You can delay landing and becoming a PR, but if the expiry date on COPR is June 2014, then your wife MUST land sometime before that time or else the COPR is voided, and you'll probably have to start over the entire PR application from scratch again. So the longest you could delay is the exact date on COPR, less 1 day. Not until 2015.bchung said:Just to clarify. The earlier suggestion, was that its possible to just ignore the COPR, and have her finish her contract and come back in 2015, while keeping proof we have been communicating and visiting each other. Which i think would sound like a great backup solution.
This would just be proving cohabitation. There is no reason that CIC would reject it, if you're asked to submit proof. People do this all the time when applying for common-law PRs while living in China or any other country.However, this other solution to move to Shanghai, means I would have to have Chinese documents translated and and submitted to the CIC, which I guess they can still reject?
There is NO condition whatsoever that states a PR and sponsor MUST live in Canada. As long as they meet the 2-out-of-5-years condition to maintain PR status, that is all that matters.Also, as an FYI, I just got back a reply from a Lawyer in Toronto, and they have stated that they think the PR Condition of cohabitation applies to living in Canada, and not overseas. However, they are uncertain.
There is also nothing in the CIC guidelines on conditional PR that says the cohabitation rule is waived if one spouse is living overseas. So i'm not sure what this lawyer is basing their statement on. Unless they can show you where CIC states it, don't trust them.