As noted previously, given the OP's history, non-routine processing could have been anticipated.1. It would be great if you shed some light as why CIC is going beyond the norm even though OP stayed more than 1000 days before he was ever detected?
2. Is CIC acting within the ACT? Don't you think that if they make negative determination, the OP can have recourse because he was not detected before he was back in compliance?
3. Have you come across a case law handling similar circumstances?
4. Was the OP caught in this RO determination because he acknowledged he was oout of Canada more than 1095 days?
Thanks for your clarification when you have some time..
Purpose of PR status is so individuals can permanently settle and live in Canada. The purpose of a remarkably flexible Residency Obligation is to accommodate unusual contingencies and circumstances, NOT to facilitate a lifestyle of extended absences generally.
This and its implications are overlooked, ignored, or disputed by many, and at least underestimated by many more. In contrast, the history of PR RO enforcement, and in particular the reasons stated for scores and scores of official IAD and FC decisions, amply illustrate this.
This is not to suggest that more is necessary; meeting the minimum PR Residency Obligation is sufficient to keep PR status. PRs can leverage or exploit the full range of flexibility afforded by the PR RO. And keep PR status. But as I and some others have oft repeated and emphasized, cutting-it-close has RISKS, not the least of which is the risk of falling short proving actual presence, which can loom large for any PR with continuing residential and employment ties abroad, or with extended absences abroad inconsistent with permanently settling in Canada.
The burden of proving compliance with the PR RO is on the PR.
Saying it is so does not make it so. That is, reporting compliance with the PR RO is not proving compliance with the PR RO.
It is far more likely that PRs cutting-it-close, or with a history of cutting-it-close, or in particular a history indicating prior breach of the PR RO, will be required to affirmatively prove their compliance with the PR RO.
Part of the proof problem is that the more time and ties an individual has abroad, the more skeptical IRCC is likely to be about time the PR claims or asserts he or she was actually in Canada, unless there is affirmative, direct, and objective evidence to show that presence.
Another part of the proof problem is that there are inherent concerns, if not outright questions, about a PR's credibility if and when the PR has a history which is not consistent with permanently settling in Canada. Credibility always looms large. The importance of credibility is perhaps second only to actually meeting the requirements themselves.
Some further observations regarding the purpose of PR and its implications:
There appears to be a common misconception among some PRs that the PR Residency Obligation is intended to allow, or even facilitate, a lifestyle which involves living or working outside Canada more than in Canada, a lifestyle which does not constitute settling in Canada to live in Canada permanently. This attitude overlooks or ignores the actual purpose of a grant of Canadian PR status: so the individual can permanently settle and establish a life in Canada.
The remarkably flexible and lenient PR RO is intended to accommodate a broad, broad range of contingencies and emergencies which immigrants to Canada might encounter. It is intended to give PRs enough leeway to accommodate such contingencies and emergencies so that PRs do not have to worry about proving their intent to settle in Canada permanently or about proving there was a compelling reason for the extended absence consistent with an intent to settle in Canada permanently.
The remarkably flexible and lenient PR RO is NOT intended to accommodate a lifestyle allowing PRs to live or work abroad more than in Canada, even though it does in fact incidentally allow PRs to, in effect, exploit the policy this way.
There is no hint, no hint at all (that I have observed in following the PR RO issue for nearly a decade now), that IRCC (same for CIC previously) deliberately punishes PRs who are, in effect, exploiting how flexible and lenient the minimal presence needed to comply with the PR RO.
But there are plenty of indicators that IRCC (same for CIC previously) is more likely to have concerns about a PR whose history is not consistent with settling down in Canada permanently. There are obvious reasons for this, with concerns about the credibility of such PRs looming large, as well as the simple logic that if there is a question about where an individual was at any given time, it is more likely that individual was where he or she was most of the time. That is, in the absence of direct evidence of actual presence in Canada, for a given period of time, it is reasonable to infer that a PR who is not settled and living in Canada permanently was outside Canada during that period of time. At the least, this imposes an obligation on IRCC to make sufficient inquiries, or even investigations, to determine the facts more conclusively than relying on the PR's own reporting.
Further more detailed responses to particular questions will follow in separate posts.