PR RENEWAL is taking 1 year+
Currently routine PR card renewal applications are taking four to six months. Not a year. This timeline varies over time, quite often from month to month, and sometimes subject to abrupt changes. Was less than this for a good while but has somewhat recently been creeping back up.
There is a huge difference, however, between routine and typical PR card renewal applications and PR card applications which get tangled in non-routine processing. PRC applications referred for Secondary Review, for example, have long taken six months to a year longer than routinely processed applications. PRC applications involving admissibility issues can get bogged down in extraordinarily lengthy timelines. Other factors or circumstances can knock the PRC application off the typical and routine timeline.
Applications tangled in particular issues offer little insight into processing timelines for others, and virtually NOTHING in regards to the typical or routine timeline.
Leading to a recent proliferation of off-topic stuff here. The lack of courtesy is disappointing. Given the continual variations in processing timelines for typical and routine PRC applications, a topic like this should be allowed to proceed, focused on the typical and common PR card application timeline without such disruptions and distractions.
In the meantime . . .
Can i leave Canada once i complete my 730 days and my application is in process for renewal ( RO was not fullfilled when applied)?***** Correction.....RO was not fullfilled..
There is no such thing as when a PR can "
complete" their "
730 days." I understand what you mean, and many refer to the Residency Obligation in a similar way. But it is important to recognize that the PR RO involves a new, different calculation each day. Sure, a PR who has been in Canada more than two years recently can leave Canada for an extended period of time and not worry about failing to comply with the RO, as they have enough credit for days in Canada to offset the time abroad. BUT understanding how this is a continuing obligation that is
recalculated every day is key to grasping how it works and how to avoid RO compliance problems.
Meanwhile there is NOTHING in Canadian immigration law which in any way prohibits a PR's exit from Canada. As far as the Canadian government is concerned, the PR is free to leave Canada, at will (well, unless incarcerated for crimes or such).
In particular,
Canadian immigration law does NOT exercise any control over a PR's rights to travel abroad. But this also means a PR's travel abroad is NOT facilitated or protected by Canadian law either. This is one of the big differences between Canadians who are citizens and Canadians who have PR status. The Charter of Rights protects the rights of Canadian citizens to travel internationally. NOT Canadian PRs. If and when a PR goes outside Canada, they are on their own so far as Canada is concerned (with some exceptions, including efforts to repatriate to Canada some PRs abroad during certain kind of crisis or emergencies).
If and when a PR goes outside Canada, the PR is relying on their passport (with some exceptions, such as those with refugee status), and the laws and authority of the country that issued that passport, and of course the laws in the country where the individual travels. Canadian law, Canadian rules, are not applicable, almost irrelevant . . . EXCEPT . . . and again I understand this is the real object of your query . . . except for purposes of boarding commercial transportation carrying passengers to Canada. All travelers coming to Canada must present very specific documents when seeking to board commercial transportation carrying passengers to Canada.
The latter is specifically about what is needed to board an airline flight to Canada, for example, and NOT about what is needed to be allowed entry into Canada after arriving at a Canadian Port-of-Entry. Particular document requirements to board a flight includes all Canadians. A Canadian citizen, for example, needs to present either a Canadian passport or a special travel document. A Canadian PR needs to present either a valid PR card or a PR Travel Document.
There is NO such limitation on Canadians being allowed to ENTER Canada. Canadian citizens have a Charter protected right to enter Canada. Canadian PRs are statutorily entitled to enter Canada. So for either, proof of identity together with some evidence of status, recognizing that status is usually easily verifiable in the individual's GCMS records, is all that is needed to obtain authorization to enter Canada at a PoE.
So, the real gist of your question appears to be whether you can be sure to obtain a PR Travel Document if your PRC application does not result in getting a new PR card before the travel. Whether you might encounter a problem getting a PR TD and returning to Canada. For a PR in compliance with the RO and not otherwise inadmissible, odds range from very good to very high there is no problem in this process, but there are variables and contingencies, including where in the world the PR is and which visa office processes the PR TD application. Typical timelines are not long, but if there are concerns or issues, the timeline can go long. Influential factors appear to include how recent the PR was in Canada, including how long and how well settled, and of course whether or not it is clear the PR is in compliance with the RO.
In other words, TOO MANY VARIABLES to offer a general forecast for how things are likely to go for someone in your situation, let alone make any assertions about how things will go.
This is even more so for a PR who makes the PR card application despite
NOT being eligible for a new PR card. As I discuss in-depth in another discussion, in most circumstances a PR will get credit toward RO compliance AFTER applying for a new PR card. So the PR just a little short at the time the PR card application is made will not, not ordinarily be at risk for losing PR status (there are exceptions, including situations where credit for days five years ago are falling out of the calculation). So the risk of losing PR status for a breach of the RO is low, and it is virtually no-risk if by the time IRCC actually opens the application the PR has spent enough additional time in Canada to be in compliance with the RO. BUT PROBLEMS TEND TO BEGET PROBLEMS. Applying when NOT eligible simply increases the RISK of at least procedural problems and delays.
To be clear, in the guide for making a PR card application it is specifically stated that
to be eligible for a new PR card, the individual must be in compliance with the RO. Anyone with common sense recognizes that INELIGIBLE applications are prone to problems even if not simply and promptly rejected outright.