bh said:
I appreciate your reply and respect your opinion regarding my question of settling in Quebec but I'm assuming that there is probably no official documentation anywhere (such as on CIC website or may be on other official websites such as settlement.org) as otherwise you would probably have added the link in your reply.
Direct from the CIC website: Permanent residents have the right "To live, work or study anywhere in Canada." (Source: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/newcomers/about-pr.asp)
It just takes time to hunt down definitive citations to everything. This is something I know, having researched it.
Section 6 of the Charter is explicit here:
- Citizens have the absolute right of entry
- Citizens and PR have the right to live anywhere in Canada.
Charter of Rights: http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/Const/page-15.html
bh said:
I guess you can see that I'm fairly nervous of starting the process of settling in Quebec and eventually finding out that it is not working out, although I would have to say that the fact that the document check-list as part of application to obtain the PR card does not include the CSQ is certainly reassuring.
Well, nothing guarantees that you go to Quebec and then find out you don't like it. But you won't go to Quebec and then find out you cannot be there legally - that's not going to happen.
bh said:
Regarding the residency obligation, we are acutely aware of the timeline. Now that you mentioned it, I can ask another related question here. We have visited Canada a couple of time after initial landing and spent a couple of weeks there and we intend to visit again. We are not sure, however, if the time we spend in Canada visiting every now and then could be eventually counted towards the final count of 1095 days to satisfy the residency obligation. The other thing is there is no documented evidence of as to how many days we spend in Canada every time we visit because, we have noted that, not all officers at the ports of entry and exit stamp the passport each time.
The residency obligation is two years in five. 1095 is the number of days in the past four years required for citizenship. Any time you spend in Canada, for whatever reason, counts towards the PR residency obligation. You have observed an important point: you will not be able to rely upon the CBSA to prove you were in Canada.
It is your obligation to prove that you meet the residency obligation. CIC will not try to prove that you
do not meet the residency obligation. Look at the PR card application and focus on the renewal section - you will have to provide them with a list of your absences. They have the right to ask you to prove that you have met the PR residency obligation. That is your obligation to prove, not theirs to disprove.
bh said:
Regarding the PR travel document, we are not visa exempt. However, when we first landed in Ontario, the officer told us that we would be able to re-enter Canada without a PR travel document as long as we enter by road and using a personal vehicle. If one would arrive in Canada either by air or by road but through a commercial vehicle, one would have to have either a PR card or a travel document. This did turn out to be true as we drove to Canada twice after landing, once to Ontario and another time to Quebec and we were allowed to enter based on our landing document. I thought I would just mention it.
Yes, if you can get to a POE, all you need to do is show your executed COPR and your passport. This is covered in ENF 4 "Port of Entry Examinations" and I've quoted it many times on this forum. So, yes, you are right, you can drive into Canada in a private conveyance, but a commercial air carrier will insist that you must have a PR card. Technically, even someone from a non-visa-exempt country must show a PR card to travel, but I've never heard of anyone from the US (for example) being required to get a PRTD by the airline.