My PR card is about to expire in a few months and I have not met the PR obligations (I got it in 2020 during COVID and then they took years to tell me I can't get my family with me on a visit visa).....anyway, I have been told that I would be able to cross into Canada in the future by land border from USA even on an expired PR card. So I wanted to check a few things.
1. Is there anything I can do now in Canada to improve my chances or ensure I can cross through the land-border in the future if I ever needed to go back ?
2. Is it true that I can in-fact cross by land border on an expired card (even if it has been several years for example) ?
3. If true - then how likely is it that the land border agent will initiate a revocation of my PR Card ?
@Besram has provided good responses which I largely agree with. One part of those posts warrant some emphasis and a caveat:
If you really care about keeping your PR status, your best bet is to return as soon as possible while your card is still valid and stay in Canada until you meet the RO. Even that carries some risk of being reported because you are already out of compliance, but your chances are probably better because you don't have the red flag of an expired PR card, which means a lower risk of being referred to a secondary inspection upon entry.
I fully agree and, again, this warrants emphasis.
The caveat:
I agree with the observation (in the first post by
@Besram) that it is impossible to say what the precise odds are, and that your chances depend on the particular circumstances in your situation, including the examples referenced.
Notwithstanding what we do not know and cannot reliably forecast, there are some general aspects of how these go that influence the odds.
The biggest unknown: The chance of being waived through Primary Inspection is the biggest unknown. As long as you have a valid PR card to present, anecdotal reporting suggests there is at least a significant chance of being waived through, which would mean no detailed examination into your compliance with the Residency Obligation. Once in Canada you can stay, and if you do not engage in any transactions with IRCC that triggers a Residency Determination, you can totally cure the breach by staying 730 days.
Once your card has expired, there may still be some chance of being waived through Primary Inspection but the odds are dramatically worse.
Odds of H&
C relief: The other big unknown is what your chances are of getting H&C relief if you are examined in Secondary. Again, this will depend on the particular circumstances in your situation, including the examples referenced by
@Besram.
Meanwhile, absent a strong H&C case the odds against saving PR status get significantly worse the longer it has been since your last day in Canada and the closer to the PR card expiration date. In particular, if at this juncture it has been more than three years since you were last in Canada (which appears to be the case), the fact you are in breach of the Residency Obligation is obvious on the face of things, no need to do any arithmetic, no need to calculate days in, days out. It is simple: if you arrive here tomorrow, July 24, 2024, and the last time you were in Canada was before July 23, 2021, that is enough information to definitively conclude you are in breach of the RO. So, again, your best chance largely depends on whether presentation of a valid PR card gets you waived through Primary, no close look at compliance with the RO.
Family Class Sponsorship and RO Compliance:
The caution posted by
@canuck78 is well-founded.
That said, since a Residency Determination is not a required element in determining the sponsor's qualification to sponsor a family class PR visa application (see information posted by
@armoured above), here too what is unknown are the odds the application triggers a Residency Determination and preparation of a 44(1) Report for inadmissibility due to a RO breach, and if so, whether H&C relief allows the PR-sponsor to keep PR status.
Not sure what "
debate" there has been. There have been enough anecdotal reports in conjunction with actual cases reported in officially published IAD decisions to KNOW that a sponsorship application by a PR in breach of the RO sometimes triggers inadmissibility proceedings. There has also been enough anecdotal reporting to reliably conclude that being in breach of the RO when making an application to sponsor family does not always trigger inadmissibility proceedings.
It warrants noting that even though the application for a new PR card does include a Residency Determination (so here too, the conventional wisdom is to stay in Canada long enough to get into RO compliance before making a PR card application), it is clear (should be no debate) that whether IRCC even prepares a 44(1) Report, let alone whether it proceeds to issue a Removal Order, varies depending on the particular situation. While the risk of a PR card application triggering loss of PR status is probably quite high for a PR way in breach lacking H&C reasons, the longer and more well-settled the PR is in Canada the lower the risk.
In contrast, again a sponsorship application does not necessarily include a Residency Determination. But we know, based on reliable reporting and actual cases, it does so and leads to inadmissibility proceedings in at least some cases. While here too it is impossible to calculate the odds, some key factors are obvious, and again the longer and more well-settled the PR is in Canada, the better their odds.
To be safe, just like when applying for a PR card, it is best to wait until being in RO compliance. For a PR who has been in Canada long enough for it to be well apparent they are settling in Canada PERMANENTLY, the odds should be fairly good. Sponsoring family is consistent with the purpose of the PR grant, to enable the person to settle in Canada permanently.
In most of the cases I have seen where a PR's sponsorship application triggered inadmissibility proceedings and the loss of their status, the PR was in breach of the RO by more than a year and they made the sponsorship application quite soon after arriving in Canada. This by no means suggests it would safe after a year. That falls into the unknown odds range.
Edit to Add: I almost forgot to note a very significant factor in regards to whether a sponsorship application triggers inadmissibility proceedings: the first stage of the process is to determine the eligibility of the PR to sponsor, and as part of the application the PR sponsor must provide a lot of historical detail, including work history, which is evaluated as part of determining the PR's eligibility to sponsor. For a PR who is in breach of the RO by a lot, this detail can make the breach and its extent more or less obvious; moreover, it is likely to illustrate the extent to which the PR is or is not settled in Canada. That is, to make a sponsorship application, the PR in breach by a lot must expose their breach.