Dear Dpenabill, your message is encouraging. Thank you for the detailed analysis and advice on my case.
Unfortunately being a legal guardian means almost all the responsibility that parent has. And that is regardless if that person is a complete stranger, granny, uncle, aunt or an older sibling. So yes at the time being his oldest child is responsible for the well being of younger siblings as well. (that they are fed, they attend school, they do not commit crime and that they are not unsupervised, depending on the age and action).Very sorry for you loss.
A few additional thoughts (although I think @dpenabill covered well) - note, I'm not a lawyer, but some suggestions on things that a lawyer could help with. Primarily helping you use the correct terminology and legal status of various points, and what documentation you can provide / obtain quickly to help buttress your case that this is urgent.
First, you say your spouse, I assume this means that you were not divorced or legally separated, just living apart. Usually that would mean that you are the sole surviving parent and legal guardian, even if your older child has been given some temporary guardianship. In other words, you are the sole person with legal responsibility for the minor children.
Personally I think the fact the sibling of the minor children is an adult is a red herring - he can assist but he does not have the legal responsibility for them in the same way the parent does - even if he is voluntarily assisting. But a lawyer can help specify the correct phrasing so that the situation is clear.
It may help, in addition, to have certain documentation - possibly letters from the social services agency that I understand is involved?
Note this does not necessarily mean that a lawyer must file all all of this or prepare your application for PRTD. But hitting the right "notes" with correct documentation and terminology may help it get the necessary attention for urgent treatment.
I don't know whether this is specifically immigration-related enough to hire a separate lawyer. Presumably there is a lawyer involved to deal with the estate and the children, that lawyer should know enough to provide answers (or consult with other lawyers as needed on immigration-related matters). That lawyer should at minimum know/be able to recommend when a lawyer with specialised knowledge is needed.
I would also tend to agree that the reason for the urgent processing/approval of the requested PRTD is primarily the matter of the minor children; while there may be issues on the record about your compliance with residency obligation, the matter at hand right now is the care of minors who are Canadian citizens, resident in Canada, who have lost their parent and the sole surviving parent needs to be there.
As I said, I'm not a lawyer; some of these aspects really need a lawyer to properly formulate.Unfortunately being a legal guardian means almost all the responsibility that parent has. And that is regardless if that person is a complete stranger, granny, uncle, aunt or an older sibling. So yes at the time being his oldest child is responsible for the well being of younger siblings as well. (that they are fed, they attend school, they do not commit crime and that they are not unsupervised, depending on the age and action).
Of course it was needed that somebody would take the guardianship in Canada otherwise those children would be taken to the (sorry I use just simple word) orphanage, even if for a temporary amount of time until they could either reunite with their parent that does have custody or until a legal guardian is assigned to them.
However because of that action it is already shown that when it comes to those children staying in Canada there is a way for them to stay (under guardianship of older sibling until they will turn 18).
And while providing money on the table, he was still PR with PR responsibilities. And under normal circumstances economical decisions are not taken as a H&C when it comes to RO. Which again means being on merci of the officer deciding his PRTD application.
Again just my assumptions.As I said, I'm not a lawyer; some of these aspects really need a lawyer to properly formulate.
He referred to a temporary guardianship (how was this done? by court/social services?); as I understand this is not intended to supplant on a permanent basis permanent guardianship or legal custody. Current marital status matters. My point is that is likely not a determination by anyone that this arrangement is in the long-term best interests of the children but a temporary measure dictated by circumstances and immediate needs - the older sibling is responsible for the time being, but does not mean that this automatically will become permanent.
Your other points are reasonable questions (re long term PR situation, how much time with the children, etc). Obviously there is some discretion on the part of IRCC (likely subject to appeal) and we do not know the full story, nor the long-term plans in terms of residing in Canada. So I'm not opining on that - noone who doesn't know the full story can, really.
But in the immediate, the question is whether H&C considerations based on interests of the children will 'override' to some greater or lesser degree what other concerns may exist. As @dpenabill noted, this is a powerful H&C consideration. Legal counsel may be better placed to advise (as I suggested) on how to formulate this (urgent) PRTD request (i.e. what terms and specific references will have most likelihood of success), and also as to whether there are better options.
My understanding is that temporary guardianship is very much a thing - and perhaps not unusual in circumstances where the surviving parent is not physically present. But again, I readily admit not a lawyer and I assume the details vary by province.I would reasonably doubt that something like temporary guardianship was setup (if such thing is even possible).
Great news! Thank you for the updateJust to final my story. I received PRTD and now I am with my children. Thank you all for the discussion and advise!
Glad to hear that, and sorry again for your family's loss.Just to final my story. I received PRTD and now I am with my children. Thank you all for the discussion and advise!