MWEdwards said:
OK, so according to what dpenabill says, I do need to worry, because I was out of Canada 1,026 days in the last five years. This is within the allowed limits, but only just.
I've been a doctoral student this entire time at a Canadian university, but I left the country to do research for my dissertation (and to work) for about 1.5 years, and I accompanied my partner (also a PR of Canada/US citizen) on a research leave the next year, also outside Canada.
I have transcripts from my time as a student (just graduated with the PhD in May 2015), and I have a letter from the CRA explaining that it deemed me a "factual resident" while I was outside of Canada, and I can produce CRA assessments. Also, I have a valid OHIP card and a valid DL. But I don't have any pay slips, because during my time as a graduate student the only kind of work I have done is freelance, for which pay slips are never issued.
I should clarify that I am not at all worried that an airline won't let me board the plane. I am worried about being delayed and interrogated by the CBSA--the residency examination you refer to. If they decide for any reason that I don't have PR status anymore and decide to issue an inadmissibility report, I'll be in trouble.
This may seem ridiculous, but I cannot remember ever having received a CoPR. Maybe I did and did not realize what it was, and tossed it out. Perhaps I had no idea at the time that anything other than the PR card was important. I know I can apply for a verification of status document to "replace" the CoPR, but it is not a true replacement, and it would be useless to me for this purpose since it is not valid for travel.
Sorry about confusing your situation with another, regarding thinking you had indicated barely a year's absence in the last five.
That said, overall your situation does not seem problematic.
First, though, I referred to a situation which warrants essentially
no worries (thinking you had been in Canada around four of the last five years), but that does not mean there is necessarily reason to worry if you have not lived in Canada for four out of the last five years.
You are a PR. That gets you in. You are in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation, that gets you in without a serious problem even if you are hard-questioned about meeting the PR RO.
It is easy to confuse the different aspects in which there can be a problem. There are three:
-- presenting TD authorizing entry into Canada for purposes of boarding commercial transportation destined for Canada; for you,
NO problem
-- establishing your identity as a Permanent Resident of Canada at the POE upon arrival at the border or in airport; for you, presentation of your U.S. passport and the expired PR card should suffice, with worse case scenario a bit of an in-depth identity examination at the POE (not likely but possible), so good idea to have (in hand) some additional identity documents, like a Canadian drivers license and OHIP card . . . and indeed, these items should really make this part easy
-- potential questions about compliance with the PR Residency Obligation
It appears that the last of these is your main concern.
Regardless of how this aspect goes, as a PR you are nonetheless entitled to enter Canada. Even if the POE officer is totally convinced you have not spent anywhere near enough time in Canada to meet the PR RO, you must still be allowed to enter Canada.
So maybe you want to know what the worst case scenario is, in case the POE officer believes you are in total breach of the PR RO.
But, first, before getting to the worst case scenario, if you have a Canadian drivers license, a current Canadian address, and can present some documentation to show what your address in Canada is, and you simply, matter-of-factly explain (if asked . . . you may not even be examined all that closely) how much time you have spent in Canada (more than 730 days within preceding five years, thus in compliance with PR RO) plus (again, if asked) why you were outside Canada as much as you have been,
the odds are good you will be waived into Canada without a problem.
Moreover, absences due to study abroad are a particular consideration for PRs. There is no guarantee, but generally absences for studying abroad are favourably treated. (Acknowledgement: I have seen some others here who appear to disagree with this, and again there is no guarantee.) So even if the POE officer is not fully convinced you have been in Canada 2+ years within the last five, the odds are still in your favour.
The key: if you otherwise fail to be convincing that you have been present 730+ days within the past five years, the key is whether or not it is apparent that you have been living in Canada, have a settled residence in Canada, and are otherwise someone who deserves to keep PR status.
Worst case scenario: residency examination, 44(1) Report & Removal Order
Assuming there is no serious problem establishing your identity (a rather safe assumption I'd venture), the worst case scenario is the PIL officer refers you to secondary and in secondary you are subject to what amounts to a residency examination, asked detailed questions relating to whether or not you have complied with the PR Residency Obligation, or if it appears you have not, if there are sufficient H&C reasons to essentially waive the breach. As noted, even if the officer in secondary concludes you did not meet the PR RO, if you have been living in Canada and you explain that the main reason for being abroad was related to educational programs for you and your partner, there are good odds of a waiver, no report, no problem.
If the officer in Secondary is totally unpersuaded, and takes the most severe course of action against you, here is what happens:
-- that officer prepares what is called a 44(1) Report of inadmissibility based on a breach of the PR RO
-- that report is immediately presented to a supervisor (technically a Minister's delegate) and that officer decides, based on the report and on your input (including H&C considerations) whether or not to issue a Removal Order, worst case being the Removal Order is then and there issued and delivered to you
-- you are then allowed to enter Canada (the Removal Order is
not enforceable at that stage)
-- you will have 30 days to make an appeal, and if you appeal the Removal Order remains
UNenforceable, at the least until there is a negative decision on the appeal
-- you get to prove your compliance with the PR RO in the appeal, or to make your H&C case in the alternative, and in the meantime you are still a PR
Frankly, that scenario does not seem likely. It really is the worst case scenario, not a likely case scenario.
Even if you make a relatively bad impression, unless the border officers totally disbelieve you (which is not likely unless there are real reasons to seriously doubt your story), the more likely bad case scenario is actually just a report sent to the local office of CIC regarding the entry, your responses to questions, and the officer's conclusions -- this is actually a
referral not the official 44(1) report. The significant difference is that if the POE officer issues a 44(1) report, that report itself establishes the date for which the residency determination will be made and no time in Canada after that will count toward meeting the PR residency obligation. If there is just a referral to the local office, time you are in Canada will continue to count toward compliance.
If there is a 44(1) report, you will be given a copy. If there is a referral, you might not even be told that is happening. Some in this forum disagree a bit about the likelihood of a Removal Order being immediately issued. It is well apparent to me, however, that if a 44(1) Report is issued, pursuant to current practices a Removal Order will also be issued unless an appropriate superior is not available, including not available by telephone (so-called "hearing" with Minister's delegate can be telephonic).
All this is probably overkill. You say you are actually in compliance but cut it a bit close. A secondary review, and no urgent processing, was to be expected when you made the application for the PR card (here too, some disagree with me that an application for urgent processing increases the risk for non-routine processing of the PR card application for those who cut it close, but reports like yours rather consistently indicate the correlation). But as long as you can reasonably document your presence in Canada, it should all sort out OK.
The OHIP card, DL, and school records should all help. Something to show you have paid rent or own or such relative to an actual residence in Canada can be important (will be important, for example, if CIC does a formal residency determination in processing the PR card application even if you are waived into Canada at the border without a blink).
Deemed residency for CRA purposes is of minimal import. May help in terms of the deserving to keep PR status aspect, if it comes down to whether there are H&C grounds sufficient to waive a breach, but only actual presence will be counted toward meeting the PR RO itself (there are other exceptions, but none which appears to be relevant to you).
Be sure to have all documents you think you want available to show at the POE/border
in your hands, in carry-on if you travel by air, within easy reach to pick up and carry with you as you go into secondary if you are traveling by car. Better to have a few key documents than a large quantity. Persuasive evidence is far more influential than quantity.
But again this is probably overkill. Just be prepared to tell the truth, and have some documentation to back it up (a sample of rental receipts would be very good, utility bills would be OK).