I was wondering if someone here might have some experience, or know about the process it takes to get a travel document...here's the link:
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/travel.asp
For those following this thread, it appears the only 100% legit way to travel as a permanent resident without your PR card is with one of these travel documents. If you follow the link, you'll see that one of the required documents in the checklist is "your passport or travel document/identity papers from your country of citizenship". That seems a very strange request: why on earth would you ever mail your actual passport?...then you couldn't travel anywhere anyway without it, and the processing time for a travel document might be longer than the wait for the actual PR card itself.
What a hassle, and all because airline clerks might not let you board their plane because they don't recognize CoPR papers. It makes me wonder about the bigger picture:
What would the airlines then expect from new permanent residents who have in their possession an issued confirmation of permanent residence, yet the only way for them to get the PR card sent to them is to get the CoPR signed off, yet the only place they can do that is either at the border, or when they enter into Canada through customs?
Do people who are awaiting permanent residence outside of Canada get different paperwork from those already inside the country? I ask, because all things being equal, if my wife was in her home country and got the same papers she received here (they sent them here because they knew she was visiting me), she would still have the issue of explaining to the airline agents that she will not have an issue entering Canada with her CoPR and passport! Am I missing something here?...odd.
Does anybody have any idea how this would work 'normally'? That is, if you need the CoPR to get processed at the border, yet the only way to GET to the border is to have a PR, then what sense is it that a CoPR isn't 'valid for travel'?
I know I'm sounding like I'm ranting a bit, and I apologize in advance
Thanks.
One last bit: I can't imagine the airline people having an issue with a person in transit to Canada to start their new lives, CoPR in hand, passport...there must be some type of a travel document issued to PR applicants outside of Canada for the one-way trip here. Especially since she's from a visa-exempt country, one would think the airline couldn't possibly be held responsible. I wish they had some type of waiver, perhaps.