Niette said:
Hello
Experts , please shed the light on following situation.
I have landed as PR resident in 2013 and got my PR card valid for 5 years (expired in 2018). I have stayed in Canada 3.5 years till 2016 and then had to go back home to take care for elderly parents who got sick on and off recently (unfortunately due to C-24 I could not apply for citizenship after 3 years

). When my PR card will expire in 2018 I can apply for it's renewal.
Assuming that it will be renewed for another 5 years , I'll have new PR card valid up until 2023.
Let's say I'd like to reenter Canada as a PR resident on 2021. From one hand I'll still have a valid PR card , but from another hand looking back to 5 years from this date (2021) I'll not have 2 years of physical presence in Canada , so technically I'll loose my eligibility for PR resident status.
I'm from visa exempt country.
The question is what will happen on Canadian border while entering given the fact that I have a valid PR card? Will they be able or will they bother to check whether I comply with PR residence requirements and report me? How high are the chances for it?
Thank you in advance.
Caveat: I am no expert.
To be clear, PR status does not expire.
The issue involved is compliance with the PR Residency Obligation, which requires PRs to be present in Canada for at least 730 days within the preceding five years (or within the first five years after landing).
Since you have already been in Canada more than 730 days in your first five years, you will be in compliance unless you are absent from Canada for 1095 or more days within the preceding five years. This is a continuing obligation, day to day, but typically only calculated on the occasion of certain events, such as:
-- while being examined at a PoE upon arrival (returning to Canada), based on that particular date
-- when applying for a new PR card or for a PR Travel Document, based on the date of the application, but subject to being examined at some subsequent date as well (such as when a PR is abroad while the PR card application is pending, the PR must still be in ongoing compliance with the PR RO to be eligible for a new PR card even if the PR met the PR RO at the time of applying)
-- when being assessed in a collateral transaction, such as when a PR applies to sponsor a family member
Eligibility for new PR card:
Currently the PR
must be in Canada when making an application for a new PR card, and generally IRCC delays or does not issue new cards to PRs living abroad.
Reminder: the fact that the PR card expires does not, in itself, affect the status of the PR. However, if abroad, there is a presumption that a PR who does not have a valid PR card does not have valid PR status. This is easily overcome by legitimate PRs who are in compliance with the PR RO.
But that leads to another issue: Your visa-exempt passport will no longer get you boarding on a flight to Canada. You will need either a valid PR card or a PR Travel Document to board a flight to Canada. Few exceptions (U.S. citizens for example). So if you are abroad when the PR card expires, you will need a PR TD to board a flight to Canada.
A PR TD application inherently involves a Residency Determination, which is to say the PR must submit proof of compliance with the PR RO to obtain a PR TD.
So long as your PR card is valid, you can fly to Canada. Obviously, best if you return to Canada before current card expires and stay long enough to apply for and obtain a new card. If you do this successfully and then go abroad again, if at any point you exceed being abroad 1095 or more days within the preceding five years, you will be in breach of the PR RO. Upon returning to Canada, the longer you have been abroad, the more risk there is you will be examined about compliance with the PR RO. If you are in breach of the PR RO, you will still be allowed to enter Canada but may be issued a Report and Departure Order (your explanation of reasons for being abroad may persuade the PoE officer to not report you, but there is no guarantee of that, and it appears things are more strict now than in the past). You can appeal the Departure Order, stay in Canada while the appeal is pending, and depending on your reasons, particularly if you do in fact stay in Canada pending the appeal, there is a fair chance of winning the appeal and keeping PR status.
But any breach of the PR RO risks losing PR status. There is no guarantee that H&C reasons will suffice to keep status.
There is no way to quantify the various risks involved, other than to observe the common sense correlations:
-- more time in Canada, better odds
-- more ongoing ties in Canada, better odds
-- more frequent trips to Canada, indicates more ongoing ties in Canada
-- longer outside Canada, the poorer the odds
-- more compelling the circumstances influencing the PR to spend time abroad, the better the odds, but in recent years it appears that generally ailing, aging parents only buys a slightly positive factor in the assessment of H&C reasons
Among others.