I'm seeing more and more cases of PRs not meeting the RO because of Covid.
Sure - but what we're NOT seeing - as far as I can tell - is a significant uptick in reports at border / PRTD denials / PR status revocations / appeals cases.
It's hard to attribute cause or understand what's going on. But it is a potential indicator that
in practice there may be quite a bit of leniency practiced by IRCC/CBSA.
Eventually if it turns out that they are not being lenient for covid-related non-compliance, we will see this in the appeals reports - because individuals will surely appeal and make the case that they couldn't return due to covid.
But right now, you are arguing with phantoms.
And this idea that you must provide a legit reason as to why you didn't meet the RO in Canada before Covid hit is hilarious. Do people know the future?
How you meet the 730 days it totally upto the invididual. They shouldn't be asked why you didnt meet it in your first 2 years or last 2 years. If they want justifications why the person didnt meet the RO in the first 730 days of landing then they may as well scrap the part of the RO that says 730 non consecutive days.
I don't understand your point here. I see no indication that
in practice CBSA/IRCC are asking why people did not meet the RO in such-and-such a period of time, that is, why they did not 'get the 730 days' in two years.
Posters here have noted a different point distinct from what you stated above: that for those who were
already out of compliance (and significantly so) before covid started, it will be
harder to make the case that their non-compliance was due to covid.
These two statements (why did you not get the 730 days before vs why were you out of Canada 1095 days prior to covid) may seem like mirrors of each other, but I emphasize: they are distinct and different, even if sometimes people confuse and refer to them colloquially as if they are the same. There's no requirement to (as you seem to state) get the 730 days in your first two years; it is two-in-five. Mathematically that means, of course, that being out of Canada 1095 days in your first five years (whether in the first three or in total) means you are non-compliant.
So similiarly its not fair for the PR holder to justify why they can't meet the RO before Covid hit because they can't predict the future either. Simples.
Simple but wrong. If someone was
not compliant before covid (again, distinct from why they 'did they not meet the RO ie get to 730 days before covid), it is perfectly reasonable to request/require an explanation.
That can be easily considered by taking an extreme hypothetical: someone spent only one day in Canada before covid, and their PR card expired March 20, 2020. That person can argue that they 'could have' travelled to Canada on March 19 but flights were cancelled. Entirely reasonable (it seems to me) to deny PRTD request without a
very good set of reasons for that non-compliance, all before covid.
In other words, if the applicant's
reason (only reason in explanation) for being non-compliant is "because covid started March 18", that's clearly false - the individual was non-compliant
well before covid started. And if that individual had arrived on March 17, 2020, likelihood of being reported would have been quite high (failing some other exceptional circumstances/explanation).
(Leaving aside for now that in appeal, it's not impossible that H&C might have been considered in order not to force the individual to travel in arguably dangerous circumstances)
More and more people are going to find it hard to meet the RO now because of multiple direct and indirect reasons due to Covid. An example of an indirect reason would be jobs. I hope they will review the RO in light of the pandemic.
Sure. And all of those individuals can make the case that they couldn't be compliant because of covid. Some cases will be more credible than others - and those who were significantly out of compliance before covid will have less chance of success. This does not require the RO to be revised at all.*
The crux will be those who are in the in-between situation and we\ll have to see how those are handled. I personally expect we will see some cases two or three or more years down the road (ie 'after covid') arguing that they couldn't return by say end-2022, and at some point IRCC will start having to be more strict and (more or less formally, probably not publicly) stop any covid-leniency because such covid leniency can't be forever.
*We're talking here about the ability to enter Canada to reside; I could imagine some additional leniency/policy about eg PR cards. But separate topic and too early to speculate.