I have offered more in-depth observations in the other topic where you posed your query about entry into Canada despite RO breach and absence for six years.
Summary of those comments:
Yes, TECHNICALLY you can enter Canada as a matter of right. And if you arrive at a PoE on the U.S. border, you can stand on that right and the border officials will allow YOU to enter.
That does NOT mean your child will be allowed entry. And if the child is traveling WITH YOU, that complicates things, complicates things a lot.
You asked "Can there be a scenario that border officer do not allow me enter Canada . . . " No, not you ALONE. But, they can deny allowing you to enter accompanied by a child without status.
Thus, overall, TECHNICALLY you have a right to enter Canada. TECHNICALLY the child can be denied entry (which remains the case even if the child is issued a visa). Will the border officials stand on the latter technicality if you stand on the technicality of your right to enter Canada?
I do not know what the border officials will actually do. That is very difficult to forecast.
One thing I left out there is that you say you have been outside Canada for six years and you "
don't meet RO by 500 days." Does NOT make sense. Unless you have been IN Canada at least 230 days within the past five years, you fail to meet the RO by MORE than 500 days.
While the difference between 500 days short of RO compliance and being even more short probably does not make a big difference overall (that is, even if it is just 500 days, that tips the scales heavily in a negative direction), it could have some influence depending on whether you have H&C reasons for the absence and how, in particular, those fit into why you have you have been absent so long.
In any event, I am responding further here to address a particular aspect:
Regarding "
At the most border officer will report my case of not meeting RO . . ." NO, there can be and there will most likely be MORE to it than that. It is very likely the report, if there is a 44(1) Report for Inadmissibility due to a breach of the Residency Obligation, will be
IMMEDIATELY reviewed, then and there before you are allowed to enter Canada. And the "
decision on my PR revoke case" will be made THEN and THERE, within minutes or an hour or so. If the officer who reviews the Report concludes the Report is valid and concludes there are not sufficient H&C reasons to allow you keep PR status despite the failure to comply with the RO, that officer, in that role acting as a "Minister's Delegate," that officer will issue you a DEPARTURE ORDER.
It is the combination of the 44(1) Report and Departure Order that constitutes a final adjudication terminating your PR status. This is like when a judge enters a conviction in a criminal case after the jury has found the defendant guilty. Defendant is convicted. With a right of appeal.
Indeed, if a 44(1) Report is issued but there is NO Departure Order issued, there is nothing to appeal. (How it works then depends on whether the Report remains outstanding, pending review by a Minister's Delegate, which is unusual but does happen, or whether it is reviewed and the Minister's Delegate decides to allow the PR to keep status, and thus not issue a Departure Order.)
BUT YES, if issued a Departure Order you still have a right of appeal and the Departure Order is not enforceable for 30 days. So yes you can stand on your right to enter Canada and you will be allowed to enter Canada. If you appeal, the Departure Order remains unenforceable, allowing you to continue staying and working in Canada, for as long as the appeal is still pending.
But make no mistake: the chances of winning the appeal are NOT as good as persuading the officer acting as a Minister's Delegate, during the PoE examination, that the PR should be allowed to keep PR status for H&C reasons. While PoE officials are not always more lenient than the IAD, they usually are.
BUT in the meantime, unless you persuade PoE officials you deserve to keep PR status, based on H&C reasons, you are INADMISSIBLE. Which brings this back to how having a child without status complicates things.