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PR renewal rejected: 'dated more than 90 days...'

evics

Newbie
Aug 6, 2019
2
0
Hi all,
Wondering if anyone can shed any light on this. I applied for my PR card renewal in March (to get ahead of the COVID situation). I just received by application back in the mail with a letter dated August 14th with a rejection reason:
"Your application is dated more than 90 days before being received by the IRCC and will require that you update your absences..."

I signed and mailed my application on March 16th 2020 and I have proof from the courier it was received by the IRCC on March 17th 2020. The application itself is stamped by PRC on March 18th 2020. I don't understand where the 90 days comes into it. If it is to do with the time between the application being received and them actually looking at it, everything has been delayed by COVID.

Thanks!
 

dpenabill

VIP Member
Apr 2, 2010
6,438
3,183
Hi all,
Wondering if anyone can shed any light on this. I applied for my PR card renewal in March (to get ahead of the COVID situation). I just received by application back in the mail with a letter dated August 14th with a rejection reason:
"Your application is dated more than 90 days before being received by the IRCC and will require that you update your absences..."

I signed and mailed my application on March 16th 2020 and I have proof from the courier it was received by the IRCC on March 17th 2020. The application itself is stamped by PRC on March 18th 2020. I don't understand where the 90 days comes into it. If it is to do with the time between the application being received and them actually looking at it, everything has been delayed by COVID.

Thanks!
In the abstract it is difficult if not impossible to discern what or why this happened.

It is possible this was a mistake by a processing agent at IRCC. It is more likely there is some discrepancy in the information or dates populating the application form (transposed numbers in the application form date, or your accounting of travel dates, or such). You represent the latter is not the case, which would suggest a mistake at IRCC, which again is possible but not the more likely explanation.

There are some other *possibilities* but an attempt to explore those is a tangent likely to cause confusion or distraction, and not be helpful. Noting, however, you could pay for a consultation with a lawyer (free consultations are worth little more, if any more, than what you pay for, as in nothing), or outright hire a lawyer, to review the paperwork, and either explain things or help you to sort things out.

Not sure that would be a prudent expenditure of your time or money. After all, the fastest approach to handling this is to simply make a new application (not sure if you can do so based on the fees already paid or not; but paying the fee again would be far, far less expensive than going to a lawyer) with an updated accounting of your presence and absences.

Your date of landing is no longer relevant in assessing your compliance with the PR Residency Obligation. If, for example, you either made the new application today, or were otherwise examined for RO compliance today, the relevant five years is August 28, 2015 to August 28, 2020. From now on the relevant time period changes every day, and is based on the five years immediately preceding whatever the date is "today." (Thus, for example, even if the application resulted in issuing you a new PR card, the next time you are examined, which could be the next time you arrive at a PoE coming into Canada, your compliance with the RO would be based on the number of days you have been in Canada within the five years immediately preceding that day . . . having a new PR card has NO relevance if and when a PR is examined for RO compliance.)

Otherwise, yeah, Covid-19 has thrown a big wrench, and a lot of other junk, into the works, and we are likely to see more than a few strange twists and turns in the coming months or year. This is one of those years when *stuff-happens* tends to be bigger and messier than usual stuff-happens.
 
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Orlaith

Hero Member
Nov 15, 2013
532
202
Hi all,
Wondering if anyone can shed any light on this. I applied for my PR card renewal in March (to get ahead of the COVID situation). I just received by application back in the mail with a letter dated August 14th with a rejection reason:
"Your application is dated more than 90 days before being received by the IRCC and will require that you update your absences..."

I signed and mailed my application on March 16th 2020 and I have proof from the courier it was received by the IRCC on March 17th 2020. The application itself is stamped by PRC on March 18th 2020. I don't understand where the 90 days comes into it. If it is to do with the time between the application being received and them actually looking at it, everything has been delayed by COVID.

Thanks!
I'm sorry to read that this has happened and it must be very disappointing and frustrating. I can only think that (a) it could be an error on the part of the IRCC or that (b) there is some tiny mistake on your application which has led to this.
I must have checked my own application 6,000 times and had others check it too but I still forgot to tick a box.
I would tripple check the date as you have put it on the application form that you haven't accidentally transposed the numbers or used a different format to the Canadian norm. I.E. 10/3/2020 v 3/10/2020.
Worst case scenario you just pop a new application in and be TURBO careful with the date that you sign it is in the right format.
Let us know how you get on.
You could call the office or send in a webform. Good luck.
 

canuck78

VIP Member
Jun 18, 2017
55,710
13,560
Wonder if it was due to you applying early? Looks like you applied at around the 4.5 year mark. Nobody else has posted about getting a similar letter but that doesn’t mean it isn’t happening.
 

canvisa13

Hero Member
Nov 21, 2019
504
200

msucanthave

Full Member
Nov 22, 2018
28
0
Not sure why you got rejected. I recently applied for PR card renewal. Expiry date October 2020.
July 1st week- sent out the application
July 13,2020- application received
October 13,2020- AOR, processing started
October 26,2020- PR card sent by mail
 

msucanthave

Full Member
Nov 22, 2018
28
0
I think its because it took them more than 90 days to open your application. The process in my application took 3months to complete.
 

scylla

VIP Member
Jun 8, 2010
95,946
22,189
Toronto
Category........
Visa Office......
Buffalo
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
28-05-2010
AOR Received.
19-08-2010
File Transfer...
28-06-2010
Passport Req..
01-10-2010
VISA ISSUED...
05-10-2010
LANDED..........
05-10-2010
What do you mean by “4.5 year mark”?
The poster means applying to renew six months before the expiry of the card. In other words, applying to renew the PR card six months early.
 

RJ2020

Hero Member
Oct 29, 2020
381
105
The poster means applying to renew six months before the expiry of the card. In other words, applying to renew the PR card six months early.
IRCC website in “who can apply” page said:
You should only apply for a PR card if:

your card has expired or will expire in less than 9 months
He/She actually needs to renew it ASAP, due to the delay in the processing time, because of this Covid-19 situation.
 

scylla

VIP Member
Jun 8, 2010
95,946
22,189
Toronto
Category........
Visa Office......
Buffalo
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
28-05-2010
AOR Received.
19-08-2010
File Transfer...
28-06-2010
Passport Req..
01-10-2010
VISA ISSUED...
05-10-2010
LANDED..........
05-10-2010
He/She actually needs to renew it ASAP, due to the delay in the processing time, because of this Covid-19 situation.
Yes, I'm very aware of the 9 month rule. Just explaining what the poster was asking.
 
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