1. For your PR obligations it is not 3 consecutive years, it is 2 years in every 5 year period.Hi All,
I am trying to better analyze in terms of policy if the physical residency requirements (3 out of 5) are problematic to achieve for certain immigrants and why.
- Personally, I have an international career and progressing professionally requires me to be deployed in different countries. As a result, spending nearly 3 consecutive years in Canada (even though Canada has been / is my home and I want it to remain my home) is really challenging and comes at the risk of my losing my career. As of now, I've spent 21 months here...with some gaps...and every additional month feels daunting and risky in terms of my work.
Do you face a similar problem? Has the pandemic increased your hardship? Should the Government of Canada be using a different metric to assess ties to Canada?
Thanks for sharing your experience.
3 years of physical presence only matter to apply for citizenship, not to keep PR, as previously stated. it is not a consecutive requirement either. You may want to do a bit more research to correct your assumptions.Hi All,
I am trying to better analyze in terms of policy if the physical residency requirements (3 out of 5) are problematic to achieve for certain immigrants and why.
- Personally, I have an international career and progressing professionally requires me to be deployed in different countries. As a result, spending nearly 3 consecutive years in Canada (even though Canada has been / is my home and I want it to remain my home) is really challenging and comes at the risk of my losing my career. As of now, I've spent 21 months here...with some gaps...and every additional month feels daunting and risky in terms of my work.
Do you face a similar problem? Has the pandemic increased your hardship? Should the Government of Canada be using a different metric to assess ties to Canada?
Thanks for sharing your experience.
Thanks for sharing. It is not hard for you, so my question is not addressed to you. Also, if Canada is your home, why would you mention the US? I don't care about the US. Thanks for your thoughts. All the best.Hi
1. For your PR obligations it is not 3 consecutive years, it is 2 years in every 5 year period.
2. To me, spending 2 years in every 5 in Canada seems pretty generous. Try the requirements for the US to retain your green card, a lot harder.
No. I am referring to naturalization, not merely maintaining PR obligations.3 years of physical presence only matter to apply for citizenship, not to keep PR, as previously stated. it is not a consecutive requirement either. You may want to do a bit more research to correct your assumptions.
you posted in the PR Obligations forum, so it is assumed you are referring to keep your PR status
Then you should say so in your first post rather than saying you are trying to better analyze in terms of policy if the physical residency requirements (3 out of 5) are problematic to achieve for certain immigrants and why. At first, I thought you are trying to make a research paper of some sort.Thanks for sharing. It is not hard for you, so my question is not addressed to you. Also, if Canada is your home, why would you mention the US? I don't care about the US. Thanks for your thoughts. All the best.
Just Wow!My original post is addressed specifically to those immigrants for whom the naturalization residency is a problem. With the second question being why.
Unfortunately, I've been stuck with a bunch of mansplainers, expressing their opinions/judgments. So, utterly useless responses.
And I have not received a single response about someone's actual experience, which is what this question was targeted at.
Even if I want to write an article, random opinions contribute to nothing. They are a waste of time.
You realize this is a public forum and anyone can say what they want?My original post is addressed specifically to those immigrants for whom the naturalization residency is a problem. With the second question being why.
Unfortunately, I've been stuck with a bunch of mansplainers, expressing their opinions/judgments. So, utterly useless responses.
And I have not received a single response about someone's actual experience, which is what this question was targeted at.
Even if I want to write an article, random opinions contribute to nothing. They are a waste of time.
Hahaha..what a loser.My original post is addressed specifically to those immigrants for whom the naturalization residency is a problem. With the second question being why.
Unfortunately, I've been stuck with a bunch of mansplainers, expressing their opinions/judgments. So, utterly useless responses.
And I have not received a single response about someone's actual experience, which is what this question was targeted at.
Even if I want to write an article, random opinions contribute to nothing. They are a waste of time.
I recommend you post that question on Facebook, where only people who agree with you will reply and reinforce your feeling of being right.Thanks for sharing. It is not hard for you, so my question is not addressed to you. Also, if Canada is your home, why would you mention the US? I don't care about the US. Thanks for your thoughts. All the best.
You missed out that chip on their shoulderYou realize this is a public forum and anyone can say what they want?
To be waiting for such a specific group of people that may be in the same situation, for anecdotal experience, will not yield many results.
If you care about gaining citizenship, then you will need to make some choices to make that happen, of course. There's no workarounds or loopholes if that's what you're asking about.
Good luck, it sounds like you need to take a breather and relax.