You would think but believe they got their card and left. That puts them more at risk of being flagged again. The more I see the less I have confidence in both IRCC and CRA. Would add province health authorities as well. There seems to be zero monitoring, no coordination between agencies, a very forgiving system, almost no deportations (not sure how someone can apply for H&C multiple times in a row until someone finally approves the file without being removed), a large number of protected people visiting their home countries, lots of people receiving child benefit and/or welfare while abroad (even while living in the US where CRA should have US taxes attached to any Canadian filing), access to medical care even in instances where people are clearly not meeting residency requirements (coming to Canada for under 6 months to have a child and leaving and using a health card), many living in Canada and using Canadian services while working for their US employer remotely and primarily paying US taxes (used to be a border town issue but now essentially a pathway for H1Bs to live anywhere in Canada for 3 years to qualify for Canadian citizenship while continuing to work for their US employers and returning to the US after the 3 years), etc. Sure that by next year people will be able to get citizenship after 3 years and not even have to come back to Canada for the citizenship oath.
The fact that supervisa stays are now 5 years plus a 2 year extension is also going to be a huge disaster. Don’t think any of the parents consider an up to 7 year stay a visit and will have nowhere to return to if they don’t receive PR during that period of time through PGP. With the increased numbers of immigrants there will be a very large volume of seniors in Canada on supervisas. Whether a senior is on a supervisa,a TRV, without status or has PR/citizenship they still access healthcare so will place additional pressure on the healthcare system when the baby boomers who have lived and worked in Canada all or a good proportion of their lives are already pushing the system past it’s limits. Seniors will stay with or without status will place increased pressure on the health system which will have even less GPs than we currently have since most GPs are over 45. Go into hospitals in Brampton and Surrey and you can see how planned infrastructure based on 2-4 residents per household and lack of investment has already created a disaster for the local health systems without adding seniors on supervisas, TRVs, without status and who have received PR/citizenship through PGP which just adds to the system always being over capacity, always above average wait times, etc. Birth tourism mostly in Richmond, North York, Richmond Hill and NICUs in Toronto and Vancouver also creating incredible strain and loss of funds on OB/GYN and forcing even more women with high risk pregnancies to be sent to the US for NICU beds. There seems to be a total lack of planning. Thank goodness someone opened up one GP only med school but we need a few more, more nursing school spots, more medical tech programs, more medical lab programs and spots, etc. Don’t get me started on Ford who is essentially going against all the study outcomes that prove that privatizing surgeries will cost more and not improve wait times. Why would we learn from the data of other provinces. Quebec is actually reversing use of private facilities after it proved to cost more and not help wait times. Never was delusional enough to think government was great but thought that there was at least some logic or follow through. Ok rant over…. Not always a National Post fan but this article but this article just highlights so many issues in multiple systems and Canada’s lack of concern when it comes to people taking advantage of Canada’s generosity.
https://nationalpost.com/opinion/some-refugees-exploiting-canada-immigration-system