dear members,
My renewal application for PR had been referred for secondary review. Finally, renewed PR card was issued nearly a year later with no additional questions/details asked during secondary review period.
But is there a way to obtain information from IRCC on what triggered secondary review and what was reviewed/ checked? Like, right for information act, etc? What I understood from this forum was, it is not just RO obligation, something could also trigger a secondary review. Interested in knowing what that something could be?
I had secondary review on my last PR card renewal 5 years ago, didn’t know I could order this GCMS notes. Can I order now to see what happened to my last application? Is the record still there?
It is very unlikely a generic request for GCMS notes will reveal much at all, even for a PR card application currently in Secondary Review. Probably nothing that will illuminate what triggered the Secondary Review or otherwise reveal any concerns or issues which were the subject of inquiry or investigation.
That is, the GCMS notes will likely reveal little if any more than the fact of the SR referral itself, which the PR is informed regarding anyway.
A carefully and craftily composed ATIP request for more than just a copy of GCMS records might, but only *might* result in obtaining some substantive information. And that would depend on how well informed, well structured, and well directed the ATIP inquiries are framed. Making this kind of ATIP request requires doing a LOT of HOMEWORK. And even then, what can be obtained regarding Secondary Review is likely to be largely superficial at best. Remember, SR is about INVESTIGATING the PR as to matters related to status, and almost all information about investigating PRs is confidential, not to be shared.
THAT SAID . . .
Foremost, there is a distinction between what triggers the referral to Secondary Review versus what might be the subject of inquiry in conducting the SR.
For example, some concern about compliance with the Residency Obligation might be a triggering factor, but a straight up RO inquiry is not ordinarily the subject of SR. Rather, if IRCC identifies information indicating a CURRENT breach of the RO, that will ordinarily trigger a referral to a local office for a PR Residency Obligation determination. That is different from SR.
While some probable subjects of SR have been discussed at length in many topics here, including by me, to a significant extent what we know is largely the surface issues. Ranging from investigating possible misrepresentation to potential security problems. Again, since SR is largely an investigatory process, what and why is mostly NOT public information, not even information to be shared with the individual affected.
In the mix, it appears that a significant number of SR referrals may simply be cases in which IRCC apprehends the PR is not actually settled in Canada permanently, here ranging from questions as to whether the PR was actually in Canada when the PR card application was made to whether the PR is currently IN Canada.
Not being permanently settled in Canada is NOT grounds for denying a PR card. And despite IRCC asserting that PRs must be IN Canada to be eligible to apply for a new PR card, the fact the PR was not in Canada is NOT grounds for denying a PR card either. But IRCC does not need to have specific grounds for denying a PR card application to decide to refer a PR card to SR for further inquiries and investigation.
We do not know for sure, but it appears that this latter process may be mostly about letting the PR card application sit in a queue for a long enough period that upon further review, many months or even a year after the application was made, it is readily apparent whether or not the PR is in compliance with the RO. We do know, for example, that when IRCC apprehends the PR is living abroad, after applying for a new PR card, that often (not always) the application is referred to SR and IRCC is largely waiting to see what happens when the PR attempts to return to Canada, either in what happens when the PR applies for a PR TD from abroad, or the PR arrives at a PoE and is examined. (PRs with PRC application in SR almost certainly have a flag on their record so that PoE officials will readily recognize this and question the PR accordingly.)
MOREOVER, and rather significantly, it would be very unusual for the individual PR to not already be aware of why IRCC might be making further inquiries or outright investigating the PR. And if the PR OBJECTIVELY, honestly (mostly in terms of being honest with oneself), can perceive of no reason for IRCC to be concerned about the PR's RO compliance, or for IRCC to apprehend the PR has not settled in Canada PERMANENTLY, or for there to be any concern the RO's representations to IRCC or CBSA officials (past or present, but including representations made during PoE examinations) were untruthful, or for there to be criminality/security issues, there is no reason to be even the slightest bit concerned about a referral to SR. Protests to the contrary tend to be rather lacking in credibility.
My impression: I do not know. I have no statistics or internal IRCC memos to back up my impression. But my impression, nonetheless, is that a rather significant portion of the PRC application SR referrals are related to concerns the PR is NOT currently settled and PERMANENTLY living in Canada. Whether the more specific subject of inquiry is about some potential past misrepresentation (such as during a PoE examination asserting to have been in Canada more recently than the PR actually was) or IRCC perceives the likelihood the PR is abroad or will be going abroad for an extended time, in order to see how it goes when the PR attempts a return to Canada. Or some other focus of inquiry. My impression is that the perception the PR is not permanently living in Canada underlies what triggered many of these inquiries.
Some will no doubt cry this is unfair if otherwise there is not overt cause to believe the PR is currently in breach of the RO. After all, the law does not require PRs be permanently settled in Canada.
But the PURPOSE of the law is to allow for PRs
permanent residence in Canada. And if and when it appears a PR is not acting consistently with the PURPOSE of the law, that can be a reason to make further inquiry and investigate.
Again, I cannot be sure. But it readily appears that the PR who has more or less obviously settled in Canada, establishing a place of permanent residence in Canada, is less likely to be referred to SR even if that PR applies with little margin over the 730 days minimum to comply with the RO, than the PR whose pattern of travel, residence, and employment indicates he or she has not yet made Canada his or her permanent home. The former is fairly common among the many PRs who struggle to make the move itself, and who may even have been given a break in failing to meet the RO during their first five years but who have, nonetheless, finally settled in Canada and clearly permanently so, making an application for a new PR card not so long after they have been in Canada for almost all of the previous two years. In contrast, an SR referral might be easily anticipated for a different PR with many more days in Canada but who has a different and blatantly less-settled in Canada history.