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Your application for obtaining Canadian citizenship may be refused for a number of reasons, most important (and common) of which is failure to meet the residency requirement. The rejection of your application for citizenship must be communicated to you in writing within 60 days after your application was referred to a citizenship judge. Upon receiving the judge’s decision, the law provides you with 60 days time within which you can decide whether or not you wish to appeal rejection or refusal of your citizenship application.
The appeal from the refusal of your citizenship application must be made to the Federal Court. Appeals to the Federal Court involve a complicated procedure subject to strict evidentiary and procedural rules. You would therefore be well advised to retain the services of an experienced citizenship and immigration lawyer who is thoroughly familiar with the Federal Court’s decisions interpreting the legal meaning of the word “residence”.
You may think that it is rather straightforward: you either meet the three-year residency requirement or you don’t. However, despite the apparent clarity of the law as to the method for calculating the three-year residency, the phrase “residency” is not a defined word. There are some judges of the Federal Court who have defined “residency” as requiring actual physical presence in Canada. Other judges have, however, interpreted the word in a way that actual physical presence is not necessarily required so long as the applicant can demonstrate significant ties and connection to Canada. The connection to Canada may be demonstrated by such indicators as ownership of property, Canadian bank account, investments in Canada, membership in various social and recreational clubs, drivers’ license and etc. There are therefore people who have been able to obtain Canadian citizenship despite extended absence from Canada.
In addition to the residency requirement (of 1,095 days), there are other potential grounds for rejection of your citizenship application. These may include any, or a combination, of the following grounds: