Sydkadra said:
Dear Msafiri, Leon, Scylla all other experts.
In continuation with the above thread, what difference will be there for PR who travels after March 2016 by commercial transport and those with Private Vehicles and cross the US/Canada Border which is applicable to Visa-Exempt and Non-Visa-Exempt PRs. It seems that other documents which will be valid for travel between US/Canada Land Borders are the Nexus Cards/Valid PR Cards and Canadian Passport. Why question is whether the COPR or the Immigration Landing Paper will no longer be a valid document entering Canada in Private Vehicles ( own or rental). I appreciate if the experts clarify in detail about the changes which will come into effect in March 2016 as per the CIC , the link is given
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?q=064&t=10
Thank you for your reply
I will let others answer your question, the meaning of the text in a link you posted is not sufficiently clear to me, so I may misunderstand it.
If it was up to me to interpret it, I would say that starting March 2016 if you are Canadian PR you MUST have a valid Canadian PR Card to board a flight into Canada from abroad. If you don't have Canadian PR Card you may not be allowed to board plane, no matter what other documents or entitlements you have. In case you are Canadian PR and want to enter Canada and don't have Canadian PR card, you will have to drive in private vehicle into Canada (no bus, train or air).
On a side note:
Canada is a great country, I keep saying everyone here how beautiful it is and how nice it is over there.
But, IMHO, the way to keep Canadian PR's in Canada is not by penalizing them and stripping them of PR status for leaving it, but instead
admitting no more immigrants than there are jobs to gainfully employ them.
Anyone who was in US 10 years ago knows that US job market is not nearly as good it was 10 years ago, getting a job is a real struggle here now, and making a living in US is not a cake-walk, you really have to work and work hard, no matter you lay concrete in construction or work as a doctor or a lawyer in the office.
However, I personally don't know of any US PR who "hides" outside of USA for years and only comes here once in a blue moon to keep a PR Card.
I hear anecdotal stories about such people and they probably exist , but it's sufficiently rare that I don't encounter such individuals in my daily routine.
We don't have forums in US where a lot of US PR status holders share their worries about returning to US after prolonged absence from US (and prolonged here means anything in excess of 6 months).
The issue is not "bad, sneaky, law breaking PR's who want to go under radar", but the fact that people need to pay bills and sustain their families, and they can't do that when getting ANY job becomes such a struggle that even people with higher education are forced to work in Walmart or flip burgers, just to be able to pay rent and not waste their savings.
Reduce the quote,temporarily zero it down it necessary, bring a good vibe to a job market and then punish those Canadian PR's who still don't want to live in Canada.
As to new Canadian law which will allow to strip of Citizenship for moving abroad AFTER becoming Canadian Citizen, this is just beyond my comprehension. In US you must be some major criminal, like a former Nazi or similar, to be stripped of Citizenship. Why dole such an extreme punishment on someone who merely decides to move out of Canada after becoming a citizen?
This is just surreal to me.