A common example of what tribunal decision makers (IAD panels and Federal Court justices) explicitly state are the factors to be considered is this:
The principal factors . . . to consider include the extent of non-compliance with the residency obligation, the reasons for the departure from Canada and for the lengthy stay abroad, reasonable attempts to return, the initial and continuing establishment in Canada, the hardship and dislocation that could be caused to the appellant if this appeal is dismissed, the best interests of any minor child directly affected by the decision, and any other unique circumstances. (this is quoted from the IAD panel decision in Ayeb v Canada, 2019 CanLII 129178,
http://canlii.ca/t/j52xw )
So, the PR's "
initial and continuing establishment in Canada" is among the enumerated H&C factors.
Even though establishment in Canada is among the enumerated factors considered when assessing whether H&C relief for a RO breach should be allowed, and is directly addressed as such in some of the cases, my sense is that it plays a bigger role in a general equities sense, having more influence in the decision-maker's attitude toward the PR . . . just seems that officers, MDs, IAD panels, and even Federal Court justices, tend to be more sympathetic and less strict toward those PRs who clearly appear to be well on track to be PERMANENTLY settled in Canada.
Inviting some Caution: the nature and extent of establishment in Canada is not typically a big consideration in many cases, not what tips the scale in the assessment of H&C reasons for which a PR may be allowed to retain PR status despite breaching the Residency Obligation.
What tends to show establishment in Canada is obvious, common sense, with
the period of time living in Canada being the most obvious factor, and otherwise employment (including length of employment), home ownership, family members living in Canada, banking and other activity in Canada, among other indices of living a life IN Canada, and to some extent indications the PR's intent is to permanently settle in Canada. But of course any of these will be balanced or offset by indications of a life tied to matters outside Canada, and again the period of time looms large along with the more salient indicators of residency, employment or immediate family outside Canada being the more obvious.
Note, for example, that in ENF 23, the operational manual which includes extensive guidance for assessing RO compliance and considering H&C factors, most of the enumerated factors relate to the extent of non-compliance, and the factors listed under "
Establishment in and outside Canada" it first lists:
-- Is the permanent resident a citizen or permanent resident of a country other than Canada?
-- Has the permanent resident taken steps to establish any permanence in a country other than Canada; or the country they resided in immediately before becoming a permanent resident of Canada (that is, any third country status)?
then lists:
-- To what degree has the permanent resident established in Canada?
-- What linkages and ties has the permanent resident maintained in Canada?
While the operational manuals have not been updated in years, and in some respects they are not sufficiently current to rely on, the section on H&C (in regards to RO enforcement) is consistent with both IAD and Federal Court decisions as well as what we know otherwise, including based on anecdotal reports of personal experience.
Meanwhile, returning to the Ayeb decision quoted above, that panel went on to specifically address the PR's "
degree of establishment in Canada" this way:
As for his degree of establishment in Canada, he was in Canada initially for only ten days. He was therefore not able to establish himself, which is clearly a negative point in this appeal. But since he returned to Canada, in the short time since his arrival, he has found a job, a place to live and a registered vehicle. He has opened a bank account and done other things with a view to becoming firmly established since returning to Canada. He also seems to be an employee who is much appreciated by his employer, as can be seen from the statement of employment he submitted. (again, this is Ayeb v Canada, 2019 CanLII 129178,
http://canlii.ca/t/j52xw )
That IAD panel also considered the fact that the PR had made visa applications for his spouse and children so they could join him in Canada, which in the panel's view demonstrated "
how serious the [the PR]
is about coming back and settling here."
Leading back to the
CAUTION . . . so far as I have surveyed RO breach cases (noting that I have been doing this regularly for nearly a decade and a half) the Ayeb decision is among the more lenient ones, and in this case the panel explicitly stated the case favouring H&C relief was "
by quite a slim margin."
In contrast, in another IAD decision in which establishment in Canada played a positive role in an outcome allowing H&C relief, what was most influential by a big margin was simply the arithmetic:
668 days RO credit . . . just 62 days short . . . in conjunction with the PR's actions toward getting established in Canada during
the year and a half before the 44(1) Report and Removal Order. Among the particular activities cited was the PR's participation in sports in Canada, "
soccer," and "
extracurricular activities." This is in the IAD decision Diallo v Canada, 2019 CanLII 92752,
http://canlii.ca/t/j2q8g
The latter illustrates that the thing about the nature and extent of establishment in Canada is that it is tangled with and largely dependent on numerous circumstances very specific to the individual involved. It is about the extent to which the PR has been and continues to be in the process of making Canada their PERMANENT home.
A more recent Federal Court decision found that the IAD's assessment of establishment in Canada "
lacks intelligibility" and thus was a significant factor in granting relief. This was in Mohammed v. Canada, 2022 FC 1,
https://canlii.ca/t/jlk62 where Justice Ahmed favourably cited a different IAD decision in regards to its discussion of the establishment factor, that is the Bhimji v Canada, 2019 CanLII 54638,
https://canlii.ca/t/j10hv case.