Dude, you need to chill and stop bumping your thread. People give advice here for free on their own time which means you sometimes have to wait for a response. If you're not willing to wait, hire an immigration lawyer to help you.
Submit the visitor record application now. This will give you maintained status but you will need to stop working as of Thursday.
The TRV does not give you status in Canada.
You will fall out of status on Thursday if you do nothing.
Unfortunately you are being penalized by the caps the province of Quebec has put in place. They are the only province that has done this and it's making already long processing times even worse. Sorry you are experiencing this.
They do. But only once the H&C applicant has AIP which can often take over a year. So she would need to be prepared to remain in Canada without leaving and without the ability to work for a year or more.
How much time it takes can vary based on the airport and how busy they are at that specific time. I would try googling the name of the airport and transit times.
You can technically sue almost anyone. However you need evidence, as you say. And you may end up spending more on a lawyer than you get from your ex.
He sounds like a toxic person. I can't imagine living with him is easy. Tell him he needs to pay for your ticket home and then get the heck out...
In terms of rights, you are here as a visitor and so have the right to remain in Canada as a visitor for the length of time you were allowed to enter Canada, usually six months. That's about it in terms of rights.
Yes, it sounds like you will be common law in July 2025. But per my earlier post...
If he is a Canadian citizen, then the only way to qualify for an open work permit is for you to be married or common law first, then he has to submit an application to sponsor you for PR through family sponsorship, and then you have to wait for AOR which typically takes 1-2 months after the...
Based on the information you provided, you haven't lived together for enough time continuously to become common law. So I don't believe there's any way you can qualify for a work permit based on this. You would need to semi that you have lived together continuously for at least one full year...