Yes, everything I wrote is true.
I would be very grateful if you could find a lawyer in Vancouver who would agree to write a warning letter to IRCC for $ 200-400.
Why should I pay a lot of money for something that is supposed to be free and according to the law?
If Canada doesn't need people like teachers at school, my daughter will turn around and go back to us.
She has a place to live. Trust me, we have a job for her and everything she needs to live. She did not come to Canada from the jungle.
There are people who rush into battle until the end.
And there are others.
If Canada does not want such educated people as a daughter, then she does not need Canada either.
My daughter will not crawl on her knees and beg for help; I do this in her place.
But one day she will just get tired of it - she will turn around and leave.
I am a US Citizen. I have got PR in Canada, but I couldn't get a job in Canada. So, I simply turned around and decided to stay in the US. I am still Canadian PR (until stripped of the status by CIC or decide to formally renounce it), but for all practical purposes I may never be able to live in Canada as PR in future (if I ever cross the border they will probably ask me about RO, report a breach and order me deported). Anyway, this is my response to "she has a place to live". I also have a place to live and am not hailing from a "jungle". But, to sum it all up, it's irrelevant to the question you asked about PR card application.
As to finding attorney in Vancouver, I am sorry but I will not do that. It's your daughter. It's your or your daughter's responsibility to find a lawyer, in Vancouver or anywhere, and then negotiate the rate charged (if you decide to hire one). I raised my kids and never asked anyone to do anything for them. Neither should you.
Finally, this is not a matter of what Canada wants. I personally felt Canada didn't
need me and I had no problem with that. I don't
need Canada either. I just felt it was wrong for Canada to advertise and grant PR status to people she didn't really need. May be she should admit half the people she currently admits, or less. And if she still decides to bring in hundreds of thousands of skilled PRs, fine, but it's unfair to impose the RO restrictions upon people who can't get a skilled job there.
But that's not the issue your daughter has. Her issue is that she applied for PR card and IRCC never processed her application. As such, she can do one of two things: wait indefinitely for IRCC to process her application. Or. if she is absolutely sure she is entitled to it, consider filing WOM in Federal court and force IRCC discharge its' duty. As I noted, she doesn't
have to have an attorney to file WOM, she can do it on her own, as did some of our military men who knew they deserved to become US citizens, but had no means to hire private counsel.
And anything else you bring up is just irrelevant and is a subject for a different conversation.