PR card exired
HI guys
Can anyone advise what you do when your PR card expires. My daughter decided not to stay for her full two years and returned to Scotland and got married. She has now come over for a visit, and border patrol were very strict with her at Toronto airport as she has not retained PR status - he mentioned she had to contact the embassy to cancel her PR card (which she has misplaced) she is here for two weeks and we were hoping to go through to the states for a couple of days but she is worried she will not get back into the Canada. Her UK passport has another 2 years to run so we are unsure what to do, who to contact etc. Any advice woudl be appreciated. Thanks for reading Irene |
Re: PR card exired
Originally Posted by No1_mom
(Post 10310506)
HI guys
Can anyone advise what you do when your PR card expires. My daughter decided not to stay for her full two years and returned to Scotland and got married. She has now come over for a visit, and border patrol were very strict with her at Toronto airport as she has not retained PR status - he mentioned she had to contact the embassy to cancel her PR card (which she has misplaced) she is here for two weeks and we were hoping to go through to the states for a couple of days but she is worried she will not get back into the Canada. Her UK passport has another 2 years to run so we are unsure what to do, who to contact etc. Any advice woudl be appreciated. Thanks for reading Irene Plan 'b' take everything with her and get a flight home from the US if she cannot get back in. I doubt she would get anything sorted here in 2 weeks. |
Re: PR card exired
Originally Posted by No1_mom
(Post 10310506)
HI guys
Can anyone advise what you do when your PR card expires. My daughter decided not to stay for her full two years and returned to Scotland and got married. She has now come over for a visit, and border patrol were very strict with her at Toronto airport as she has not retained PR status - he mentioned she had to contact the embassy to cancel her PR card (which she has misplaced) she is here for two weeks and we were hoping to go through to the states for a couple of days but she is worried she will not get back into the Canada. Her UK passport has another 2 years to run so we are unsure what to do, who to contact etc. Any advice woudl be appreciated. Thanks for reading Irene Contacting the embassy and cancelling her PR card is not a CBSA/CIC option so that bit confuses me. If she has not been reported then she could leave and go to the US but on return could be questioned about her PR status. Even then she would be admitted as a PR as the 30 day appeal period even if she was initially reported has not expired plus 7 days allowance for mailing and then a 30 day period to leave. |
Re: PR card exired
thanks for reply. She said that the guy talking to her did not know what to do and there were 4 of them scratching their heads - eventually one girl told him to over-ride the computer. He told her though she would not be allowed to reenter Canada until she had sorted it out. Going to America for 2 days is not that important but it was supposed to be 'our' little holiday together but now I am more worried about her coming back next year for an actual holiday (this trip was booked last minute as she is traveling with my mother-in-law who has terminal cancer and wanted to see her grand kids for the last time). I searched the cic web and found a pdf file which is so long winded it is difficult to understand - http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resourc.../enf23-eng.pdf
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Re: PR card exired
If your daughter is a PR and has not been formally reported or voluntarily relinquished her status then even though she might be in violation of the residency obligation she is still a PR.
If she has no intention of remaining a PR then she can volunteer to relinquish her status when next entering Canada. Eventually it will have to be dealt with. Coming back as a visitor will be no problem providing she can satisfy an examining officer that she will not work and will leave Canada. If she wishes to return to Canada as a PR at some later stage then she may have a problem if she does not meet the 730 day residency obligation unless she is married to a Canadian citizen and accompanying him outside of Canada. This link explains how people can lose their PR status http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resourc.../enf23-eng.pdf Link also shows how they can retain PR status if not actually living in Canada. |
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