Let's be clear: The RO is NOT designed or intended to facilitate PRs living abroad for extended periods of time EVEN THOUGH it
ALLOWS for that. What the law allows is not necessarily what the law intends, and this is particularly the situation in regards to the PR RO.
Make no mistake: the purpose for a grant of PR status is so the individual given PR status can settle and live IN Canada permanently.
The PR RO, in contrast, is intended to be liberal enough to give PRs the flexibility to deal with real life contingencies that compel spending extended periods of time abroad. It is intended to in effect take the government out of an individual's personal decision-making. A PR does NOT need to worry if the government approves or sanctions the reasons why a PR is compelled to spend so much time abroad . . . which the law allows, up to three years in five . . . that is, the PR does not need to explain or justify spending so much time abroad
so long as the PR does not remain outside Canada for more than three years . . . before the fifth year anniversary of landing, or thereafter, within the last five years.
What about Covid-19 and the global pandemic?
The following observations are not intended to judge anyone, not their situation, not their choices. On the contrary, these observations are intended to make it more clear how and when relief from a failure to comply with the RO works. Even in the times of Covid-19.
Spoiler alert 1: as much leniency over and above the RO itself it appears border officials may be allowing, especially these days in the wake of this pandemic, PRs should recognize that there is a huge substantive difference between being in compliance and crossing that threshold into non-compliance. It's the difference between having valid PR status versus being in BREACH . . . as a MATTER of LAW. A PR in breach is *INADMISSIBLE* and is thus AT RISK of a decision terminating PR status
UNLESS the PR PROVES he or she should be allowed relief based on Humanitarian and Compassionate considerations, which it should be well understood, demands meeting a rather stringent standard and ordinarily depends on showing very compelling reasons for why H&C relief should be given.
Spoiler alert 2: The PR RO is fixed. It is not changing. Not anytime soon. (And if changes were coming, odds are high that would be in the direction of a more strict rule, not a more lenient one.)
At this juncture it warrants mentioning that
@armoured,
@Naheulbeuck, and
@canuck78 have offered important, illuminating observations above. I do not mean to belabor what they have appropriately observed.
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.
PRs who have, as the grant of PR is intended, settled in Canada and are PERMANENTLY living in Canada, consistent with the reason why the Canadian government gave them PR status, should have no difficulty meeting the PR RO . . . regardless the impact of Covid, directly or indirectly.
So this observation, about "
more and more people," is really ONLY about PRs who were living abroad before the pandemic began. This is a limited number. There was nothing wrong, let alone illegal, about them living outside Canada.
But living outside Canada is not in accord with the purpose of their PR, so to the extent there are RISKS involved, the PR is generally the party bearing those risks. As
@cic86 repeatedly references, people cannot predict the future. What that means, though, in this context, is that those who make plans depending on how things will go in the future bear the risk the future might not be consistent with those plans.
A PR living abroad, any PR living abroad, should be (1) cognizant of the Residency Obligation, and (2) aware of the risk that
stuff-happens. This is especially salient for those who are
cutting-it-close. The more the PR is
cutting-it-close, the bigger the risk
stuff-happens which might interfere with that individual being able to meet his or her OBLIGATION to comply with Canada's rather generous PR RO . . . that is if that PR wants to retain PR status.
We should be clear about what the "
obligation" is, leading to . . .
"I hope they will review the RO in light of the pandemic."
I am not sure who "
they" are in this statement, but whoever "
they" are . . .
To be clear, the Residency Obligation is prescribed by statute. It is fixed. It is based on counting days. Compliance is not determined based on any subjective criteria at all. It is just an arithmetical calculation based on facts in existence.
It is possible that Parliament might consider a Bill to amend the statute but the prospect of that happening anytime in the near future is near nil . . . that is, to be frank,
it is NOT going to happen. There is simply NO chance that the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act will be amended to revise the PR RO.
Otherwise . . .
Neither IRCC nor CBSA have any authority, NONE at all, to review or amend or modify the RO. In light of the pandemic or in light of any thing else.
So the long and short, and sideview as well, is that the RO is fixed. It is based on counting days. Compliance is not determined based on any subjective criteria at all. It is just an arithmetical calculation based on facts in existence.
What that means is important. It means a failure to meet the RO, based on counting days, results in the PR being in BREACH of the RO as a MATTER of LAW. The PR in breach is inadmissible . . . UNLESS the PR has a persuasive H&C case.
That is, Covid or otherwise, for those PRs who fail to comply with the RO, keeping their PR status is dependent on a favourable H&C decision (be that formal, or an informal waive through the Port-of-Entry). NO WAY AROUND THAT. That is the law.
The point I'm making is that if the applicant is not able to meet the RO because of Covid then that explanation should suffice specially for PRs depending on 2020 and 2021 for completion of their ROs. Infact it should be a no questions asked checkbox on the PR renewal form by now rather than going through the highly unpredictable humanitarian route which requires all sorts of explanations and evidence for RO proof which puts the PR totally up in the air.
So far, assuming Covid-19 has been a compelling reason for a particular PR to remain outside Canada, it is simply NOT the case that Covid-19 alone can fully explain why a PR has been outside Canada for more than
three years. At most, at the very best, Covid can explain just two things:
-- that it is the reason for remaining outside Canada for 15 months as of now . . . (which could get longer as we go but it should be recognized that the weight of this "reason" for continuing to remain abroad is likely to be diminishing significantly in the coming months)
-- that it is the reason why a planned move to Canada was delayed . . . again, for up to 15 months as of now
The caveat that those are "
at most, at the very best," is not a casual or insignificant limitation. Canada has not, not in any way, blocked PRs from returning to Canada during this pandemic. The extent to which covid-19 MIGHT explain why a PR remained abroad, or otherwise delayed moving or returning to Canada, is absolutely PERSONAL. Canada not only allowed PRs to come to Canada during this pandemic, but early on had engaged in proactive measures to facilitate PRs returning to Canada.
That said, and noted, sure, yes, for many PRs who were living abroad when the pandemic started, even though the Canadian government was OK with the PR coming to Canada, for this or that individual PR the impact of the global pandemic is at least a significant part of the explanation for why that individual did not return to Canada sooner. And for sure, the availability of employment in Canada undoubtedly figured into this for many.
Every indication is that government officials, be that CBSA border officials, IRCC Visa Office officials abroad, and IRCC processing agents and officers handing PR card applications, will take this factor into account if and when a particular PR is examined for RO compliance and determined to be in breach, and is thus depending on H&C relief.
As
@armoured has aptly described, this process is "
not random. It's not arbitrary. There is a system, process, guidelines for how officers should evaluate and implement, and there is an review (appeals) process . . . " Indeed, there are literally hundreds of IAD decisions which address, describe, and apply the manner in which H&C factors are considered. And more than a few Federal Court decisions addressing this.
Overall, in general, so far as we can discern based on rather limited anecdotal reporting, but also noting the absence of anecdotal reporting suggesting otherwise, it appears the odds favour a rather lenient if not overtly generous approach to enforcing the PR RO.
But, in contrast, there is NO indication that covid will result in any across-the-board waiver of the PR RO. It will be a factor. At best, at most.