Philippine Asian News Today Vol 20 No 21 | Page 10
IMMIGRATION & Mortgage
10
The Notary
Corner
By Editha Corrales Nelson
PHILIPPINE ASIAN NEWS TODAY November 1 - 15, 2018
UNDERSTAND PERMANENT RESIDENT STATUS
Immigration Consultant, Notary
Public, Mediation / Arbitrator
Canada’s entry requirements
are changing
Permanent residents (PR) of
Canada must carry and present their
valid PR card or permanent resident
travel document (PRTD) when board-
ing a flight to Canada, or travelling
to Canada on any other commercial
carrier. If you do not carry your PR
card or PRTD, you may not be able
to board your flight, train, bus or boat
to Canada.
It is your responsibility to ensure
that your PR card is still valid when
you return from travel outside Cana-
da, and to apply for a new PR card
when your current card expires.
A permanent resident is some-
one who has been given permanent
resident status by immigrating to
Canada, but is not a Canadian citizen.
Permanent residents are citizens of
other countries.
A person in Canada temporarily,
like a student or foreign worker, is not
a permanent resident.
Refugees who are resettled from
overseas become permanent resi-
dents through the Government-As-
sisted Refugee Program or the Private
Sponsorship of Refugees Program.
Someone who makes a refugee
claim in Canada does not become a
permanent resident at that time. To
become one, the Immigration and
Refugee Board must first approve
their claim. Then, they must apply for
and get permanent resident status.
THE PERMANENT RESIDENT
CARD (PR CARD)
If you travel outside Canada, the
permanent resident card is your proof
that you are a permanent resident of
Canada. If you leave Canada, you will
need this card to re-enter the country
on a commercial vehicle, like an air-
plane, boat, train or bus.
Canadian permanent residents
need to show their permanent resi-
dent card when travelling to Canada
in order to prove their permanent resi-
dent status. Permanent residents who
do not have a PR card, or who are not
carrying their PR card when travelling
outside the country, will need to obtain
a Permanent Resident Travel Docu-
ment before returning to Canada by
air mode in order to comply with eTA
requirements.
If your permanent resident card
expires, it does not mean you have
lost permanent resident status.
WHAT PERMANENT RESI-
DENTS CAN DO
As a permanent resident, you
have the right to:
• get most social benefits that
Canadian citizens receive, including
health care coverage,
• live, work or study anywhere
in Canada,
• apply for Canadian citizen-
ship,
• protection under Canadian
law and the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms.
You must pay taxes and respect
all Canadian laws at the federal, pro-
vincial and municipal levels.
WHAT PERMANENT RESI-
DENTS CANNOT DO
You are not allowed to:
• vote or run for political office,
• hold some jobs that need a
high-level security clearance.
TIME SPENT LIVING IN CANA-
DA
When you are a permanent resi-
dent, you can live outside of Canada,
but must live in Canada for at least
two years in a five-year period. If you
live outside of Canada for longer, you
may lose your permanent resident
status.
For more information on how
long you have to live in Canada, see
Appendix A: Residency obligation of
the PR card application package.
LOSING YOUR PERMANENT
RESIDENT STATUS
Losing your permanent resident
status does not happen automatically.
You cannot lose your permanent resi-
dent status simply by living outside of
Canada long enough that you don’t
meet the residency requirement. Un-
less you have gone through an official
process, you have not lost or given
up your permanent resident status,
even though you may not be eligible
to return to Canada as a permanent
resident.
You may lose your permanent
resident status if:
• An adjudicator determines
that you are no longer a permanent
resident following an inquiry
• A visa officer determines you
do not meet the required residency
when you apply for a permanent resi-
dent travel document or temporary
resident travel document.
You may lose your permanent
resident status in one of the ways de-
scribed above if:
• you do not live in Canada for
two out of five years;
• you are convicted of a serious
crime and told to leave Canada; or
• you become a Canadian citi-
zen.
You do not lose your perma-
nent resident status if your PR card
expires.
VOLUNTARILY GIVING UP (RE-
NOUNCING) PERMANENT RESI-
DENT STATUS
Losing your permanent resident
status does not happen automati-
cally.
There may come a time when
you no longer want to be a permanent
resident of Canada. If so, you can ap-
ply to voluntarily give up (renounce)
your permanent resident status.
For example you:
• know you have not met your
residency obligations by being out-
side of Canada for a long period of
time, and
• would like to visit Canada,
and
• do not want to wait for a visa
officer to do a formal assessment of
your permanent resident status
OR
• would like to avoid processing
delays at the Port of Entry
You may not be able to enter
Canada until your permanent resident
status is resolved either by receiving a
Permanent Resident Travel Document
or by voluntarily giving up your per-
manent resident status.
If you know you no longer want
to be a permanent resident of Cana-
da, you can apply to voluntarily give
up your permanent residence status.
** Strictly taken from cic web-
site
A Canadian Certified Immi-
gration Consultant, Certified Senior
Advisor and a Notary Public in the City
of Burnaby, Editha Corrales Nelson’s
preferred areas of practice are Pow-
ers of Attorney, Wills Preparation, In-
ternational Legal Documents, Name
Changes, Affidavits, Letters of Invita-
tion, Statutory Declarations, Drafting
of Business Contracts and other no-
tarial services. For an appointment,
please call: 604-777-2757.
The following should not be
construed as providing legal advice
and information in this column is in-
tended only as a general guide and
should not be applied to specific cir-
cumstances without further consul-
tation. For more information on the
subject, contact Editha Corrales Nel-
son at 604-777-2757 or email: cor-
[email protected].
‘We are living in fear and limbo, we need Landed
Status Now!’ Migrant Care Workers Release Report
CANADA - Migrant Care Workers
in Toronto, Edmonton, Vancouver,
and Montreal are jointly releasing a
report on Sunday, November 18, 2018
calling for immediate action to stop
fears of mass deportation and ensure
permanent resident status on arrival
and family unity for migrant Care
Workers. Care Workers are calling for a
fundamental overhaul of the program
as a matter of fairness and human
rights. A care strategy also ensures
a healthy population in Canada and
upholds the integrity of the Canadian
immigration system. This historic
report is developed by Care Workers
themselves from the experiences of
working and living under the Caregiver
Program. The Caregiver Program is
set to expire in November 2019. Tens
of thousands of racialized women who
came to Canada with the promise of
living in Canada permanently with
their families are in limbo, in fear of
deportation, yet still full of hope for
fairness.
WHAT: Report Launch: “Care
Workers Voices for Fairness and
Landed Status”
WHERE,
WHEN,
MEDIA
CONTACTS:
Toronto: Nov 18, 11am, Suite
203, 720 Spadina Avenue, 647-782-
6633 (Caregivers Action Centre &
Caregiver Connections)
Edmonton: Nov 18, 1pm,
CUPE 474 Hall - 10989 124 Street,
780-937-5908 (Alberta Careworkers
Association & Migrante Alberta)
Vancouver: Nov 18, 10am,
BCGEU, 130-2920 Virtual Way, 604-
618-3649 (Vancouver Committee for
Domestic Workers and Caregivers
Rights)
Montreal: Nov 18, 10am, 4755
Van Horne, Bureau 110, 514-238-
0089 (PINAY Quebec)
WHO: Landed Status Now
Campaign, Migrant Care Workers,
Legal experts and Women leaders
BACKGROUND
For over a hundred years,
women workers like us have come to
Canada to provide care for families,
people with disabilities and the elderly.
In the last 60 years, that work has been
through temporary work programs.
The current Caregiver Program was a
WWW.PHILIPPINEASIANNEWSTODAY.COM
pilot program created in 2014 by the
previous Conservative government
without consultation with Caregivers,
and is incredibly flawed.
Only 1,955 Care Workers and
dependents were granted permanent
residency in the first 36 months under
the current Caregiver program. This is
in stark contrast to the average 10,740
Care Workers and their dependants
received permanent resident status
every year under the previous Live-In
Caregiver program. If this immensely
exclusionary program is allowed
to lapse, all Care Workers entering
Canada today will not have access to
permanent residency and may have to
make the difficult decision to become
undocumented.
Caregiving
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