wait (with perhaps some exceptions). Nothing to be gained by dreaming IRCC is suddenly going to solve things and quickly be issuing and delivering new PR cards.
The complaining aside, unfortunately you are spot on, more than a few are quite likely facing some very tough navigating going forward. And perhaps some serious prioritizing in their own personal affairs.
After all, it really is not true that there is a hard and fast distinction between what is essential, or "unavoidable," and that which is not essential. Right now, for example, the transport of certain goods, like foods, is considered "essential." That hardly compares to some of the other situations in which people are confronted by a compelling need to be somewhere other than where they are.
This is why in large part I bristle with many of the repeated assertions that a PR card is necessary for traveling abroad. That is not true. Even if it is true that the long term consequences for going abroad without a valid PR card can vary from nothing serious to, for some, very serious consequences, the lack of a PR card is not what prohibits a PR from leaving Canada. It may discourage traveling. And by a lot. But the lack of a PR card does NOT preclude traveling abroad . . . individuals have a choice, and for some this can be a very hard choice.
If the travel is truly "unavoidable," that is saying the trip must be made. And that can involve making a decision with serious consequences. So yes, making the decision to make a trip, for some, may require making some heart-wrenching choices, subject to some serious consequences.
One can rail against IRCC for making these decisions more difficult. One can rail against the fates for inflicting a pandemic at this stage of one's life.
But the reality is that many, many people are faced with some of these choices. Is the need to go abroad more compelling, a higher priority, than keeping PR status? This is real. Real decision-making is on the line for more than a few.
Not easy to balance a compelling reason to travel and the risk of being stuck abroad. I do not envy those in this situation. I grasp its gravity.
I have been accused of being unsympathetic, even heartless, about this. Which hurts. I grasp what is happening and the hardship so many face. I feel their pain. I've been there. I have missed the funerals for children due to an inability to travel. It is something that is not only excruciatingly painful when it is happening, but something that haunts one for the rest of one's life. Been there. Doing that.
But insults flung at our civil servants will not make the hard choices so many are faced with any easier. Distractions and diversions will not offer much illumination or insight for those who are struggling with just knowing what their options are.
The reality is that many should focus on making the best choices they can without including travel plans for a good while to come. Sure, some will not be able to wait. Some will have to travel and suffer whatever collateral consequences that might result. Unfortunately. Hard, hard choices. That's what happens in a crisis. That's what rational, sensible people have to deal with. Knowing that for some there are no good choices, the best option sometimes being the one that results in the lesser harm. Knowing this does not make it any easier. But dodging this risks obfuscating what really needs to be considered before making those choices.
As I repeat, again and again, IRCC is not concealing what it is doing: they've told us, renewal PR card applications are a low priority and but for perhaps a lucky few who manage to get urgent processing, PRs without a valid PR card or whose PR card will soon expire, it is not likely they will get a new one for a long while now. Best most can do is make decisions accordingly.
Sure, they can do things like try contacting their MP in the meantime. But in terms of real life decision-making, that is not going to solve the issues they are facing right now.
I get the sense there is a lot of
shoot-the-messenger sentiment afloat around here. Hopefully that remains merely metaphorical.