11/29/2015
Topic:
Validity of PR status
Biplab
|
Dear Sir/Madam,
I enter canada on 27-12-2013 and returned my home country on 27-03-2014. My PR status will be expired on February' 2019. When i need to re-enter canada to renew PR card for further five years.
Biplab |
9/29/2016
Topic:
My PR card is Expiring
Biplab
|
Biplab Barua wrote:
Dear Anna,
Tks for your resourceful reply. still am i eligible to re-enter and continuing to stay 730 days (two years) then RO will be complied?? I think, if i re-enter in 1st week of Feb 2017, and will reside in canada 730 days then i will fulfill residency obligation since my PR is valid for up to February 21,2019.
Tks,
Biplab
Moderator wrote:
Hello Biplab,
Unfortunately, we are unable to tell you when to enter Canada in order to fulfill your residency requirements.
This is something you need to calculate yourself.
Regarding your question, generally, to find out if someone has fulfilled their residency requirements, each time a Permanent Resident re-enters Canada, the Officer will count back 5 years from the date the permanent resident has re-entered Canada.
In that 5 year period, if the permanent resident has not accumulated 2 years (730 days) of physical presence in Canada, then it may be determined that the permanent resident has lost their PR status.
You can find information on the process that is followed when entering Canada in this Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) ENF 23 - Loss of Permanent Resident Status manual.
Here is an excerpt from the manual on what happens at the port of entry,
2. Program objectives
IRPA establishes a residency obligation with respect to each five-year period after permanent resident status has been granted.
and
7.8 Examining Permanent Residents at a POE (Port of Entry)
When a permanent resident appears at a POE for examination, the officer must confirm that the person is a permanent resident. Officers must remain cognizant of the fact the Act gives permanent residents of Canada the right to enter Canada at a port of entry once it is established that a person is a Permanent Resident, regardless of non-compliance with the residency obligation in A28 or the presence of other grounds of inadmissability.
Port of entry officers (POE) can refuse entry to a Permanent Resident only when the person has already lost the status in accordance with the provisions of A46 (such as when a final determination has been made that they have failed to comply with the residency obligations or when a removal order comes into force).
In other words, once a permanent resident's status is established, the person may enter Canada by right and the immigration examination under IRPA concludes.
The onus is on each individual permanent resident to meet their own residency requirements. This means that it is up to you to ensure that you are meeting the residency requirement within each 5 year period and that you are also keeping track of your time spent inside and outside Canada.
It is your responsibility to ensure that you are fulfilling your residency obligation.
In terms of proofs either to prove that you were in Canada or that you were outside of Canada you may want to keep:
- Airplane tickets/boarding passes
- Bus tickets/boarding passes
- Accomodation/Apartment information such as Lease, Rent Receipts for the time that you are in Canada
- Hotel receipts
And any other documents that can prove the time you were present in Canada in the event that you were questioned by an immigration officer and asked to provide proof of your time in/outside of Canada.
According to the the Citizenship and Immigration Canada Operations Manual - Chapter ENF 23 - Loss of Permanent Resident Status,
Put simply, this means that the permanent resident bears the full responsibility of demonstrating - with supporting documentation as considered necessary by an officer -that they were physically present in Canada for the required number of days or that they have otherwise met (or will be able to meet) the residency obligation as prescribed in the Act.
The permanent resident also bears the onus of presenting documentation that is credible, in the opinion of an officer, to support any assertion(s) made by the permanent resident, or that may have been made on behalf of that permanent resident. There is no one document that can categorically establish a permanent resident’s physical presence in Canada.
I hope this information is helpful. Please let us know if you have further questions and if there is any follow up to your question/situation.
===== Anna Settlement.Org Content and Information/Referral Specialist, CIRS Settlement.Org
Hallo Anna,
I am very happy to get your resourceful information. could you pls clarify again regarding following points:
1. To keep PR status valid I would like to re-enter on March 01,2017 which might be complied minimum residency obligation 730 days as I shall continue from that date. 2. Someone told me PR holder can’t stay outside of Canada for more than three years from 1st arrival date. Is it truth? Immediate five years from PR date will be ended on December 28,2018. If I re-enter on March 01,2017 still 657 days remain to meet RO. Since I was in Canada 85 days it will be added with (657+85)=742 days. It is mention able that my 1st arrival date is December 28,2013 and was in Canada upto March 25,2014 e.i. 85 days.
Kindly advise.
With Best Rgds,
Biplab |
9/29/2016
Topic:
Validity of PR status
Biplab
|
PMM wrote:
Hi
Dear Sir/Madam,
I enter canada on 27-12-2013 and returned my home country on 27-03-2014. My PR status will be expired on February' 2019. When i need to re-enter canada to renew PR card for further five years.
Biplab
1. You have to return by 26/03/17 and remain until 27/12/18 without leaving to renew your PR card.
PMM
Tks for information.
Biplab |