xMadMaxx said:
Hello,
I married a Canadian (who was living outside canada) in 2001 & became a perminant residant on April 2007. However, due to personal reasons we had to leave Canada in 2008.
My question is, I am not planning on going back to Canada to live & work any time soon BUT I plan to go for vacation. Is it worth while to apply for travel document and renew my PR (I have to stay in canada for about 7 weeks which is a bit difficult since I have a job outside Canada) or Just enter from US (as I have US visa)?!!
I know that I can't apply for a visa unless I renounce my PR which I don't want to as eventually we are going to move to canada in 2 years time.
Thanks
My impression is that you understand the key aspects of this situation even though they are not specifically stated:
-- you have been cohabiting with a Canadian citizen spouse for more than two years during the most recent five years
-- you are asking about renewing the PR
CARD not PR itself
The first of these is the critical one. This is the element which indicates you are in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation and are, therefore, admissible to Canada. If my impression is
not correct, that is, if you have not been cohabiting with a Canadian citizen spouse for more than two years during the most recent five years, you are undoubtedly in breach of the PR RO, inadmissible, and would be denied a PR Travel Document or, if you travel via the U.S., likely be reported for inadmissibility (44(1) Report) upon arrival at a POE. Exception: if you have compelling H&C case, of which there is no hint in your post.
Assuming you have been cohabiting with a Canadian citizen spouse . . .
Assuming you have been cohabiting with a Canadian citizen spouse for more than two years during the most recent five years, there is no reason to not apply for a PR Travel Document for the purpose of traveling to Canada. Make sure to include proof, with the application:
-- in qualified relationship (copy of marriage certificate is best) with spouse
-- spouse is a Canadian citizen (copy of Canadian passport or citizenship certificate; copy of birth certificate showing birth in Canada might suffice)
-- documents supporting declaration of time living together during the previous five years, that is, proof of cohabitation
Regarding applying for new PR card:
For now (subject to change), to be eligible for a replacement/renewed
PR card, the PR needs to be
in Canada. Technically it is possible to come to Canada briefly so as to make the application in Canada, and potentially return to get the PR card later when it is delivered. It is obvious that a large number of PRs more or less living abroad
attempt to do this, and a significant number of them are probably successful.
However, this involves some difficulties and pitfalls. In particular, though, many who attempt this succumb to the temptation to make a misrepresentation about their current residential address, in the hopes the new card will be mailed to that address, collected there by a trusted friend or family member, to be forwarded to the PR or retrieved during a subsequent brief visit.
This is a foolish gamble for someone who is in compliance with the PR RO.
The primary advantage there is in having a new PR card, for someone who is in compliance with the PR RO (such as by accompanying a Canadian citizen spouse abroad), is that it makes traveling to Canada easier, no need to apply for another PR TD when you want to travel to Canada. The PR TD process, however, is not so difficult, for someone who can easily document RO compliance (even if that is by accompanying a Canadian citizen spouse), that would make it worth taking any risks by fudging in the PR card application (and if your employment is continuing abroad, there really is no way to avoid truthfully stating that where you live is your address abroad).
Reminder: a new PR card will not preserve PR status. It does not protect the PR from PR RO examinations. A new PR card does not extend status.
One other advantage is that it would make it easier to re-establish a life in Canada if and when that was your plan, as in make it easier to obtain Provincial health care coverage and get a Provincial drivers license.
The current processing time listed for obtaining a PR card (replacement/renewal) is 171 days. There is a significant risk, for a PR who has been living abroad and is relying on the credit in the exception for PRs accompanying a Canadian citizen spouse, of at least a referral to secondary review and a longer processing time. There is a significantly higher risk of being required to pick up the card in person, rather than it being mailed to the PR's residential address.
Nonetheless, how a particular PR approaches this is very much a personal, individual decision, dependent on the specific circumstances for the individual, and there is no one guideline for all PRs despite their being in similar situations.