snadhan said:
Hi
I hold a PR from mid 2013 and have been travelling to Canada twice a year starting 2014 to visit my family (wife & 2 kids) who have been residing in Canada since then. Considering I do not meet residency obligations. I would like to continue to travel on my PR till it expires and then if my PR cannot be renewed will have no other choice, I understand, but to renounce my PR and apply for a TRV or Visit visa to continue to visit the family. Can you please advise on the following queries which relates to this
1. If I do get stopped at the airport for non-fulfillment of RO. What actually happens procedurally? Will they make me renounce my PR at the airport and deny me entry into Canada or can i confirm to them my intention to renounce and continue to travel till the expiry of my PR card and then renounce my PR.
2. If I refuse to renounce until the expiry of my PR I understand that I will be reported. Will this affect my chances of getting a TRV or visit visa or my spousal sponsorship after renouncing of PR.
3.What are my chances of getting a visitor visa or TRV on renouncing my PR?
4. On renouncement I intend to re-apply vide spousal sponsorship. Are there any other factors such as being stopped at the airport for non-fulfillment of RO or renouncement affect my application under spousal sponsorship
Would appreciate your comments / guidance in the matter
Before getting bogged down in details, a key factor in what you decide to do depends on your future plans, and in particular on whether or not you plan to
come to Canada to stay, and if yes, you plan to come to Canada to stay, the key is
when do you plan to settle permanently in Canada.
First, the PoE procedure:
A PR cannot be made to renounce status. Renouncing PR status is entirely voluntarily. A PoE officer may offer or even
suggest renouncing PR status. A PoE officer should not encourage let alone push a PR to renounce status, although apparently this does happen sometimes. Nonetheless, the PR cannot be forced to renounce status, and many if not most are better off not renouncing status. However, indeed in some circumstances renouncing status can be the more prudent, practical approach. But that depends on a lot of circumstances.
A PR cannot be denied entry into Canada (while there are exceptions, those would be security or criminality related, not about PR Residency Obligation compliance, and those individuals are subject to being detained rather than denied entry).
If a PR is referred to Secondary and examined at the PoE regarding PR RO compliance, and the officer determines that the PR is in breach of the PR RO, the
worst case scenario is the officer issues a 44(1) Report for Inadmissibility (due to PR RO breach), which is almost immediately referred to another officer (technically a "Minister's Delegate") who interviews the PR (technically this is a "hearing"), in person or telephonically, and issues a Departure Order (sometimes called a "Removal Order"),
and then the PR is ALLOWED to enter Canada.
In the course of that process, the possibility of renouncing PR status may arise or even be discussed. Deciding to
NOT renounce PR status at that time will
NOT negatively affect any of the options you will have.
There are too many factors to consider, regarding when it would be better to renounce PR status, to go into those in any depth now. The more obvious situations typically involve a PR who is way, way in breach of the PR RO, who has minimal reasons which might make a H&C case for keeping PR status and thus virtually no chance to win an appeal, whose plan was merely to visit for a relatively short time (less than six months), and there is no other benefit likely gained by making an appeal.
There is probably some benefit in appealing for you
depending on your particular circumstances and your future plans. Again, for you a key consideration is whether you plan to actually come to Canada to stay, and if so, when.
In the meantime, the expiration date on your PR card does not mean much at all. Sure, you can decline to renounce PR status while you PR card is still valid. You can decline to renounce PR status after your PR card expires.
If you are reported at the PoE and a Departure Order is issued, as I already noted you will then be allowed to enter Canada. You are given a specific period of time in which to make an appeal. If you do not appeal, you
lose PR status when that time passes. Even though you still have a valid PR card in possession, it would no be longer valid. PR status would be gone.
If, or when reported and issued a Departure Order, you will probably want to appeal. Do so within the time for doing this (I forget whether that is 30 or 60 days from the day the Departure Order is issued). Making the appeal itself is not complicated. No lawyer is needed. If you think you have a chance to win the appeal, you will do better by getting a lawyer at some point during that process, but you do not need a lawyer to make (in effect start) the appeal itself.
If you appeal,
you keep PR status pending the outcome of the appeal. Appeals can take from many months to over a year, sometimes two years. If your current PR card expires while the appeal is pending, you can apply for and should be issued a special one-year PR card. This can be done again if the appeal remains pending when the one-year card expires.
Advantages to making an appeal:
Again, perhaps the most important consideration in your circumstances is whether or not you plan to come to Canada to stay, and if yes, when.
For example, if your plan is to come to Canada to stay in the near future (less than a year, the sooner the better), and you appeal, if you then settle in Canada while the appeal is pending, and it takes a significant amount of time before the appeal is decided, the combination of having your family living and well-settled in Canada, and you finally staying permanently in Canada, significantly increases the likelihood of succeeding in the appeal.
This can be a bit tricky, depending on how much you actually were in breach of the PR RO and the reasons why you remained outside Canada, so it is very difficult to forecast how this will go for you in particular. The reported IAD decisions tend to indicate a big difference between the spouse who is still working and living abroad versus the spouse who has finally settled in Canada with his or her family who is well-settled in Canada. If the PR spouse is still working abroad, fact that family is in Canada does not help the PR's H&C case much at all . . . indeed, since the family has been getting along with the one spouse mostly abroad, that evidences the family will not suffer much hardship if the one spouse loses PR status.
In contrast, if IRCC perceives that the PR spouse is finally settled in Canada, and the longer the PR has been in fact staying in Canada at the time of the IAD hearing (which can easily be well more than a year after the Departure Order is issued), the more likely IRCC is to allow the PR to keep status.
The significance of the difference between being settled in Canada and still primarily being abroad cannot be overstated: it is huge. (It is a significant factor in almost any H&C case, but in the case of a PR spouse with family settled in Canada, it is huge.)
It may be that IRCC perceives that denying the appeal will be followed by a sponsored PR application, which is likely to be successful, so there is no point in bogging down IRCC resources in order to make the PR jump through those hoops.
But make no mistake: without settling in Canada before the appeal is decided, the outcome in these cases tend to be negative, loss of PR status.
Obviously, other factors are significant. The extent to which the PR breached the PR RO is a big one. The reasons why are important.
Ignore advise which does not recognize how variable H&C cases are. For example, disregard any assertion that the need to stay working abroad is not grounds for H&C relief.
It is true that generally the PR who is in breach of the PR RO due to economic factors, leading to the PR working abroad, is not given much of a break because of his or her need to work abroad.
BUT this reason can really help the PR who nonetheless settles his family in Canada and makes a concerted effort to himself move to Canada, but due to economic need that is delayed resulting in a breach of the PR RO. By itself, the economic reason is unlikely to persuade Canada to allow the PR to keep status, but in combination with other positive factors, like family settled in Canada and the PR himself finally settling in Canada before the decision is made, it can really help. Especially if it appears the PR's agenda was to in fact fully make the move to Canada to settle permanently but circumstances made it too difficult to do so in time to meet the PR RO.
A lot can depend on whether the PR appears to deserve to keep PR status.
There is no requirement that a PR settle permanently in Canada. There is no requirement that a PR deserve to keep PR status. These are, nonetheless, huge factors in making the H&C case for keeping status.
CAUTION Regarding Spousal Sponsorship If PR Lost:
First, it warrants noting that all other things in order, the individual who has lost PR status due to a breach of the PR RO is
NOT disadvantaged by this relative to visiting or obtaining other status. On the contrary, all things being equal, such individuals are generally not considered to be at risk of overstaying a visa, or of working in Canada without status, making it easier to get temporary status. And there is no negative impact on any subsequent PR application, be that the Express Entry or Spousal Sponsored application.
But there is little to be gained by rushing to make the spousal sponsored PR application
unless and until there is a firm plan to actually settle permanently in Canada.
There are exceptions to this. I have already gone way long in this post and will not go down that road here. But generally, so long as there are no other negatives (criminal charges for example) impeding obtaining visitor status to visit family, better to do that, get temporary status as appropriate, for the purpose of visiting Canada
unless and until planning to actually settle in Canada.