Rob_TO said:
Is this actually true?? I've only ever seen a rule that PR cards can't be issued to an address outside of Canada (hence the need for Canadian address at landing). But once you have the PR card, i've never seen a rule in any CIC guide or elsewhere, that says you can't mail them wherever you want.
Not that FedEx or Purolator or whoever you use, would ever know you're sending a PR card!
Yes. It is also amazingly consistent across agents (which in and of itself tells me something).
Whether when a specific person mails a PR card, that specific PR card will be seized and returned to CIC, that's a different question. It doesn't show up in CIC guides, but that's not really surprising. CIC instruction guides for applicants cover before you apply for the most part and give you a sense of what will happen the process. CIC internal instructions such as OP's and IP's cover internal CIC processes as they the process an application so that wouldn't address instructions to other agencies or external organizations. Bulletins and interviews (e.g., of visa office heads in Parliament) sometimes give you an insight into specific administrative rules and interactions with other agencies (e.g., CBSA to request a seized passport for approved inland applicants to be able to land or for renewal purposes) but that's just a sliver of what I'm sure is many other interaction points. After all, although CIC is very open with us, they don't publish every internal document for our reading pleasure.
Getting back to the OP's situation, assuming he is a British citizen or a citizen of another visa exempt country, he can travel back to Canada with his visa-exempt passport and he can enter Canada with his stamped CoPR. So, he has no need for a PR Card to facilitate his travel back to Canada after his baby is born. Therefore, waiting to apply for the PR Card until he's back in Canada or a couple months before travelling back so it's ready and waiting for him when he moves to Canada or having it sent to friends/family and having them hold on to it represents no real downside risk (assuming he picks a trustworthy friend or family member who won't lose it
).
If, instead, the OP chooses to send the PR Card to a friend or family member and asks them to mail it on to him abroad, he incurs the risk of the PR card being lost (whether by CIC instructed interception, by misdelivery, loss by the carrier, etc.) and he also incurs the shipping cost.
Thus, with one option, the OP has no cost. With the other path, he would choose to incur the actual cost of shipping and a potential cost from the risk of loss of the PR card AND would capture no incremental benefit for that increased cost. I know which option I would pick.
There's plenty other sources of headaches in this world.
ETA:
Avadava raises additional risks of mailing the card (identity theft)