This thread and discussion was triggered by a recent (June 9, 2021) decision in the Federal Court by FC Justice Nicholas McHaffie, in regards to PR Giacomo Metallo, in which judicial review was granted. At the time Metallo applied for a new PR card he was in breach of the PR Residency Obligation, and he was issued a 44(1) Report and . . . well, the procedure went off the rails a bit, but ultimately he was issued a Departure Order, and he appealed. No need to get bogged down in those procedural details here.
A key issue at stake was specifically about what date determined the relevant five year period for assessing RO compliance. The date the PR made the application for a PRC? Or the later date the 44(1) Report was prepared? As Justice McHaffie put it:
Justice McHaffie ruled that Metallo was entitled to credit for days in Canada after applying for a new PRC . . . even in terms of assessing days in Canada for purposes of evaluating H&C factors.
BACKGROUND and CONTEXT:
Conventional wisdom is a PR should NOT apply for a new PR card UNLESS the PR is in compliance with the Residency Obligation. There are solidly good reasons for this. Notwithstanding the nuances addressed below, that is the best approach, the safe approach. Nothing here should be construed to counter that. There is no doubt: if a PR is in Canada: WAIT to apply for anything, WAIT to be in full compliance with the RO.
HOWEVER, as I have sometimes noted elsewhere, that conventional wisdom is often based on a misunderstanding about how compliance with the RO is calculated in processing a PRC application.
In particular, sometime more than a year ago I pieced together information from numerous official sources, mostly IAD decisions but other sources as well, to document what happens when a PR applies for a new PR card but is NOT in compliance with the Residency Obligation on the date of that application. In significant part that was to dispel the misleading, somewhat erroneous view, which seemed to be the most common view here, the view that in processing PRC applications the residency calculation is determined based on the day the PRC application was submitted.
But that is NOT how the process works, not entirely anyway.
The short version is that EVEN if the PR was in breach of the RO on the date a PRC application is made, the PR will still get credit for days in Canada AFTER applying for the new PRC up to the date the PR's RO compliance is actually examined. In practice it actually gets a little more complicated than that, given the variables in individual cases (just being in Canada, for example, will not necessary increase the PR's credit for time in Canada if days in Canada from five years ago are falling out of the calculation).
As noted, I have indeed outlined this in some detail before, here: https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/h-c-reasons.678182/page-2 where I also cite and link numerous sources.
Does this merit attention? The better approach, again, which is the safe approach, for a PR who has managed to return to and be in Canada despite being in breach of the RO, is to WAIT, to WAIT long enough to be sure to be in RO compliance BEFORE making any application for a new PRC, or to sponsor family members, or before traveling outside Canada.
So why bother with these nuances?
Well, a couple reasons at the least. The better we understand how things actually work, the better we can map navigational aids to help guide PRs through some of the more tricky terrain. Another reason is that not all PRs will wait, and not all can wait, and for these PRs understanding how things work can be pivotal in navigating their way through the process.
For example, a looming example, Metallo benefitted from a FC Justice willing to exercise discretion to not only address but make a decision based on an issue that was not raised before the IAD. The FC court will not, not usually, entertain arguments not raised in the lower tribunal. One might say Metallo was lucky. He had counsel for the IAD hearing, counsel who, apparently, did not argue the IAD should base its H&C assessment on how many days Metallo was in Canada up to the date of the 44(1) Report. Appears he had a better lawyer for the appeal to the FC (Arghavan Gerami, whose name has popped up on the making-a-difference side of the scales more than once).
But this brings up an important distinction. The difference between how information can influence a PR's decision-making before doing this or that, and how information can be used by someone AFTER they already made the decision and actually did this or that.
A lot of the time we are talking about what a PR should consider BEFORE doing this or that. Like making a PRC application. Easy to say: before making a PRC application, be sure to be in RO compliance.
Other times we are talking about what a PR is dealing with when the PR has already made the decision to do this or that, and has done it. Like making a PRC application. Like making a PRC application EVEN though the PR is not in RO compliance.
So yes, for sure, before applying for a PRC, be sure to be in compliance. BUT if a PRC application (or application to sponsor family member) has already been made, and it was made before the PR is in RO compliance, that is when this discussion is most relevant and useful. Days in Canada after applying should still be counted, credited.
For clarification: the question is not whether a PRC application will be denied if the PR is not in compliance. Denying a PRC application has no direct effect on a PR's status. To be clear, neither does the application being granted, being issued a new PR card. (Side note about the a-bit-off-the-rails procedure in the Metallo case: he was actually issued a PRC following a subsequent PRC application, but that had no impact on whether the Departure Order issued would be valid and enforceable.)
The question is whether, if not in RO compliance, the application for a PRC (or to sponsor a family member) will trigger a formal RO compliance examination that results in a 44(1) Report and Departure Order. If it does, it is important to note that days in Canada after making the application still count.
The difference that this Metallo decision makes is that it puts together all the various pieces and better describes the process for IRCC handling PRC applications by PRs in breach of the RO. Officially. My analysis in the other topic, which again is here: https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/h-c-reasons.678182/page-2 was indeed merely my analysis. I am no expert. I do the best I can but I am no expert. Now there is Justice McHaffie's decision which puts those pieces together. It is probably worth citing and linking the main IAD decision I relied on a year ago because that is the very same IAD decision that Justice McHaffie gives so much weight: the Rastgou 2018 CanLII 129864 decision, here https://canlii.ca/t/hx738
Also see cases cited and linked in the post linked above and partially quoted below:
A key issue at stake was specifically about what date determined the relevant five year period for assessing RO compliance. The date the PR made the application for a PRC? Or the later date the 44(1) Report was prepared? As Justice McHaffie put it:
The main issue in this case is what five-year period should be used in an H&C assessment for someone living in Canada who applied for a permanent resident card: the five years ending on the date of the application or the five years ending on the date of the officer’s decision.
Justice McHaffie ruled that Metallo was entitled to credit for days in Canada after applying for a new PRC . . . even in terms of assessing days in Canada for purposes of evaluating H&C factors.
The FC Metallo case is here: https://canlii.ca/t/jgdc5
The IAD Metallo decision set aside is here: https://canlii.ca/t/j52xd
BACKGROUND and CONTEXT:
Conventional wisdom is a PR should NOT apply for a new PR card UNLESS the PR is in compliance with the Residency Obligation. There are solidly good reasons for this. Notwithstanding the nuances addressed below, that is the best approach, the safe approach. Nothing here should be construed to counter that. There is no doubt: if a PR is in Canada: WAIT to apply for anything, WAIT to be in full compliance with the RO.
HOWEVER, as I have sometimes noted elsewhere, that conventional wisdom is often based on a misunderstanding about how compliance with the RO is calculated in processing a PRC application.
In particular, sometime more than a year ago I pieced together information from numerous official sources, mostly IAD decisions but other sources as well, to document what happens when a PR applies for a new PR card but is NOT in compliance with the Residency Obligation on the date of that application. In significant part that was to dispel the misleading, somewhat erroneous view, which seemed to be the most common view here, the view that in processing PRC applications the residency calculation is determined based on the day the PRC application was submitted.
But that is NOT how the process works, not entirely anyway.
The short version is that EVEN if the PR was in breach of the RO on the date a PRC application is made, the PR will still get credit for days in Canada AFTER applying for the new PRC up to the date the PR's RO compliance is actually examined. In practice it actually gets a little more complicated than that, given the variables in individual cases (just being in Canada, for example, will not necessary increase the PR's credit for time in Canada if days in Canada from five years ago are falling out of the calculation).
As noted, I have indeed outlined this in some detail before, here: https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/h-c-reasons.678182/page-2 where I also cite and link numerous sources.
Does this merit attention? The better approach, again, which is the safe approach, for a PR who has managed to return to and be in Canada despite being in breach of the RO, is to WAIT, to WAIT long enough to be sure to be in RO compliance BEFORE making any application for a new PRC, or to sponsor family members, or before traveling outside Canada.
So why bother with these nuances?
Well, a couple reasons at the least. The better we understand how things actually work, the better we can map navigational aids to help guide PRs through some of the more tricky terrain. Another reason is that not all PRs will wait, and not all can wait, and for these PRs understanding how things work can be pivotal in navigating their way through the process.
For example, a looming example, Metallo benefitted from a FC Justice willing to exercise discretion to not only address but make a decision based on an issue that was not raised before the IAD. The FC court will not, not usually, entertain arguments not raised in the lower tribunal. One might say Metallo was lucky. He had counsel for the IAD hearing, counsel who, apparently, did not argue the IAD should base its H&C assessment on how many days Metallo was in Canada up to the date of the 44(1) Report. Appears he had a better lawyer for the appeal to the FC (Arghavan Gerami, whose name has popped up on the making-a-difference side of the scales more than once).
But this brings up an important distinction. The difference between how information can influence a PR's decision-making before doing this or that, and how information can be used by someone AFTER they already made the decision and actually did this or that.
A lot of the time we are talking about what a PR should consider BEFORE doing this or that. Like making a PRC application. Easy to say: before making a PRC application, be sure to be in RO compliance.
Other times we are talking about what a PR is dealing with when the PR has already made the decision to do this or that, and has done it. Like making a PRC application. Like making a PRC application EVEN though the PR is not in RO compliance.
So yes, for sure, before applying for a PRC, be sure to be in compliance. BUT if a PRC application (or application to sponsor family member) has already been made, and it was made before the PR is in RO compliance, that is when this discussion is most relevant and useful. Days in Canada after applying should still be counted, credited.
For clarification: the question is not whether a PRC application will be denied if the PR is not in compliance. Denying a PRC application has no direct effect on a PR's status. To be clear, neither does the application being granted, being issued a new PR card. (Side note about the a-bit-off-the-rails procedure in the Metallo case: he was actually issued a PRC following a subsequent PRC application, but that had no impact on whether the Departure Order issued would be valid and enforceable.)
The question is whether, if not in RO compliance, the application for a PRC (or to sponsor a family member) will trigger a formal RO compliance examination that results in a 44(1) Report and Departure Order. If it does, it is important to note that days in Canada after making the application still count.
The difference that this Metallo decision makes is that it puts together all the various pieces and better describes the process for IRCC handling PRC applications by PRs in breach of the RO. Officially. My analysis in the other topic, which again is here: https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/h-c-reasons.678182/page-2 was indeed merely my analysis. I am no expert. I do the best I can but I am no expert. Now there is Justice McHaffie's decision which puts those pieces together. It is probably worth citing and linking the main IAD decision I relied on a year ago because that is the very same IAD decision that Justice McHaffie gives so much weight: the Rastgou 2018 CanLII 129864 decision, here https://canlii.ca/t/hx738
Also see cases cited and linked in the post linked above and partially quoted below:
. . . the following is a list of OFFICIAL SOURCES recounting ACTUAL cases . . . which amply illustrate that as a matter of policy and practice, generally those who apply for a PR card when not in RO compliance will NOT lose PR status if by the date of an interview, for a RO examination, they have in the meantime been in Canada enough to get into compliance; days in Canada after applying for a PR card will count toward compliance.
OFFICIAL SOURCES clearly showing that BEFORE issuing a 44(1) RO inadmissibility Report, IRCC does a RO calculation based on date of interview/examination, with credit for days IN Canada AFTER the date the PR card application was made:
Gamarachchi v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2019 CanLII 37401 (CA IRB), http://canlii.ca/t/j01sx
PR card application made January 31, 2016. Examination date was July 10, 2017, based on five year period from July 11, 2012 to July 10, 2017.
Chatterjee v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2019 CanLII 127475 (CA IRB), http://canlii.ca/t/j4r1l
PR card application made August 31, 2015. 5 year period considered based on date of interview February 17, 2017, so time in Canada between Aug 31, 2015 (date of application) and Feb 17, 2017 was counted.
Rastgou v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2018 CanLII 129864 (CA IRB), http://canlii.ca/t/hx738
December 12, 2015 PR card application.
Period of consideration for the purpose of RO assessment is the five-year period preceding the 44 report, that is, from October 20, 2011 to October 19, 2016 (Oct 19, 2016 being the date of the interview)
Hajar v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2019 CanLII 129235 (CA IRB), http://canlii.ca/t/j5361
. . . applied to renew his Permanent Resident card (PR card) in February 2016. The Departure Order was issued after the officer found that the appellant is inadmissible for failing to reside in Canada for at least 730 days (two years) out of the five year period ending May 10, 2017 (date ID officer prepared the Report)
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