I really can't disagree more. My spouse can't fly out of Canada and then back without the PR card. So it is required.
You claim the PRTD is an alternative, but the processing time is unknown before leaving and so is the end result of application. It's a ridiculous equivalence and you know it.
The PR card works essentially the same as the passport, and I'm pretty sure there'd be massive protests if passport processing was 299 days.
Think about it. Stop defending the inept government.
I am a Canadian citizen. But, as an immigrant, most of my family is abroad. Including my daughter and granddaughter. I cannot travel to visit them now either. Not because I do not have proper travel documents; I have the proper documents. But because there is a real crisis and travel is highly restricted.
I might say "
Think about it." But I am not here telling anyone what to do. (But sure, being old and in the way, I tend to bristle a bit when someone thinks they are entitled to tell me what to do when they aren't.)
I make no effort to defend the government. My effort is to explain what is happening as best I can discern. I agree with some criticisms. I disagree with the gratuitous whining. But mostly I try to focus on what is happening and illuminate as best we can where things are headed.
To be clear, a passport is a "travel document." In contrast, the PR card is merely a status card. There is no comparison, despite many who fail to grasp the differences.
In the meantime access to obtaining a PR Travel Document is difficult for the same reason that access to a new PR card is difficult.
Sure, but for the impact of the Covid-19 crisis, using a PR TD to travel back to Canada can be very inconvenient for SOME (for most, it really is not), but outside the bubble of narcissism, personal convenience no where near approaches what is "essential" or "necessary."
Note, too, that unlike Canadian citizens, the Canadian Charter of Rights does not protect a PR's international mobility. This is just how it is. Some may believe it should be otherwise. But it is what it is. Processing PR cards is not an essential priority UNLESS the PR petitions for urgent processing based on legitimate grounds (but unfortunately, these applications appear to be bogged down by scores of requests by those whose "urgent" need is, so to say, not especially urgent).
The thing that I do not understand is why to dismiss our concerns and problems as whining.
There is no clarity as to the timeframe for a PR Travel Document either. So there is a big unknown, or time delay in get the only two forms of documents that would allow you back into the country.
These are related. Not all complaints are created equal. Not all "urgent" needs are created equal.
I did not and do not dismiss all the concerns.
Canada is currently restricting the vast majority of international travel . . . with exceptions for travel that is essential and non-discretionary.
We have family on the other side of town who we were isolated from for months (yeah, we know many were not following the lockdown guidelines . . . pox to them . . . we have). With some issues. And as an immigrant, most of my family is abroad, and I continue to be isolated from them . . . even the ones who are not all that far away but on the U.S. side of the border.
Leading to . . .
Everybody has his/her issues during this crisis.
And lots and lots and lots of issues. Some big ones. Some really big ones. Like life and death itself.
Business people I know are not at all likely to recover from this. Others are out of work and struggling badly due to this. People I know who suffer from certain disadvantages are suffering badly from this. It is an unmitigated disaster. A crisis. And oh yeah, many thousands have DIED, and many more will die.
The government is scrambling to meet the most pressing needs. I do not say this to defend them. I say this to observe the obvious: it's a mess out there, still getting messier by the day. Anyone expecting a reallocation of government resources to PR card application processing anytime soon is not dealing with the reality. And those demanding action soon, at the expense of other government services, deserve as much criticism as anyone.