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I have already addressed another blatantly erroneous post by @Wolfpmd3 and here too this participant has again made misleading and erroneous posts.

For emphasis:
" . . . once his PR expires he won't be able to renew it and he won't ever be allowed to enter Canada as a PR unless he Voluntarily renounces his PR status and regains status by following the process again . . . "​

PR status does NOT expire. PRs have a statutory right to enter Canada.
 
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I have already addressed another blatantly erroneous post by @Wolfpmd3 and here too this participant has again made misleading and erroneous posts.

For emphasis:
" . . . once his PR expires he won't be able to renew it and he won't ever be allowed to enter Canada as a PR unless he Voluntarily renounces his PR status and regains status by following the process again . . . "​

PR status does NOT expire. PRs have a statutory right to enter Canada.

PR status does not expire agreed, but you won't be able to renew your PR card nor obtain a PR travel document.

So yes you can remain a Canadian PR forever without ever being able to enter the country.

Unless your appeal is successful or you renounce your status there is nothing you can do.
 
PR status does not expire agreed, but you won't be able to renew your PR card nor obtain a PR travel document.

So yes you can remain a Canadian PR forever without ever being able to enter the country.

Unless your appeal is successful or you renounce your status there is nothing you can do.
What @dpenabill is saying is that you must be allowed to enter the country if you arrive at a point of entry. A person with an expired PR card and no PRTD cannot board an airplane or commercial transport to Canada, but if they can get into the US and then arrive at a land border with Canada, even if they have 0 days in 20 years, they will still be allowed to enter while the revocation process begins, and will be allowed to stay until an appeal is decided.