trumprefugee
Champion Member
- Jun 6, 2017
- 3,186
- Category........
- PNP
- Visa Office......
- Ottawa
- NOC Code......
- 2172
- App. Filed.......
- 06-01-2018
- Nomination.....
- 19-12-2017
- AOR Received.
- 07-01-2018
- IELTS Request
- 24-06-2017
- Med's Done....
- 05-01-2018
- Passport Req..
- 09-03-2018
- VISA ISSUED...
- 02-04-2018
- LANDED..........
- 28-05-2018
Lots of material here! Just want to address two points:
If Canada had, for example, a probationary period of conditional permanent residence for a certain reasonable amount of time, like the US does for spousal sponsorship and certain entrepreneur immigrants, and then the restrictions were moved (refugees no longer automatically losing PR status after cessation and PNP PRs allowed to live in any province), I'm sure way fewer people would be in such a rush to get citizenship. But given the current often onerous restrictions that many Canadian PRs are subjected to, and the fact that the only way out if the PR wants to maintain permanent status in Canada is to get citizenship, this is why people are so desperate to get citizenship.
Regarding the refugee PRs, thanks for the correction, which further underscores the need either for faster citizenship processing or removing the most onerous restrictions on PR mobility after a certain number of years or, for the refugees, getting rid of the law that automatically terminates PR status when cessation is determined. (Yes, unrelated to the original subject of this thread about paper vs online, but relevant to my point that PR status isn't great and why many people are in a hurry to get citizenship.)Something that needs to be made clear is that it is not that cessation of protected person status "means that PR status can also be revoked," but the determination of cessation itself automatically terminates PR status. It is indeed a severe consequence, and for many potentially an especially harsh outcome. It is indeed a situation rife with injustice.
But IRCC has little or nothing to do with this (although it apparently does refer some individuals to CBSA for investigation if there is clear evidence of reavailment presented in an application). It is the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness which investigates and prosecutes cessation proceedings before the RPD. There is no notice in those proceedings, so far as I am aware, of the impact on PR status if the RPD determines the individual's protected person status has ceased, but that decision in itself automatically terminates PR status. NO H&C relief available. This is by operation of law, not any decision made by IRCC.
If Canada had, for example, a probationary period of conditional permanent residence for a certain reasonable amount of time, like the US does for spousal sponsorship and certain entrepreneur immigrants, and then the restrictions were moved (refugees no longer automatically losing PR status after cessation and PNP PRs allowed to live in any province), I'm sure way fewer people would be in such a rush to get citizenship. But given the current often onerous restrictions that many Canadian PRs are subjected to, and the fact that the only way out if the PR wants to maintain permanent status in Canada is to get citizenship, this is why people are so desperate to get citizenship.
Yes, IRCC did prioritize the December 2020 online applications, but as others have indicated and also cited, after this first batch, paper applications are being prioritized over online, and quite significantly so. This would further add to the confusion of what is being prioritized, until many months after the fact.Loose cannon diatribes more or less attacking the Canadian immigration system as if it was a singular sentient being utterly miss the mark, at best vaguely identifying issues, at worst (and this is more common) causing confusion and misunderstanding. Take this topic for example, as I have illuminated, IRCC has actually given priority to a small percentage of online applicants, the first five thousand in the order in which they applied, these five thousand getting processed ahead of much older paper applications. The documents referenced well-explain why this fairly small number of online applicants have been, in effect, put ahead in the queue. But for whatever personal agenda some forum participants have come here to sow confusion and chaos by totally misrepresenting what IRCC has done in making this effort to facilitate the migration to a more digitally based processing system, still concentrating on processing the older paper applications, but using this small number of online applications to get that process rolling.