1. Example: a PR travels to France for 2 months and his PR card expires while there. The PR can apply for a Canadian travel document, which will enable him re-enter Canada (assuming ofcourse he meets residency obligations).
Also, some refugee claimants are issued travel documents which they use instead of their home country passport.
So no, a PR card would not fall under this. If you have never applied for such a document and are not a refugee claimant who received such a document, then you don't have a "previous Canadian travel document".
2. I don't think it matters. The main thing is, they can not be your family members. If they have a problem with it, they will contact you to request another reference. Many times they don't even call references (they never called mine).
Note: make sure you complete the application entirely, sign and date it
before giving it to your guarantor to fill out.
wanabecanadian said:
A few questions for the experts:
1) For section 3 of the Passport Application form: Previous Canadian Travel Document - what does this refer to? Would a PR card fall under this?
2) Regarding references, does it matter if the two references are related but neither are related to the passport applicant?
Thanks