Hi,
This is an academic question at this point. I am working for a major Canadian public funded entity and has been lucky to be allowed informally to work remotely regardless of my location as long as the job is done. I have full time work status and my pay slip and T4 slips reflect that. Does the days spend outside country but still working full time for a publicly funded entity qualify in anyways to be counted towards residency obligation either directly or via a pathway? A small portion of the said absences from Canada were for exploring project partners in the country of visit although those trips were in 2 to 4 weeks range because I chose to spread my engagements and attend to other duties remotely.
Thanks
Overall: NO likelihood the scenario described will support a claim for RO credit for the time abroad.
In particular, I largely agree with the overall conclusion offered by
@armoured, as to the particular scenario described.
Beyond that, however, beyond implications about this particular scenario, there are some elements addressed here regarding which some clarification may be warranted. These observations are instigated by and oriented to what I consider to be a MYTH, regarding "
business trips" (no one has ever provided this forum with any authoritative source which even comes close to supporting the view, often expressed here, that time spent going abroad on behalf of a Canadian business employer to work will not qualify for the
employed-abroad-by-Canadian-business credit because it is or could be characterized as a "
business trip"), which has been such a persistent myth this is something I have researched, analyzed, explored, and addressed in depth and at length (including, just this morning, looking at a number of cases I had not reviewed before). See
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/working-abroad-ro-credit-including-business-trips-an-update.607559/
Otherwise, I would emphasize that the term actually used in the relevant cases, over and over again, is "
assigned" abroad rather than "
posted" abroad. The latter, "
posted," is probably used by many to mean close to the same thing as "
assigned," and the terms used are far less important than the substantive nature of the employment. But in addition to use of the term "
assigned" in the applicable Regulation (Regulation 61(3) Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations) itself, numerous official decisions, including Federal Court decisions in addition to IAD panels, specifically focus on the terms "
assigned," and "
assignment," and some go into depth interpreting the meaning of "
assigned" or "
assignment" in particular. I do not mean to get bogged down in distinguishing the relative meaning of these terms, or perhaps more significantly their connotations, but in regards to this credit, the focus has been consistently, emphatically, on the meaning of "
assigned" or "
assignment," so these are the terms that loom large in understanding and figuring out how this credit is applied in practice.
But this leads back to a bigger concern regarding what some describe as "
business trips," which is a label that is largely
NOT relevant to whether, or not, the time the PR is abroad in the employ of a Canadian business will qualify for the
employed-abroad-by-Canadian-business credit. That is, whether the time a full time employee of a Canadian business is abroad as assigned by the employer, qualifying for the credit, does not depend on whether the label "
business trip" applies to the work or not.
(To be clear, what the OP describes does not appear to come close to even arguably qualifying for this credit. Whether or not the "Canadian entity" involved meets the qualifications for a business in Canada. This discussion is a not-so-relevant tangent.)
For whether a business trip will count, or not, the relevant questions are the same as in regards to any other situation where a PR is sent abroad to work on behalf of the employer; the relevant questions are whether
(1) the PR is in the full time employ of the employer (or affiliate if applicable),
(2) the employer is a Canadian business (meeting the criteria for what constitutes a Canadian business),
(3) the PR is "assigned," by the employer, to the job/work being done abroad, and
(4) the assignment is temporary (subject to the criteria for determining this, like definite plans for the PR to return to a position in Canada)
Which means a
business trip should count in many scenarios, according to the applicable rules and practice,
BUT might NOT count in other scenarios. Does NOT depend on whether the label or characterization "
business trip" appropriately or not describes the nature of the PR's working abroad.
Leading back to the OP's scenario and . . .
Business trips - short term assignments, travel 'to explore project partners' might be a bit of a grey area (and depend on the exact status of the entity and your contractual arrangements, etc.
Again, I agree with
@armoured's overall conclusion. Including here . . . except in the particular context here I would not characterize this as a "
grey area." As the OP sets the stage, in particular in a situation where the PR is already abroad and the circumstances are such that the
employed-abroad-by-Canadian-business credit is not applicable, the time engaged in a short-term assignment ("business trip" or otherwise) will not meet the criteria necessary for the credit to apply. There are actually cases fairly close to this, which I remember in general terms but cannot put my cursor on at the moment.
Unraveling how the facts fit into the criteria, in this scenario, may seem to be a bit fuzzy, potentially getting into a sort of grey area, but not really. Complex, yes, but in sorting through the relevant elements, this should not be a grey area, not by much anyway. To some extent this leads to what meets the criteria in the Regulation specifying that the PR be "
assigned on a full-time basis," which could invite convoluted interpretations and applications, but that would mostly be rooted in pushing an arguable though not really persuasive position, while in contrast, in reality, in practice, it is usually fairly easily sorted out and not much of a grey area at all.
It illustrates how dangerous focusing on labels can be. A "
business trip" can count. A "
business trip" might not count. Characterizing the PR's time working abroad a "
business trip" does not illuminate much at all about whether it will qualify for this credit.