Hi @legalfalcon. I have a question regarding the subject of this thread.
I have not yet moved out and will not any time before the coming September. My story is as follows:
I have just become a permanent resident in January 2022 through the Quebec Skilled Worker program - the Quebec equivalence of PNPs. Since day 1 I arrived in Canada, I have been residing in the province of Quebec.
Recently, I've received a Ph.D. offer from an Ontario university. School begins this coming September. This is one of the top-notch schools in my field, so I am tempted to do my Ph.D. there. The university that offered me a place is strictly better than any QC university.
But then the problem comes: if I decided to do it in Ontario, it would mean that I could have left the province that "nominated" me for permanent residence, in which case I might be violating the initial "intent to reside in Quebec" even though PRs benefit from the freedom of mobility bestowed by the Charter.
What I can tell you is that I have every intention to return to Quebec after my Ph.D. In fact, my common-law partner is doing hers in Quebec and will not leave. I am also currently taking French courses offered by the QC government to better integrate myself into the Quebec society. For the purpose of education, could my absence from QC be considered temporary? Could I leave QC for my PhD without harming my citizenship application in 2 years?
Thank you.
I have not yet moved out and will not any time before the coming September. My story is as follows:
I have just become a permanent resident in January 2022 through the Quebec Skilled Worker program - the Quebec equivalence of PNPs. Since day 1 I arrived in Canada, I have been residing in the province of Quebec.
Recently, I've received a Ph.D. offer from an Ontario university. School begins this coming September. This is one of the top-notch schools in my field, so I am tempted to do my Ph.D. there. The university that offered me a place is strictly better than any QC university.
But then the problem comes: if I decided to do it in Ontario, it would mean that I could have left the province that "nominated" me for permanent residence, in which case I might be violating the initial "intent to reside in Quebec" even though PRs benefit from the freedom of mobility bestowed by the Charter.
What I can tell you is that I have every intention to return to Quebec after my Ph.D. In fact, my common-law partner is doing hers in Quebec and will not leave. I am also currently taking French courses offered by the QC government to better integrate myself into the Quebec society. For the purpose of education, could my absence from QC be considered temporary? Could I leave QC for my PhD without harming my citizenship application in 2 years?
Thank you.