Possibly. BUT NOT necessarily. A likely scenario is somewhere IN BETWEEN. A rather likely scenario is there was a 44(1) Report issued which remains outstanding. In which event @sgaur is INADMISSIBLE but still a Permanent Resident.At this point you are either OK or you are not and missed a hearing date. You might as well apply to renew your PR card and see what happens.
@sgaur -- In any event, there is NO HARM in contacting the help centre and making an inquiry as to current status. Doing so will NOT trigger any action worse than what the situation currently is. AND GETTING INFORMED is almost certainly the BEST NEXT STEP here.
It is NOT likely that the 44(1) Report for Inadmissibility based on a breach of the Residency Obligation has just gone away. As I go into detail regarding, in my previous long post, it is likely the Report is still OUTSTANDING, and if that is the case, you are INADMISSIBLE, meaning the days you are staying in Canada are NOT counting toward compliance with the PR Residency Obligation. (Note: being inadmissible is, perhaps, somewhat good news, in that means you still have PR status, and thus still a chance to keep your status.)Nope. But I am paying taxes last 2 years. I purchased property in Canada. IRCC will come to know my actions very easily. They always sent email. I did not receive any email also. I am a positive person and hopeful of positive outcome.
There are rather limited possibilities regarding your current situation; again, the possibilities are:
-- Report still outstanding, still to be reviewed; in meantime you are INADMISSIBLE and days in Canada do not count toward RO compliance
-- Report was reviewed in absentia, and there was a determination, a decision
-- Report was reviewed in absentia, and there was a determination, a decision
-- -- resulting in a favourable H&C decision allowing you to retain PR status, OR
-- -- resulting in a decision terminating your PR status
-- -- resulting in a decision terminating your PR status
The first possibility, the report remains outstanding, seems the more likely.
Again, contacting the help centre is not going to trigger anything more negative than what the situation already is. There is NO need to proceed in the fog. GET INFORMED.
For example, if your status is OK, then it is OK to make a straight-forward PR card application based on days in Canada during the last two years. BUT if the Report is still outstanding (which seems likely), at the least you will need to make a H&C case if you apply for a PR card. Big difference.
THUS what to do based on what the help centre says about your status (addressing the possibilities in reverse order):
-- if the help centre says you do not have PR status, that it was terminated, that is probably it, done deal; a lawyer might offer some advice about potential recourse (request for reconsideration, or seeking review based on lack of notice, or such)
-- if the help centre says you have valid PR status, that too is probably it, done deal, IN YOUR FAVOUR; good to go, apply for a PR card
-- if the help centre says you have a 44(1) Report outstanding, or you are inadmissible, or anything to such effect, your status is still up-in-air, to be determined . . . AND IMPORTANTLY this means the days you have been in Canada do NOT count toward RO compliance . . . you will need to make a persuasive H&C case to keep status . . . and in this scenario I'd suggest discussing what to do with a LAWYER
-- if the help centre says you have valid PR status, that too is probably it, done deal, IN YOUR FAVOUR; good to go, apply for a PR card
-- if the help centre says you have a 44(1) Report outstanding, or you are inadmissible, or anything to such effect, your status is still up-in-air, to be determined . . . AND IMPORTANTLY this means the days you have been in Canada do NOT count toward RO compliance . . . you will need to make a persuasive H&C case to keep status . . . and in this scenario I'd suggest discussing what to do with a LAWYER
My sense is that the last is the more likely scenario. In any event this is NOT going to get resolved by waiting. Yes, you could simply apply for a new PR card and wait to see what happens. BUT if, as it seems likely, if the Inadmissibility Report is still outstanding, it would be prudent to either get the help of a lawyer OR do some more homework before deciding on your next step . . . .
. . . and if your next step is applying for a new PR card, at the least be sure to make a strong H&C case in the application (frankly I'd worry about approaching this even this way without the advice of a lawyer).