links18 said:
So what are they looking at then with this request for more documents? That the person in question was resident in Canada (whatever that means) during the period in question or that they were actually physically present for the 1095 days?
What CIC wants, for the vast majority of applicants, is physical presence. Under the current Act though, CJs have more leeway to assess continuing ties (i.e. "the Koo test"). Thus, a truck driver, whose family lives in Scarborough, who pays taxes in Canada, who attends a mosque/synagogue/church or temple in Scarborough every week, but who is physically in the USA 175 days a year because they drive between Mississauga and Florida for a Canadian company shaping maple syrup to Canadian snowbirds, could still become a Canadian citizen.
However, the new Citizenship Act will probably seek to change this by defining "residence" as "physical presence".
So, truck drivers and airline pilots, stewards or stewardesses, NHL hockey players who were PRs in Canada but got traded to the San Jose sharks, will be out of luck...