Hello,
I got reported 44 (1) and was told that I would get a call from the superintendent.
I got my PR in Feb 2023, couldn't move to Canada because I had started a course before I got the PR card. I couldn't just leave it and move because I had spent money (most of my savings).
I finished the course and planned on moving on March 2026 but due to some personal issues I couldn't do it, and moved back this month, yesterday.
I have rented a place before with th intention of commuting from Windsor to Detroit and have done so a couple of times. But the days spent in Canada doesn't cover the obligations.
I genuinely want to be here and get the citizenship. I am single women, 37 years old and I am not very confident about getting this chance again, if I choose to reapply for the PR.
What are my options and chances of continue my stay!?
While I largely concur in many of the observations in
@armoured's
first response, the main one is to "
stay and ride it out" . . . that is,
IF settling, working, and living in Canada
permanently is indeed your priority.
This is echoed by
@canuck78 . . .
If you want the strongest chance of retaining PR you should find a job in Canada and remain in Canada without leaving until you find out if you can retain your PR.
and by
@scylla . . . and is something I also agree with, emphatically so, and several others have "
liked."
Of course that begs the question: what are your chances? Are the odds of saving your PR status good enough to make that investment, that commitment? Is the time and effort to keep PR status worth it?
That's a judgment call for YOU to make.
If you decide it is worth the effort to stay and pursue saving your PR status:
Other than what the facts are as of now, and how they influence what happens, staying is probably the most important factor, by a lot, in how this will turn out. In terms of what you should and can do, beyond the main thing (again that is
staying) again I largely concur in the first response by
@armoured, even though I might phrase things a little differently. (Generally I'd suggest that getting paid-for help from a lawyer sooner is a good idea, for a PR who can afford to pay for such services; but regarding this situation I concur in
@armoured's ambivalence. See further note about this below.)
Is Saving PR Status Worth Staying and . . .
Again, that's a judgment call for YOU to make. That depends a lot on YOUR personal objectives, your goals, your intent.
I genuinely want to be here and get the citizenship.
I do not mean to parse your words or in any way pass judgment, even if your overall objective is more about obtaining Canadian citizenship than it is about permanently establishing a life living in Canada. (Appears more than a few pursue PR and citizenship primarily for the status, "
passport shopping" some describe it, rather than to permanently establish a life in Canada.) Technically, given the way the law and process works, at this stage now that you are a Canadian with PR status, it does not matter if your goal, your
intent, is to acquire Canadian citizenship as a means or stepping stone for pursuing opportunities other than living permanently in Canada. But the difference could have some influence given that H&C relief, which is what you need to keep PR status, is to a large extent about what the PR
deserves. So of course the total stranger bureaucrats who will decide whether you
deserve to keep PR status could be influenced by what they perceive to be your intent, your goals.
Other responses here reflect this, particularly those suggesting that commuting to a job outside Canada while your PR status is subject to inadmissibility proceedings is likely to be counterproductive.
That said, you can leave and return while inadmissibility proceedings are pending. In particular, unless there is a Removal or Departure Order that becomes enforceable (which does not happen until the right of appeal is expired, at which point you would be a Foreign National, not a PR), you can leave and return to Canada, your PR status and PR card remain valid . . .
but no experience in brain surgery is needed to recognize the negative influence doing that could have on the thinking of total stranger bureaucrats who will decide whether you
deserve to keep PR status. (Disagreeing some with the later comments by
@armoured about discerning what an officer might think or what might influence an officer's thinking, noting after all one of the main advantages a lawyer provides is better insight into an officer's thinking process based on experience combined with knowledge of what really matters, recognizing however that such insight is not limited to lawyers; they tend to know better what matters and be better at discerning what influences officers and other decision-makers . . . but more than a few active participants here make a concerted effort to be as well-informed as non-professionals can be.)
Leading to what might seem like a digressive, perhaps not even relevant tangent about intent . . .
I will try to get to that in a separate post.
Re whether to lawyer-up or not; when to lawyer-up:
As noted above, for now, I concur in
@armoured's ambivalence about whether to lawyer-up pending further proceedings. If the cost is no problem, get a lawyer's input (free consultations are not worth much and can be misguiding in some situations). Otherwise, mostly, again,
@armoured's first response covered how to prepare for further proceedings.
But if you are issued a Removal or Departure Order, you have just 30 days to make an appeal, and that's when it would be time to lawyer-up. You do not need a lawyer to start the appeal, and you can proceed without a lawyer if you cannot afford one, but in making your case to the IAD (which will hear and decide an appeal) a lawyer's assistance can make a big difference. Note, even though a lawyer cannot change the facts, a lawyer will generally be a far better guide in what to say, what to emphasize, and very importantly, what not to say; most of us can argue, but lawyers are specially trained and experienced to argue persuasively, a big part of which is knowing what matters, what doesn't matter, what's a distraction, and what could be detrimental.