Hi, I have been working outside of Canada but originally planned to have a combination of work from home and outside Canada (where job is) such that I can fulfill the 730 days (2 years) minimum physical residence requirement in order for me to qualify for a PR renewal when my PR visa expires. However, due to the travel restrictions as a result of Covid-19, my plan changed and I remain stuck in the country where I currently work (outside Canada).
Does anyone know if there are considerations given by the Government of Canada due to this circumstance?
Any real life examples you are aware of?
TIA!
To be clear, there is NO renewal of PR status. If you landed and became a PR, you do not have a "PR visa." Rather, you have status as a Canadian, a Canadian Permanent Resident. There is no need to renew this status.
That is, PR status does NOT expire.
If you have been outside Canada for more than 1095 days total since the date you landed (assuming you landed within the last five years), you are already in breach of the Residency Obligation. If this is the situation, your best chance of keeping PR status is to come to Canada to stay as soon as possible.
Assuming you have a valid PR card, you can still board a flight headed to Canada.
So far there is NO formal policy specifically regarding the impact of Covid-19 on the enforcement of the PR Residency Obligation. So far, no formal policy excusing a breach of the RO because of Covid-19.
The existing rules and formal policy, nonetheless, already cover it to the extent that H&C factors may allow Canadian officials to, in effect, excuse the breach.
In particular, to the extent a PR fails to comply with the RO due to extenuating circumstances, those circumstances MUST BE CONSIDERED before issuing a Removal Order or before denying a visa office application for a PR Travel Document or before denying a PR card application based on a failure to comply with the RO (of course the PR must present credible evidence of the facts constituting extenuating circumstances). Obviously, the impact of Covid-19 is a circumstance which will be taken into consideration in this way.
But to what extent it will allow a particular PR leniency in the enforcement of the RO is something that will vary, and probably vary a great deal, depending on the individual PR's circumstances. Here again,
the sooner the PR gets to Canada the better chance the PR has of keeping PR status.
Caution: if you pass the 1095 days outside Canada threshold during your first five years, assuming the PoE officials allow you to enter Canada without issuing a Report for the RO breach, to safely keep PR status you will then need to STAY in Canada long enough to cure the breach. For many this means staying for TWO STRAIGHT YEARS. And a PR in this situation generally should NOT apply for a new PR card until the breach of the RO is fully cured.
Reminder: applying for and being issued a new PR card does NOT restart the clock. Once a PR has been a PR for five years, compliance with the RO depends on being IN Canada at least two years within the previous five . . . every day. Expiration date on the PR card is NOT relevant.