Hi,
I would appreciate some help/ guidance. I landed in Canada in 2015 for a few weeks and have been out of Canada since then. I applied for my PR card and SIN.
I plan to return to Canada in late Sept 2019. My PR expires in March 2020, which means I will have only about 6 months residency. However, I have been working for (the subsidiary of a) Canadian company this whole time and will have an offer from another Canadian company in Sept.
Will I be able to show this to renew my PR (assuming I can get this my written on a company letter head)? What are the challenges I will face when entering Canada and while renewing my PR card? Is it straightforward? Thanks all for your help!
To the extent the others have emphasized the RISK of being reported upon your arrival at a PoE, I concur in that caution.
In this regard, they are very likely correct that the time working for a Canadian subsidiary will
NOT be given credit toward compliance with the RO, leaving you way short, way in breach, and thus very much at risk for being reported and losing PR status. (If you do not understand this, this is something discussed in depth in other topics, including a topic I started earlier this year specifically to go into some depth about the
employed-abroad-by-a-Canadian-business credit. More re this at end of post.)
That said, I disagree with the proposition that you cannot "claim" the time working for the Canadian subsidiary.
And when you arrive here, IF you are questioned about why you have been abroad so long, or asked related questions, and in particular if you are referred to Secondary and examined about Residency Obligation compliance, you should claim the time working abroad for a Canadian subsidiary as a reason for why you remained abroad so long and along with that further assert (truthfully, honestly) related factors . . . such as (again, if TRUTHFUL and HONEST) you needed the experience with the subsidiary to qualify for and obtain a position IN Canada . . . or you believed the time working for the subsidiary would count (again, only if this is truthful). Explain whatever YOUR REAL REASONS were.
It is very unlikely that the time working for the Canadian subsidiary will count toward meeting the RO. Which leaves you in breach of the RO. But that time could be a big positive factor in evaluating H&C reasons for why you should be allowed to retain your PR status.
Probably a good idea to have as much supporting documentation you can to show that the employer is a Canadian business or at least the subsidiary of a Canadian business.
But mostly . . .
IF ASKED . . . remember, at the PIL it is better to answer questions as directly and SIMPLY as possible, without elaborating . . . and if you are lucky you could be waived into Canada without being closely questioned about RO compliance.
BUT if you are referred to Secondary and more or less specifically asked about RO compliance, which seems fairly likely to happen, that is when and where to provide more extensive details about WHY you have remained abroad and the employment related elements. Be OPEN. Be HONEST. Explain your situation and decisions.
No one here can predict how this will go. A lot depends on a wide range of factors, not the least of which is YOUR CREDIBILITY (which is why it is so important to be truthful, to be honest . . . appearing to be hesitant, vague, or evasive, let alone at all deceptive, can make a huge, huge difference).
SUMMARY: You are well in breach of the RO. So the risk of being reported is substantial. While working for a Canadian subsidiary is NOT going to get you credit toward meeting the RO, it could be a factor tipping the scales in your favour otherwise. How it will actually go is very, very difficult to forecast . . . and, in this regard,
PLEASE report back how it does in fact go for you.
WHAT HAPPENS THEN:
How it goes at the PoE upon arrival can vary. It is possible you could be waived through by a PIL officer, without being asked any in-depth RO questions.
The other possibility is you are referred to Secondary, and questioned closely about RO compliance, which I have discussed above and which itself can lead to different outcomes, including:
-- being allowed to enter Canada without being reported
-- being issued a 44(1) Report, which in turn leads to an interview with another officer (may be by telephone) who can decide whether to issue a Departure Order or allow you to keep PR status
The later first: if you are issued a 44(1) Report and interviewed by another officer, and issued a Departure Order, you will be allowed to enter Canada and you should then appeal (if you want to try keeping PR status). If in contrast that officer accepts your explanation of reasons for why you remained abroad as sufficient to allow you to keep PR status, you will be allowed to enter Canada AND you should be able to then proceed to apply for a new PR card with low risk, based on that PoE officer's formal H&C decision.
If you are simply waived into Canada by a PIL officer or if referred to Secondary and questioned, and that officer also more or less waives you into Canada without making any formal report, count your blessings AND WAIT TWO YEARS, or at least nearly two years, BEFORE APPLYING FOR A NEW PR CARD. Use your current PR card to get set up for provincial health care and a drivers license. And a SIN if you did not already get one. Then avoid travel outside Canada for TWO YEARS. Avoid making any applications to IRCC for TWO YEARS. Get yourself into compliance with the PR RO before you engage in any further transactions with CBSA or IRCC.
MORE RE RO CREDIT FOR TIME EMPLOYED BY CANADIAN SUBSIDIARY: This comment is mostly for emphasis. I suspect you may not fully recognize or accept the caution offered by
@canuck78 and
@Bs65 and myself, that your employment with a Canadian subsidiary abroad will NOT qualify for the
employed-abroad-by-Canadian-business credit toward RO compliance. If indeed you have doubts about this, again there is a lot of information in this forum about this issue and, more to the point, how difficult it is to actually qualify for the credit. Just being employed by a Canadian business is NOT enough to get the credit. As I mentioned, there is a topic I started to address this subject in-depth. See:
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/working-abroad-ro-credit-including-business-trips-an-update.607559/
Sample quote:
CAUTION: Actually qualifying for the working-abroad-for-Canadian-business-credit toward PR RO tends to be very tricky for any PR who actually needs the credit. It warrants noting, for example, even though I am very confident there is NO rule or policy which precludes the credit for "business trips," that does NOT mean business trips will qualify for the credit. The requirements are complex AND OFTEN STRICTLY APPLIED, depending on the FACTS in the particular case, which are typically also complex.