You bring up some interesting points. In the spousal/dependent children category of the FC class, there IS often little time given for travel between the time taken to issue the visa and to land in Canada. That is due to the fact that medicals are required at the beginning of the process. In this instance, I would agree with you that the time for landing should be extended with SOME visa offices depending upon how long processing of the application took. However, in the Economic classes (FSW, CEC, PNP), the medicals are done near the end of the process and the Right of Permanent Residence fees is requested as the very last thing. They are stong indicators of a successful application, very near 100% barring something significant being discovered either on the medical (which the applicant normally is aware of, although not 100% of the time and even then, the DMP usually informs them as well as CIC) or the applicant committing some sort of criminal act that would make them inadmissible. Passports are typically requested within 2 to 6 months after the medical is done, leaving the applicant approximately 6 months to land in Canada. IMHO, that is enough time to wrap up your affairs and land. For some it's not and if they don't have friends in Canada whose address they can provide to CBSA upon landing who can send them their PR cards, they can retain counsel to do this for them. I don't think this is unreasonable so we can agree to disagree.
It is not illegal to be a vistor and a permanent resident, it's impossible! You are one or the other. A person who is visa exempt and has lost their PR status due to not meeting residency obligations can easily surrender their PR and enter Canada as a visitor. Just because they are not a PR anymore does not mean they can`t visit. It`s when people who haven`t met the residency obligation try to slip by unnoticed to maintain PR that they get in trouble. And even a PR who arrives in Canada and has a section 44 report issued at the time of entry ALWAYS as the right of appeal and WILL be allowed entry for the inadmissibility hearing. So no fine for Air Canada. Gosh, even those who are new PRs but are not landed at the POE because of inadmissibility issues get the right of an appeal of the S44 report. Again, no fine for the airline. Air Canada isn`t the only airline with similar information published. Delta does too just to name one other.
Perhaps you misunderstood what I was saying about the transportation companies and immigration access. My statement was meant for Canada alone. I still believe what I said when it comes to Canada. Perhaps the coming years will prove me wrong but not without a fight from the privacy advocates.
Believe me, I do PLENTY of battling about CIC and hold them accountable to their laws, policies and procedures and have won quite a few wars where I believe CIC has wrongly interpretted the law. I HAVE read through countless threads and have been helping people on this forum for years. But this program is not one I complain about. For the past 3 years, initial issuance of PR cards has remained steady at 4 to 6 weeks. Unlike most of the other timelines, this one has stayed consistent. I understand where your comment comes from but in this case, I don`t see any evidence that it is likely.