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Glaber

Hero Member
Feb 22, 2019
241
568
Thank you very much for you reply! I am FSW applicant. One more thing to clarify if there will be any issues related to choosing not to live at the initially highlighted city or province in application at the later stage of applying for citizenship?
FSWs have no such obligation. You're free to land or settle wherever you please mate. :) (Except Quebec)
 
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itwillrain

Full Member
Dec 8, 2021
37
26
Ah yes, another soon-to-be Winnipegger! You've made a great choice in destination.
I'm considering Winnipeg too. If anyone has other affordable recommendations, please drop some. Assume I'll be working remote.
I'd be super bored till the PPR comes, finding a decent place to settle in Canada is the least I can do.
 

FurioGiunta

Hero Member
Nov 18, 2020
304
494
FSWs have no such obligation. You're free to land or settle wherever you please mate. :) (Except Quebec)
For FSWs at least once they have landed, I think they are free to live and work anywhere in Canada including Quebec. I don't think they have the obligations of PNPs or Quebec applicants.
 

ImpatientAlligator

Hero Member
Sep 7, 2021
782
1,376
For FSWs at least once they have landed, I think they are free to live and work anywhere in Canada including Quebec. I don't think they have the obligations of PNPs or Quebec applicants.
If you tell the CBSA during landing that you plan to settle in Quebec, there is a chance that they'll reject you.

A friend of mine got through FSW long back and got a job in Montreal before landing. His company's immigration lawyer was insistent that he needed a Quebec PR or a work permit to work in Quebec before he landed . After he did a soft landing in Vancouver, they were cool with it. So, I guess you can't show intent to live in Quebec at the time of landing.
 

Vidnomenon

Star Member
Oct 19, 2021
170
197
Category........
FSW
NOC Code......
1123
AOR Received.
06-01-2021
Med's Done....
27-10-2020
Passport Req..
20-06-2022
What were your two ADRs? Was your eligibility review required?
I got ADR for PCC and Schedule A then ADR for proof of employment.
Never ordered GCMS notes so I have no idea what their comments on my eligibility were
 

wonderbly

VIP Member
Aug 26, 2020
3,875
3,087
Once-idle immigration officer now working on dormant files, applicants say
Those assigned to Canadian officer 'DM10032' finally getting permanent residency after years-long wait


After being stuck in immigration limbo for years, people around the world who had permanent residency applications assigned to one Canadian immigration officer — notoriously known among them as a worker who's fallen "asleep," "useless" or idle — are finally seeing significant movement on their files.

Some immigrant hopefuls have even landed in Canada in the past few weeks while others are booking one-way tickets with newly stamped passports in hand — only a couple of months after CBC News told their stories about the torturous wait under an officer only known to them as code "DM10032."

The officer had left their applications largely untouched for years, prompting questions about their employee status or even the person's existence.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) confirmed to CBC in January that DM10032 was an active employee, but didn't explain why dozens of applicants assigned to this officer were left in the dark since they applied to become permanent residents in 2019. It said it doesn't "comment on personal details."

Now it appears the department has largely cleared a backlog of permanent residency (PR) applicants waiting for more than two years under DM10032.

"As soon as this story got published, we discovered that the officer … began to work on these files," said Oluwaseun Adewolu, who had her residency finalized in the past couple of months after nearly a three-year wait.

"Two months after … literally everyone in my WhatsApp group has all gotten PPR [passport requests]. We have quite a number of people from that same group that are going to land [in Canada] this weekend."

Adewolu, who is a member of several social media groups created around Canada's immigration delays and DM10032, said she knows more than 30 applicants assigned to that officer who have had significant movement on their files in the past two months.

According to IRCC's written answers submitted to the House of Commons this March, officer DM10032 was overseeing 77 applicants as of Feb. 2, 2022 — 59 of those applicants have waited more than a year, and only five people who've waited more than two years.

It's unclear whether those with the longest wait times have been reassigned to other immigration workers, or whether officer DM10032 was able to fast track applicants since their story was published in late January.

Adewolu said there's a "blissful" atmosphere among applicants now.

"It's just like giving birth to a new baby, just like getting promotion at work," said Adewolu. "People joke more, people just are more open … compared to when we were all depressed and sad from the 26, 27 months of waiting."

Adewolu's family left Nigeria and landed in Winnipeg in March. She has registered her children in school and has been doing job interviews.

"It's been three weeks but to a large extent, I've seen the glamour, I've seen the reality of Canada, I've seen how welcoming the country is."

Jibi Mathews in India had told CBC she last heard from DM10032 in March 2020. In an update to CBC, she said she got her passport request (the final step before becoming a permanent resident) a few weeks ago.

" would like to thank IRCC and the officer DM10032 for finally taking decision on my PR application after two years," she wrote.

'The wait is killing us,' says family
But some are still waiting.

Kiranjot Randhawa, who applied for PR in November 2019, said she's one of the handful of people still waiting under DM10032 for more than two years.

"[We] try to remain positive regarding our application, that one day we will receive that golden email," she said from India. "That hope is keeping us alive. But the wait is killing us."

Though she's happy for the others who've seen movement, she said the wait has become "more torturous" for her family in recent months.

"They are booking their tickets, shopping and everything, and I'm still waiting every day checking my status," she said.

Those assigned to DM10032 are only a tiny snapshot of the mountain of files waiting at IRCC. Canada had a backlog of more than 1.8 million immigration applications as of Feb. 1, according to IRCC data.

Since January, CBC has received more than 100 emails from desperate applicants assigned to various officers asking for help to share their stories — some waiting as long as five years for a decision.

"It's been very depressing, like I go to sleep most nights very sad. I think I've lost a bit of myself," said Ikechukwu Uketui, an optometrist in Nigeria. He applied in November 2019 and his file was assigned to officer code "AB14712."

"It really breaks me mentally, sometimes I just cry … I just can't wait for it to be over."

IRCC hopes $85M will help reduce wait times
In an email response to CBC News, IRCC admitted it needs to improve its operations and said it's "taking action" to reduce its inventory of applications that grew during the pandemic.

It noted the federal government proposed $85 million in new funding for the department during this fiscal year, which would help hire more staff to work on the backlog and help reduce wait times.

"Please note that the processing of an application may involve more than one officer and applications can be shifted from one processing centre to another to make processing as efficient as possible," wrote IRCC spokesperson Jeffrey MacDonald.
 

DogNotTheHot

Full Member
Oct 14, 2021
35
62
Hello everyone!

FSW Inland - VO Ottawa AOR Aug 2020.
Medicals were passed based on GCMS notes in early December 2021 (after been expired in Aug 2021).
Medicals passed on GC Account March 31
ADR Request IMM 5669 Schedule A for both me and my dependents.

I will submit the info tomorrow morning and hopefully, I'll not be very far from the Portal email :)
 

ImpatientAlligator

Hero Member
Sep 7, 2021
782
1,376
Once-idle immigration officer now working on dormant files, applicants say
Those assigned to Canadian officer 'DM10032' finally getting permanent residency after years-long wait


After being stuck in immigration limbo for years, people around the world who had permanent residency applications assigned to one Canadian immigration officer — notoriously known among them as a worker who's fallen "asleep," "useless" or idle — are finally seeing significant movement on their files.

Some immigrant hopefuls have even landed in Canada in the past few weeks while others are booking one-way tickets with newly stamped passports in hand — only a couple of months after CBC News told their stories about the torturous wait under an officer only known to them as code "DM10032."

The officer had left their applications largely untouched for years, prompting questions about their employee status or even the person's existence.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) confirmed to CBC in January that DM10032 was an active employee, but didn't explain why dozens of applicants assigned to this officer were left in the dark since they applied to become permanent residents in 2019. It said it doesn't "comment on personal details."

Now it appears the department has largely cleared a backlog of permanent residency (PR) applicants waiting for more than two years under DM10032.

"As soon as this story got published, we discovered that the officer … began to work on these files," said Oluwaseun Adewolu, who had her residency finalized in the past couple of months after nearly a three-year wait.

"Two months after … literally everyone in my WhatsApp group has all gotten PPR [passport requests]. We have quite a number of people from that same group that are going to land [in Canada] this weekend."

Adewolu, who is a member of several social media groups created around Canada's immigration delays and DM10032, said she knows more than 30 applicants assigned to that officer who have had significant movement on their files in the past two months.

According to IRCC's written answers submitted to the House of Commons this March, officer DM10032 was overseeing 77 applicants as of Feb. 2, 2022 — 59 of those applicants have waited more than a year, and only five people who've waited more than two years.

It's unclear whether those with the longest wait times have been reassigned to other immigration workers, or whether officer DM10032 was able to fast track applicants since their story was published in late January.

Adewolu said there's a "blissful" atmosphere among applicants now.

"It's just like giving birth to a new baby, just like getting promotion at work," said Adewolu. "People joke more, people just are more open … compared to when we were all depressed and sad from the 26, 27 months of waiting."

Adewolu's family left Nigeria and landed in Winnipeg in March. She has registered her children in school and has been doing job interviews.

"It's been three weeks but to a large extent, I've seen the glamour, I've seen the reality of Canada, I've seen how welcoming the country is."

Jibi Mathews in India had told CBC she last heard from DM10032 in March 2020. In an update to CBC, she said she got her passport request (the final step before becoming a permanent resident) a few weeks ago.

" would like to thank IRCC and the officer DM10032 for finally taking decision on my PR application after two years," she wrote.

'The wait is killing us,' says family
But some are still waiting.

Kiranjot Randhawa, who applied for PR in November 2019, said she's one of the handful of people still waiting under DM10032 for more than two years.

"[We] try to remain positive regarding our application, that one day we will receive that golden email," she said from India. "That hope is keeping us alive. But the wait is killing us."

Though she's happy for the others who've seen movement, she said the wait has become "more torturous" for her family in recent months.

"They are booking their tickets, shopping and everything, and I'm still waiting every day checking my status," she said.

Those assigned to DM10032 are only a tiny snapshot of the mountain of files waiting at IRCC. Canada had a backlog of more than 1.8 million immigration applications as of Feb. 1, according to IRCC data.

Since January, CBC has received more than 100 emails from desperate applicants assigned to various officers asking for help to share their stories — some waiting as long as five years for a decision.

"It's been very depressing, like I go to sleep most nights very sad. I think I've lost a bit of myself," said Ikechukwu Uketui, an optometrist in Nigeria. He applied in November 2019 and his file was assigned to officer code "AB14712."

"It really breaks me mentally, sometimes I just cry … I just can't wait for it to be over."

IRCC hopes $85M will help reduce wait times
In an email response to CBC News, IRCC admitted it needs to improve its operations and said it's "taking action" to reduce its inventory of applications that grew during the pandemic.

It noted the federal government proposed $85 million in new funding for the department during this fiscal year, which would help hire more staff to work on the backlog and help reduce wait times.

"Please note that the processing of an application may involve more than one officer and applications can be shifted from one processing centre to another to make processing as efficient as possible," wrote IRCC spokesperson Jeffrey MacDonald.
When JT got elected, he said "because it's 2015!". It's 2022 now and the tech/operations they have in place belong to the early 20th century.
 
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FurioGiunta

Hero Member
Nov 18, 2020
304
494
If you tell the CBSA during landing that you plan to settle in Quebec, there is a chance that they'll reject you.

A friend of mine got through FSW long back and got a job in Montreal before landing. His company's immigration lawyer was insistent that he needed a Quebec PR or a work permit to work in Quebec before he landed . After he did a soft landing in Vancouver, they were cool with it. So, I guess you can't show intent to live in Quebec at the time of landing.
Right, the safest thing to do is land somewhere other than Quebec, get your PR card then move wherever you want. Even waiting for PR card is probably not necessary, but I would err on the side of caution.
 
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boilercat

Star Member
Sep 16, 2020
127
51
Folks...Just curious...what does every bodies ADR say....mine says something like" in order for us to make a decision...we require the following info/docs" am I correct that some peoples adr say "in order for us to continue reviewing your application...we require..." can anyone confirm this and is there a difference...is one phrasing better/meaningful than the other....

Is anyone else's officer code start with HM...

I'm so tired
Mine just say we require the following
 

oinkario

Hero Member
Nov 2, 2021
319
336
Category........
PNP
Got my GCMS notes today (My 4th one)

Zero fks given. Only Eligibility passed and medicals extended (But I don't see it on my online portal yet). Security and Cirmianlty still not started.
Two good things: I got all my GCMS notes in under 30 days. No need to spend another $400 on medicals.
Hopefully you’ll get it soon! Medical extension is a good sign. :)
 

Alwy

Full Member
Oct 28, 2020
45
25
India
Category........
FSW
NOC Code......
4152
Hi, I did my re medical on 30 March 2022. Since the exam was requested by IRCC, I was told I don't have to upload or sent any documents to IRCC. But, my profile still shows status as we have requested medical exam. I feel anxious, is this normal? Should I wait for some more days? Or should I call medical centre and ask them whether they sent my medical details to IRCC?
 

WPGBound

Star Member
May 12, 2020
161
224
Hi, I did my re medical on 30 March 2022. Since the exam was requested by IRCC, I was told I don't have to upload or sent any documents to IRCC. But, my profile still shows status as we have requested medical exam. I feel anxious, is this normal? Should I wait for some more days? Or should I call medical centre and ask them whether they sent my medical details to IRCC?
I'm guessing it's normal. IRCC has requested quite a few re-meds recently, I wouldn't be surprised if they have their own internal backlog of receiving the IMEs from doctors and passing them through the system until they reflect in our accounts.

I did my re-medical exam on March 29 and am in the same boat as you - haven't seen anything to reflect that it's been received by IRCC.
 

Alwy

Full Member
Oct 28, 2020
45
25
India
Category........
FSW
NOC Code......
4152
I'm guessing it's normal. IRCC has requested quite a few re-meds recently, I wouldn't be surprised if they have their own internal backlog of receiving the IMEs from doctors and passing them through the system until they reflect in our accounts.

I did my re-medical exam on March 29 and am in the same boat as you - haven't seen anything to reflect that it's been received by IRCC.
Ok thanks.