worriedanxious007 said:
Scary! I'm just really nervous as I never lie and I'm terrified they will take my PR away as I've ben gone four yearss when I return. If i make at least a visit back for a month in between will this help my case at all?
My PR card will be valid for six months when I plan to land back in Canada. Just wondering how often they report someone in those circumstances and how likely it is I'll have it taken away? This is my second PR card, the first five years i never left Canada. If I'm just honest and tell the officer I've been completing my medicine degree herr in Europe do you think it's possible they will not report me? I still have a residence address with my best friendin Canada, active bank accounts etc.
You have no alternative but to be fully honest in answering questions, including in the custom's declaration form. Any deceptiveness (including evasive responses) risks things going significantly worse, from bad to really bad.
Your timeline suggests a high risk for a secondary referral and questions. Technically you are also at high risk to be given a 44(1) report followed by a Removal Order, following which however you are allowed to enter Canada and which you can appeal.
If the POE officer considers writing a 44(1) report, the officer
must consider everything you offer to explain or excuse why you have not spent time in Canada or did not return to Canada sooner. But the weight the officer gives to the finishing educational program abroad is, well, uncertain.
For a PR still within the first five years since landing, still in possession of a PR card, arriving in Canada to actually settle in Canada, having established significant ties in Canada, with a good (and credible) story explaining intent to establish a life in Canada but compelling reasons delaying actually doing it,
it APPEARS (reports are too sporadic and otherwise unreliable for anyone here to any where near "know") that the CBSA officers at the POE can be fairly lenient if not generous . . . but that goes out the window, right out the window, if they sense someone is gaming the system or being in any way evasive let alone deceptive.
There is no way of knowing for sure, and virtually no way of having even a good idea, what will happen at the POE until you actually arrive at the POE. While quite a few reports suggest that PRs fudging the facts, or even outright lying (such as understating how long it has been since they were last in Canada), get away with it,
the odds of getting away with fudging are a lot, lot less today than they were in the past . . . and the odds that CBSA will discern evasiveness or deceptiveness is a lot, lot higher these days . . . and if the latter happens, it almost certainly will not go good from there.
The sooner you arrive in Canada the better your odds. It is fine to use a Canadian address, but not a good idea to claim it is any more than what it is. The odds are very high CBSA will identify you as returning without being in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation, so your best chances are in persuading them how important it was to complete your degree and that you have intended all along to fully settle in Canada as soon as possible.