REMINDER: I am NOT an expert. I am not qualified to offer personal advice.
While I can cite some information and offer some observations, to be clear, whether or not to contest this, or what recourse might otherwise be available,
is LAWYER-STUFF.
I can note, apart from the summary by
@frequent flyer, with which I agree, there are significant parts of the commentary here, so far, that are erroneous, or at the least off the mark some. I will address some of that in a separate post.
I received a removal order based on missing residency days upon entering Canada. I did get a lawyer and appealed the decision to IAD which is pending a hearing. I know that citizenship can not be granted to those who are subject to removal orders.
My issue is that: I thought while the removal order is being appealed in the IAD, the citizenship application would be suspended (not rejected).
. . . can my citizenship application be put on hold until IAD has a final decision on my case? Or, IRCC has every right to reject my application without waiting for the IAD decision? I greatly appreciate your thoughts.
So the issue is: does IRCC has the right to reject the application now that a removal order is being appealed at IAD? without waiting for the IAD decision? Again, when I applied in 2017, my number of physical days back then were correct.
Short answer: Since you are the subject of a "removal order," you no longer meet the eligibility requirements for a grant of citizenship, which is a basis for denying the citizenship application.
I am not qualified to second guess your attorney or otherwise advise you in regards to what recourse you might have, other than to say of course the Citizenship Act provides that you may seek leave from the Federal Court to appeal a decision (to obtain review of the decision) denying the application for citizenship. That is, I cannot address the specifics of YOUR individual case, and thus even though I can point out legal process that MIGHT be available, I cannot offer any advice on whether you have much of a case or whether you should respond contesting this, or otherwise pursue legal recourse (in addition to an application for leave to obtain review it might be possible to make an application for mandamus . . . noting
this is for a LAWYER stuff).
I can and will offer a longer explanation as to some of the relevant laws, policies, practices, and other related information.
LONGER EXPLANATION:
(starts somewhat simple but then gets weedy)
To qualify for a grant of citizenship pursuant to
subsection 5(1) in the Citizenship Act (should link), the individual must (of course) be eligible at the time the application is made and REMAIN eligible right up to the moment the oath is taken. With some very limited exceptions, the Minister actually has NO AUTHORITY to grant citizenship to an individual who does not meet the qualifications.
One of the qualifications, to be eligible for a grant of citizenship, is prescribed in
subsection 5(1)(f) in the Citizenship Act (should link), which says, rather simply, a qualified the person is someone who "
is not under a removal order."
Additionally, making it clear that to be granted citizenship, the individual
MUST REMAIN eligible right up to the moment the oath is taken,
subsection 22(6) in the Citizenship Act (should link) also specifies:
Despite anything in this Act, a person shall not take the oath of citizenship if they . . . no longer meet the requirements of this Act for the grant of citizenship.
Since you are under a removal order, you do not meet the 5(1) eligibility requirements, 5(1)(f) in particular. No expertise, no advanced studies in calculus necessary, to compute this equation.
Which brings this up:
"I thought while the removal order is being appealed in the IAD, the citizenship application would be suspended (not rejected)."
Various anecdotal reports appear to suggest that suspending such applications may be a common practice. Or at least SOMETIMES is the practice. Not sure why, but one of the more persistent myths perpetuated in this forum is the proposition "
XXX was OK for me, so XXX will be OK for you." That is
NOT how things really work. NOT even close. How it goes for one person is at best an indicator of how things MIGHT go, NEVER a definitive indicator of how things will go.
In contrast, I have repeatedly cautioned that falling short of complying with the PR Residency Obligation while a citizenship application is in process can result in the application being denied.
When applications are suspended pending the outcome of collateral proceedings related to determining if the applicant is admissible, that is done pursuant to
subsection 13.1 in the Citizenship Act (should link), the provision which gives the Minister authority to suspend processing "
for as long as is necessary" for an applicant "
who is the subject of an admissibility hearing under [IRPA], [to receive] the determination as to whether a removal order is to be made against the applicant."
As I noted, I have repeatedly cautioned that falling short of complying with the PR Residency Obligation while a citizenship application is in process can result in the application being denied. Note, though, I deliberately say "
can result" rather than "
will result." As already noted, it's basic logic, what "
can" happen does not dictate what "
will" happen. Outcomes VARY.
Why IRCC does not handle all these cases the same I cannot say, except to note that the underlying facts, and especially the underlying equities, always vary, so to the extent the law allows variable outcomes, it should be no surprise that outcomes vary.
What Does "Under a Removal Order" mean?
There might be, just maybe, a question about whether a removal order, issued pursuant to
subsection 44(1) IRPA (should link) for inadmissibility due to a breach of the PR RO, which is under appeal, constitutes being "
under a removal order" as prescribed in 5(1)(f) Citizenship Act. Pending the appeal, such a removal order is NOT enforceable. It only becomes enforceable if the appeal is dropped, dismissed, or abandoned.
CAUTION: Again, this is LAWYER-STUFF. To a large extent I am speculating here.
Riffing, one might say, in an effort to understand whether the fact IRCC suspends citizenship application processing in some of these cases (or at least, based mostly on anecdotal reporting here, appears to suspend processing) suggests there is such a question here.
My best understanding of the applicable statutory provisions (cited and linked above) is that being issued a "
removal order" constitutes being "
under a removal order," even though the removal order is not "
enforceable" pending an appeal. But I am NOT an expert. I am NOT a Canadian lawyer. I do not have any formal training or professional experience in immigration or citizenship matters.
I do know that in older Federal Court cases, under previous versions of the law, the Federal Court upheld the denial of applications based on such removal orders while those orders were under appeal. Those cases were based on both previous versions of the requirements themselves, but also were applications subject to different provisions governing procedure, most (perhaps all, memory a bit rusty as to the precise procedural details) governed by the Citizenship Act prior to the adoption of subsection 13.1 which now governs when applications may be "
suspended."
Moreover, contrary to something which is repeatedly, erroneously, asserted in this forum: the issuance of the 44(1) Report and Removal Order does NOT start the process for revoking PR status. It is THE FORMAL decision terminating status. It is subject to appeal, yes. The removal order is not enforceable pending the appeal, that is correct. BUT the decision to issue the removal order is the outcome of the "
admissibility hearing." Seems clear that is the "
determination" referenced in 13.1 Citizenship Act. And means the PR is "under" the removal order even though it is not enforceable pending appeal.
OTHERWISE . . . there are some rather salient negative headwinds, in the
what-one-deserves (from the perspective of many if not most Canadians) vein, related to the applying-on-the-way-to-the-airport aspect.