Right only Canadians that were born in Canada via either birth tourism or to other Canadians don’t need to be obliged to live in Canada.
Also no immigrant should dare thinking of spending time to take care of their aging parents that live overseas, nor think of running any company outside of Canada.
Because it would perceived as applying on the way to the airport.
They also should be mandated to run a company in Canada Without any delay And without carefully addressing whether it would be feasible to.
Brilliant and unbiased thinking!
It appears the sarcasm is aimed at me. The post you quote is mine.
You are
shooting the messenger. In particular, what you otherwise refer to is NOT my thinking. I mean, your hostility seems akin to complaining about the weather reporter for having forecast rain and cold the day of a planned picnic. It is not my thinking, after all, that underlies Section 6 in the Charter of Rights (distinguishing the mobility rights of citizens versus PRs). Not my thinking, after all, that underlies enforcement of the PR Residency Obligation on those who have applied for Canadian citizenship (up to when they actually become a citizen). I am just a reporter.
Likewise, it is not my thinking that underlies what the purpose is for the law which provides immigrants a path to citizenship, and also not my thinking that underlies how the law's purpose influences the interpretation and application of the rules. I am, again, just reporting, trying to illuminate the factors citizenship applicants and prospective applicants probably want to be aware of and take into consideration when making decisions that could affect how it goes for them. And when engaging in advocacy toward persuading the government to do a better job processing applications.
Besides that, you get some of how things actually work simply wrong. This for example is way off:
"Right only Canadians that were born in Canada via either birth tourism or to other Canadians don’t need to be obliged to live in Canada."
Apart from the fact that no one is obliged to live in Canada (and many billions of people in the world do not even consider the prospect of living in Canada), I am guessing you meant something about keeping status as a Canadian, and the obligation some Canadians (Permanent Residents) have to spend 2 years in 5 in Canada . . . or, are you referring to PRs being obliged to live in Canada in order to become a Canadian citizen?
The PR Residency Obligation is fixed law. Not at all about what I think. But yes, those Canadians who are PRs, not citizens, are obliged to live in Canada a certain amount of time IF they want to retain status to live and work in Canada. That is the 2/5 rule. To become eligible for a grant of citizenship, they are also obliged to be physically present in Canada. That is the 3/5 rule.
Once a PR makes the application for citizenship, assuming they did indeed meet the 3/5 rule requirement, that part of what they are obliged to do is done. Requirement met. Check that one off.
But they are still only a PR unless and until they meet all the requirements to become a Canadian citizen. Taking the oath of citizenship is one of those requirements. So until they take the oath of citizenship, as a PR yes they remain obliged to spend enough time in Canada to comply with the Residency Obligation. There is no checking off this requirement until the day the oath is actually taken. Up to then, up to that day, a PR applying for citizenship is obliged to comply with the RO.
And the latter does indeed pose a risk for current applicants living outside Canada. The processing timeline is well off track for a large, large number of applicants. And since applicants living abroad after applying have an increased risk of non-routine processing which can delay processing even more, depending on how long it takes, there are likely to be many more stories similar to that told by
@azi3020980 (see previous post for link). You may applaud the assertion by
@MrChazz that this is irrelevant, but for those citizenship applicants living abroad and watching their processing time slide toward two years and more, it is relevant, big time relevant.
@azi3020980 is engaged in an appeal just to save PR status, no chance to save the citizenship application. That is not an anomaly.
Again, none of that is about what I think. Again, there is no call to
shoot the messenger.
But even interpreting your statement as generously as possible, assuming you are referring to individuals who have status to live and work in Canada for life without being obliged to live in Canada to keep that status, it is still way off. It is NOT true that "
only Canadians that were born in Canada via either birth tourism or to other Canadians" have no obligation to spend a certain amount of time in Canada to keep their status.
ALL Canadian citizens,
including naturalized citizens, are protected by Section 6(1) in the Charter of Rights, pursuant to which they have the "
right to enter, remain in and leave Canada," which means they can live outside Canada for as long as they want, and they will remain a Canadian citizen and have the right to return to Canada to live whenever they want. And this includes those who are a citizen by virtue of being born in Canada regardless of the parent's status in Canada (except those born to parents in Canada pursuant to diplomatic status), which again is in addition to naturalized citizens.
The hyperbole otherwise reeking in the other comments is also well of the mark, recognizing that there is a huge difference between traveling abroad to spend time with aging parents while a citizenship application is pending, versus relocating to live and work abroad indefinitely. Many immigrants apply for citizenship and travel abroad, even for extended periods of time, and successfully proceed through the process to take the oath and become a Canadian citizen. As I have emphasized, there is no law, no rule, no policy that we know of, that prohibits living abroad while the application is pending.
But there are risks. And prudent applicants will appreciate information about the risks so they can take those into consideration in making decisions, in balancing priorities in their lives, including in making preparations and accommodations as well as they can in anticipation of the contingencies.
But for purposes of the subject here, in this thread, what looms large is recognizing that the excessive delays in processing citizenship applications is not an unfair denial for only those with needs or plans to go abroad. In fact, the delay is unjust for many tens of thousands more with no plans to go abroad for any extended period of time. The backlog is growing, and it is already a lot bigger than is reasonable.
So yes, yes indeed, the key is to focus on effective advocacy. Which means avoiding counter-productive activism. Forget arguments emphasizing the need for a passport to travel abroad, since agree or disagree, like it or not, that argument triggers a negative reaction far more than it will encourage influential members of the government to put pressure on IRCC to get going. Avoid personal attacks on IRCC personnel, which again like it or not, agree or disagree, are far more likely to alienate those who could help get things going.
This is NOT a fix it overnight issue. For some causes a lot of noise can compel change. This is not one of those causes which will generate enough noise to accomplish that. I realize that the number of letters to MPs a person can write, should write, is limited, and effecting change that way is slow. Media contacts likewise. Effective advocacy is not easy. In the meantime a big backlog of applications is getting much bigger. So those who are genuinely concerned and sincerely interested in pushing the needle in a positive direction will focus on carefully crafted,
POSITIVE messaging aimed at addressing how important the grant of citizenship is for bringing immigrants on board to become an integral part of life in Canada, and emphasizing that IRCC has a mandate to process applications timely toward accomplishing the purposes of the law.