Hello everyone,
I am trying to find an answer to this question but throughout the forum I see nothing but opinions and hearsay, and I want to hear real reports of people who had an official response from IRCC on their case.
The scenario is:
- applicant has lived in a country (not his home country, but this should be irrelevant) for over six months. A PCC is required for Express Entry.
- PCC was obtained after applicant's period of residency in that country. That is, after the applicant last lived in that country.
- applicant is living in another country (e.g., Canada) when filing e-APR
- applicant goes back to PCC-required country for a short visit: be it 1 day or a couple of weeks. This short visit happens BEFORE submitting e-APR (after e-APR, visits won't matter).
Many members state that IRCC's page on Police Certificates (http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/security/police-cert/intro.asp ) is "clear" on this matter, and that if you go back for a visit your PCC becomes invalid. However, there is no formal definition for the term "lived" on any of IRCC's pages. There is nothing to indicate that a short visit constitutes "living".
The fact that they require a PCC for a country for which one accumulates 6 months or more of physical presence even though they were just on work or tourism (without establishing residency there) is a separate test that leads to the PCC being required or not, but there is nothing explicit that indicates that this same rule applies for the validity of the PCC.
Of course, one would be safe obtaining a newer PCC after that short visit. But the question is not whether it would be safer, but whether it is required at all - that is, if short visits truly invalidate a previously-obtained PCC, given the trouble and costs and delays involved.
Thus, for the sake of many in the same situation, I would like to hear from people that actually experienced one of the 3 cases below:
1) applicant or dependents were in the scenario above, did NOT obtain a new PCC after a short visit, and had their application for permanent residence in Canada APPROVED.
2) applicant or dependants were in the scenario above, did NOT obtain a new PCC after a short visit, and had their application for permanent residence REJECTED.
3) same scenario, but IRCC contacted the applicant and requested them to provide a new PCC for that country.
Kindly reply only if this happened to you - no opinions or assertions without a case to back it up, please.
I am trying to find an answer to this question but throughout the forum I see nothing but opinions and hearsay, and I want to hear real reports of people who had an official response from IRCC on their case.
The scenario is:
- applicant has lived in a country (not his home country, but this should be irrelevant) for over six months. A PCC is required for Express Entry.
- PCC was obtained after applicant's period of residency in that country. That is, after the applicant last lived in that country.
- applicant is living in another country (e.g., Canada) when filing e-APR
- applicant goes back to PCC-required country for a short visit: be it 1 day or a couple of weeks. This short visit happens BEFORE submitting e-APR (after e-APR, visits won't matter).
Many members state that IRCC's page on Police Certificates (http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/security/police-cert/intro.asp ) is "clear" on this matter, and that if you go back for a visit your PCC becomes invalid. However, there is no formal definition for the term "lived" on any of IRCC's pages. There is nothing to indicate that a short visit constitutes "living".
The fact that they require a PCC for a country for which one accumulates 6 months or more of physical presence even though they were just on work or tourism (without establishing residency there) is a separate test that leads to the PCC being required or not, but there is nothing explicit that indicates that this same rule applies for the validity of the PCC.
Of course, one would be safe obtaining a newer PCC after that short visit. But the question is not whether it would be safer, but whether it is required at all - that is, if short visits truly invalidate a previously-obtained PCC, given the trouble and costs and delays involved.
Thus, for the sake of many in the same situation, I would like to hear from people that actually experienced one of the 3 cases below:
1) applicant or dependents were in the scenario above, did NOT obtain a new PCC after a short visit, and had their application for permanent residence in Canada APPROVED.
2) applicant or dependants were in the scenario above, did NOT obtain a new PCC after a short visit, and had their application for permanent residence REJECTED.
3) same scenario, but IRCC contacted the applicant and requested them to provide a new PCC for that country.
Kindly reply only if this happened to you - no opinions or assertions without a case to back it up, please.