FURTHER OBSERVATIONS REGARDING "MISTAKES"
If someone misses to report a trip or two (assuming the person had enough buffer to cover it), would that be considered misrepresentation?
Many, many citizenship applicants make "
mistakes" in the information they provide. Those who are certain they made no mistake are making the huge mistake of overlooking they undoubtedly did make some mistakes.
"
Mistakes" are not misrepresentation.
Most mistakes are minor. Most minor mistakes have no impact on whether or not the applicant meets the requirements for a grant of citizenship. IRCC is well aware applicants make mistakes. IRCC does not engage in
gotcha-games. Minor mistakes of little or no import will not, not ordinarily, have much if any impact on the application, not even in terms of causing non-routine processing. For example, among mistakes reported in this forum, some have said that during their interview they realized they had left out travel totaling weeks more outside Canada, owned up, acknowledged the oversight in their application, but still having enough days to easily meet the requirements were not even given RQ-lite let alone the more intensive and time-delaying versions of RQ-related non-routine processing.
The OP (
@CCCCAAAAA) appears to have made a mistake in the physical presence application, omitting a trip abroad. This is a common mistake, so common that IRCC explicitly recommends PRs wait to apply long enough after they meet the presence requirement that they will likely still meet the requirement even if they made such a mistake. It appears the OP did not wait long enough, did not have a "
buffer," as we describe it here, sufficient to cover the mistake. And this makes a huge difference, especially now. It was a "
mistake" when the OP sent in the application. Now that the OP knows a trip was left out and recognizes this makes a difference, that this means being short of meeting the presence requirement, the failure to notify IRCC of this is misrepresentation (by omission). It is NOT likely the OP will be alleged to have made a misrepresentation, even if IRCC discovers the discrepancy in the facts; it is likely to still be considered a mere mistake. But how things actually go in such situations will, of course, very much depend on the particular facts in the specific individual's case.
So, you refer to an applicant who "
misses" reporting a trip or two. This is a common mistake.
No harm, no foul. But in some circumstances it is misrepresentation.
There is another part to this issue, having to do with the impact the omission has. Your query assumes the applicant has enough of a buffer to still meet the requirements. That is NOT the OP's situation. So, assuming a missed trip (or two) was a mistake (not misrepresentation), the main impact is whether or not the revised presence calculation, taking into account the omitted travel history, shows the applicant still meets the presence requirement, or as it appears in the OP's case it means falling short. That is, whether correcting the mistake makes a difference, whether IRCC can still grant citizenship or not. If it results in the applicant being short, there is no authority to grant citizenship based on that application.
HOWEVER . . . just because a mistake does not constitute misrepresentation does not mean its impact is limited to correcting the record. Not all mistakes are created equal. Some mistakes are bigger than others. The bigger the mistake, and the more mistakes made, the more that tends to indicate the applicant is NOT a RELIABLE reporter of the facts.
Second only to the actual facts showing the requirements have been met, the next most important element in making a successful citizenship application is the applicant's credibility. Compromised credibility can very much HURT how things go . . . ranging from causing lengthy processing times attendant non-routine processing, to resulting in a failed application in a close-call case, even though there is NO allegation of misrepresentation.
It is difficult to put anecdotal reports about mistakes made, and their effect, into perspective. Most are minor, of little or no import. But a lot can depend on context. A month mistake may be of no significance in one case whereas a five or ten day error in another can loom large (as appears to be the OP's situation). The anecdotal report about an individual failing to report a large number of day trips, for example, appears to be about many mistakes but might be seen as basically one mistake, the mistake of failing to report day trips. This forum is rife with advice based on individual experiences but that is an almost totally unreliable approach; all individual experiences really show is that it is possible for things to go that way, based on it having gone that way at least that time, and without additional contextual information these do NOT support conclusions about how things are likely to go for someone else, not even close.
It also demands a reminder that the applicant is the ONE best source of information regarding the applicant's travel history. The applicant is the one and only one person in the whole world who was there each and every time the applicant exited and entered Canada, the one BEST SOURCE of this information. If the information examined by IRCC reveals the applicant did not get this information right, that is an indication the one best source of this information is a less-than-reliable source, an indication the applicant fails to be a reliable reporter of the facts.
There are many ways for IRCC to check the information provided by the applicant. The applicant's CBSA travel history, for example, is a key source of information which IRCC often (usually? always? how often is not certain) uses to check what the applicant reports. Isolated one-day deviations are not likely to be a problem. Revelation of omissions may be seen to be minor mistakes or in some cases seen to be serious or even misrepresentation (depends on other factors). But IRCC also compares the applicant's travel history to the applicant's address and work history. In many cases IRCC researches open sources, like social media and other internet sources (LinkedIn is one of most commonly source cited in official decisions about actual cases), and compares that information with what the applicant has provided. If and when IRCC suspects problems in the applicant's presence calculation, IRCC can refer the case to CBSA, which in turn refers it to CBSA's "National Security Screening Division" (NSSD) to conduct an investigation into the applicant's physical presence.
But IRCC goes to the other sources to verify the applicant's information . . . or, more to the practical point, to identify discrepancies in what the applicant reports. Minor discrepancies are typically considered minor mistakes, of little or no import . . . unless, for example, the applicant applied with very little or no buffer. Substantial discrepancies trigger RQ-related non-routine processing, more directly putting the burden on the applicant to prove when the applicant was present in Canada.
NOTE: as I observed above, it is difficult to extrapolate general practices from particular accounts, emphasizing too that not all mistakes are created equal. If and when IRCC comes across information the applicant's report of travel history is not accurate, that is a key factor. How the discrepancy directly affects the calculation, and whether it shows the applicant was short, is the main thing.
BUT . . . this may surprise some . . . even if IRCC discovers the applicant might have been IN Canada some days in addition to those reported in the applicant's account of travel history, that too can HURT. Again, this tends to show the applicant cannot be relied upon to be a reliable reporter. It's an older case, but in one officially reported actual case, in which the applicant was denied citizenship and the Federal Court upheld that, a big factor in the decision was evidence the applicant was probably in Canada during a period of time she reported being abroad in her travel history. Back then I reacted to the incongruity of how evidence of more days in Canada could be a reason to conclude she failed to be in Canada as many days as she reported, but over time I came to better understand the decision-making process and that once that applicant was perceived to not have provided accurate information, even information in her favour, that put everything she reported into question unless it was directly supported by other sources, by the documents.
(edited typos)