eTA means "electronic Travel Authorization"
Visa exempt travelers had been, until August last year, able to board a flight destined for Canada by presenting a visa-exempt passport. An Australian passport for example. (Technically this did not meet the requirements, but as a practical matter it was how it worked.)
The eTA program is similar to one that the U.S. has been using for several years, pursuant to which the traveler must obtain an electronic authorization before his or her visa-exempt passport will suffice for the airlines to allow the passenger to board a flight.
PRs are not eligible for eTA even if they have a visa-exempt passport. The
airlines must not allow a PR to board a flight destined for Canada unless the PR presents either a valid PR card or a PR Travel Document.
The eTA program was implemented in August 2015 but is not mandatory for four more weeks (mid-March). Whether this means a PR could, for the next four weeks, for sure board a flight to Canada by displaying a visa-exempt passport without eTA, I highly doubt. The airlines could, for sure, allow such a traveler to board a flight. Whether the airlines will or not I believe is subject to which airline, where the flight originates, and other factors.
In any event, a month from now it is for sure: even those PRs (other than those who are an American citizen) who have a visa-exempt passport will need a currently valid PR card or a PR Travel Document to board a flight to Canada.
But as noted, those who carry a passport or have a visa which allows travel to the U.S. can still work around the requirement of having a PR card or PR TD, by traveling via the U.S. and then using private transportation to cross a land border into Canada. At the POE, presentation of passport plus CoPR or an expired PR card will establish identity and status and the traveler will be allowed entry into Canada.
PRs who do not have a currently valid PR card, however, are more and more likely to be examined, at the POE, regarding compliance with the PR Residency Obligation. Good idea to be carrying some documentation which shows when you were in Canada, like employment or tax records, something to show where you were living, so that if there is a question about compliance with the PR RO you can sufficiently show when you were in Canada.
scylla said:
You will not be able to return to Canada in June using your expired PR card since the new ETA process will be in place by then. You would have to either formally give up PR status so that you can obtain ETA and come to Canada as a temporary visitor only. Or you can try applying for a Travel Document so that you can return to Canada as a permanent resident. However unless there are circumstances that prevented you from returning to Canada to meet the residency obligation (working or studying outside of Canada doesn't count), the TD will be refused.
If you want to try to salvage your PR status by flying to Canada, you need to get here before March 15th. Even then, it's not guaranteed to work out.
I suspect
scylla overlooked that you could be remain abroad until April 2017 without being in breach of the PR Residency Obligation, since you were present in Canada for the two years prior to leaving in April 2014.
That said, the
burden of proving you are in compliance with the PR RO is on you. Just saying so don't make it so.
Whether to apply for a PR TD or travel via U.S.:
To some extent this depends on what proof you have to submit with the application for the PR TD. If you have a decent amount of proof, there is no reason to not just apply for the TD (when you are ready to travel to Canada) and be sure to submit documentation showing compliance with the PR Residency Obligation.
If you remained in Canada without leaving at all for the last two years you were here, in Canada, you have until the third year anniversary of the day you left to return (you indicate leaving April 2014, giving you up to April 2017 to get back). Cutting it close, however, risks things going awry. And, for example, if you apply for a PR TD just shortly before the three year mark, you will still need to travel before the three year mark to be technically in compliance when you arrive at the POE.