I have 2202 days total towards my RO.
"
I have 2202 days total towards my RO."
This is NOT possible.
At the most (counting two leap years in the relevant five) the maximum possible credit toward the Residency Obligation is 1827 days. Five years. 365 days a year. Plus, at the most, two more days counting February 29 in 2016 and 2020.
I address this separately, upfront, because it is such a blatant, obvious error, it suggests the likelihood you made others and were, perhaps, not following the instructions. Which it makes it very difficult to sort out why the lawyer says you should prepare to be sponsored for PR anew.
The question is whether the lawyer's advice was:
-- be prepared, JUST in CASE, or
-- be prepared because the PR TD will likely be denied, and if this is what the lawyer thinks, was this based on
-- -- an opinion that you will NOT get credit toward the RO for time together with spouse (no "accompanying" citizen spouse credit), or
-- -- an opinion there are other reasons why your PR TD will likely be denied
I HESITATE to second guess lawyers. I assume you shared more details with the lawyer than you have here. I am NOT an expert. I am NOT qualified to offer personal advice. I cannot entirely know what the lawyer's advice is based on. And in this scenario, in particular, it is NOT all that clear that what the lawyer is actually saying.
Nonetheless, if the lawyer said, in effect, the PR TD will be denied and you have NO plausible case for succeeding on appeal, so plan to proceed with a new PR application based on spousal sponsorship, that is something I would second guess.
Foremost, wait for a response to the PR TD. If granted, which seems quite possible (depending on the nature and scope of errors you made in the application), you are good to return to Canada with NO status problems.
BUT EVEN IF the PR TD application is denied, it would still make sense to APPEAL this. Time to do so is limited. But if you appeal, as long as you can travel to the U.S., and then travel to the U.S./Canadian border by land, you will be allowed to enter Canada. As long as the appeal is pending you are still a Canadian PR. So it will be legal to live and work in Canada just like any other Canadian.
Best to make such a trip TOGETHER. To approach and cross the border together.
The appeal will give you time to re-establish your life in Canada, to find a good lawyer to help make the case in the appeal, and in particular to make the case that you were in fact accompanying (as this term is defined for purposes of applying the credit toward RO, which can mean more than just being together, which can depend on WHO was accompanying WHOM) your Canadian citizen spouse, OR
IN THE ALTERNATIVE, make the case that you should be ALLOWED to keep your PR status on H&C grounds, which warrants a separate discussion but could, for example, be partly based on a reasonable belief you were entitled to the
accompanying-a-citizen-spouse credit.
Then you will still have the sponsorship PR application as a back-up plan in case the appeal is denied.
More regarding the accompanying-a-citizen-spouse credit and a potential WHO was accompanying WHOM issue:
Hi all, I became a PR in Canada in August 2010, but in September 2014 I moved with my boyfriend (Canadian citizen) to Europe, as he obtained a good job offer. We had been living together for 2 years already in Canada. In Nov 2014 we married in the US and continued our life in Europe. I have been back to Canada only once in 2015.
Recently, he obtained a new job offer back in Canada, so we are in the process of moving. I also have a job offer in Canada already. I applied for a PRTD under the section "accompanying a Canadian citizen", and according to the application I have 2202 days total towards my RO. I have spoken to a lawyer in the meantime and I was told to prepare to go through sponsorship again for a new PR.
What is your experience, has anyone been in a similar situation, and did you obtain your PRTD or not? Thank you for any shared experiences!
It appears that the
WHO-accompanied-WHOM question might be a problem with your PR TD application. Assuming a qualified lawyer with real experience in Canadian PR obligation issues reviewed your actual PR TD application and the details of your situation, and concluded that your PR TD will likely be denied because the
accompanying-a-citizen-spouse credit will be rejected.
This is an issue discussed at length in other topics.
For example, see topic titled: "Who-accompanied-whom can matter for PRs living with citizen spouse abroad: UPDATE"
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/who-accompanied-whom-can-matter-for-prs-living-with-citizen-spouse-abroad-update.579860/
MY GUESS (I can only guess) would have been otherwise. My guess would have been it is unlikely there will be problem getting the
accompanying-a-citizen-spouse credit in the situation you described; possible but not likely.
My further guess is there is a good chance of succeeding in an appeal even if the visa office denies the PR TD on this basis. Whether that is based on getting the credit or based on H&C reasons (assuming you have come to Canada and have stayed pending the appeal).
For now, what makes sense is waiting to see what the PR TD decision is . . . and plan to travel to Canada via the U.S. as a back-up plan.