Hlo scylla i am applying for a student visa after prtd rejection.i fear that if my previous prtd rejection case affect my study visa chances.are my student visa chances are low due to that?i got prtd rejected on 11 jan and notic of appeal but i didn’t appeal and now i am applying for study permit.
Thankyou please reply soon
Appealing time is now over i didnt appeal i got notice of appeal in January and i could appeal in 60 days.but now my pr status is renounced.
Isn’t this a supporting point for study visa that i donot appeal .?if i appealed i may got prtd atleast for hearing of appeal in canada.but i didnt appeal because i want to continue my studies.
My sense is that being a FORMER PR is a positive factor UNLESS reason for losing PR status was related to criminality or security issues. (Losing PR status due to noncompliance with the Residency Obligation is NOT an example of abusing the system and does
NOT involve any violations of Canadian immigration laws.)
BUT that would NOT be a big factor. As I attempted to point out in my previous post, there are MANY other factors, factors specific to the individual, which will influence the outcome of an application for a student permit. The individual's background and factual circumstances, apart from the fact of having been a former PR, will ordinarily have far greater impact.
At the least, the fact you were a former PR who lost status due to noncompliance with the PR Residency Obligation should NOT, not in itself, have any negative weight in whether you will obtain a student permit.
Otherwise, this is not an appropriate venue for sharing the level of detail about one's personal history and situation that will be anywhere near enough information to support a reasonable forecast for a particular individual . . . EXCEPT . . . The main exception is having an obvious factor which is more or less definitively negative; examples: like criminal inadmissibility, or like an overstay resulting in actual removal proceedings.
Additionally . . .
THIS PART OF THE FORUM IS ABOUT PR OBLIGATIONS AND IS NOT MUCH OF A RESOURCE FOR QUESTIONS ABOUT OBTAINING TEMPORARY STATUS IN CANADA, STUDENT PERMITS OR OTHERWISE.
You are NOT a Canadian PR. You are a Foreign National so far as the Canadian immigration system is concerned. The fact you are a FORMER PR is, again, a relevant factor (which, again, my sense is this is a positive factor), but this is a rather SMALL factor compared to many other factors in your personal history and circumstances.
You have participated in other parts of the forum where such questions are better discussed. I am not familiar with the level or quality of the activity in those conferences/topics BUT those are the more appropriate venues and setting for these questions. I am referring to the particular topics grouped under the heading "Temporary Entry to Canada" (topics for international students and visitors), and even if you are not pursuing this from the U.S., you may find more relevant commentary in the topics listed under "Temporary Residence in Canada (Work, Study, Visit)" grouped under "Moving to Canada from the U.S."
For clarification, it does NOT appear you have "renounced" your PR status. Rather, your status has been adjudicated to be terminated; that is, there has been a formal decision as to your status resulting in the loss of PR status. This is mostly a technical distinction, probably of minimal if any import. But in describing your situation it will be more accurate to say you are a former Canadian PR who lost PR status due to noncompliance with the PR Residency Obligation.
There is a tendency among some participants here to describe the denial of a PR Travel Document application as "beginning the process to terminate" a PR's status. Actually it is THE DECISION which terminates PR status. There is a right of appeal, of course, but the Visa Office's decision is the definitive decision terminating PR status . . . it terminates status unless the PR SUCCESSFULLY pursues process to have it set aside or overruled. (Saying that the Visa Office decision to deny a PR TD begins the process to terminate PR status is like saying that a trial judge's entry of the verdict and imposition of sentence in a criminal case is like beginning the process to convict the defendant of a crime if the defendant is allowed a stay pending appeal. One might choose to think of it that way. For what that is worth. Fact is, however, the DECISION has been made and the only question is whether the decision can be set aside or overruled.)
In any event, you did NOT appeal. The time for an appeal is past. You have not "renounced" your status. You have lost it.
And this is NOT of much significance, now, in whether you qualify for a student permit, in whether IRCC will give you an opportunity to study in Canada.