Canada_soon2014 said:
Thanks Loen, Rob_TO, Bs65 really appreciate your comments.
So just to summaries:- I will not carry my 'valied' PR cards during travel, as I am entering as visitor, will just show visa exempt passports to the IO. In case they ask anything about PR I will admit honestly and answer the question accordingly.
Do I have to fill any landing card, when crossing land border, in the landing card shall I chose option visitor?
To be clear, a PR cannot legally enter Canada as a Foreign National visitor.
Whether presenting a visa-exempt passport at the PoE results in being waived into Canada,
as if a FN visitor, is largely a matter of chance but also dependent on a range of factors, not the least of which is the impression the PIL officer has and whether there is a referral to secondary.
If referred to Secondary, CBSA will most likely identify you as a Canadian, a Canadian PR. But there is also a significant chance that the PIL officer (at the booth) will recognize you are a PR anyway.
Your identity is connected to your client identification in the CBSA and IRCC systems, and of course your identity is connected to your passport. Odds are a screening officer can readily recognize you are a PR. The PIL officer might not be concerned and still waive you into Canada. Or the PIL might refer you to Secondary. In Secondary they will almost certainly recognize you are a PR, or at the least ask you questions which if answered truthfully will reveal you are a PR or lead to their otherwise discovering you are a PR.
As others noted, it is important to make
NO misrepresentations to border officials. There have been recent cases in which returning PRs have been
criminally charged and convicted, in addition to the consequences under IRPA, for making misrepresentations to border officials.
These days it is very difficult to forecast how the PoE interaction is likely to go down. Over the last many years CBSA and IRCC have increasingly enhanced practices and technologies toward more thorough screening of travelers coming into Canada. A lot may depend on what passport you carry, not just that it is visa-exempt. Or your travel history. Or, as noted, the general impression you make at the border.
My sense is that CBSA and IRCC are well aware, now, that many PRs in breach of the PR RO utilize the U.S. as a pathway for returning to Canada with the hope of slipping back into the country without being reported (there was specific reference to this in a very recent PR RO case on appeal); to what extent this has led to more stringent efforts to interdict PRs, is not clear, is impossible to know. Overall, however, it does seem clear that this approach does not have the same odds of success as it did in the not-so-distant past. Which is to say, better to be prepared for the alternatives.