looks like at the very least this is not a baseless conclusion and this out of an ATIP notes of IRCC titled “EXPANSION OF INTAKE, IMPLEMENTATION OF MODIFIEDFIRSTIN, FIRST OUT PROCESSING MODEL AND NOTIONAL DECISION TARGETS FOR CITIZENSHIP E - APPLICATIONS”
I’m not able to share the pdf here, if someone tells me how to I’ll upload here.
My key takeaways from notes
- The Department will process the old paper file backlog while processing a small portion ofthe e- applications received to refine processes, train officers, and identify issues early in the process.
- CN and DN will issue final decisions on the oldest of paper applications while also incorporating 5,000 e-application final decisions based on the order in which the e-applications were received, as part of its 245,000 FY 2021-2022 decision target, as outlined in Annex C. Increasing of the decision target above 5000 was considered but determined to not be beneficial.
- The 5,000 e-application final decisions target represents 2% of the 245,000 decision target and around 5% of the projected 110,000 e-applications that might be received in FY 2021-2022, assuming unlimited e-application intake. My thoughts: even though this is for 2021-2022 and we are in 2022-2023, this May increase by 10% or 30% but tipping it to anything higher seems unlikely given they concluded that going ahead with e application during height of pandemic was not beneficial now that everyone is returning to work I doubt if this will instantaneously become beneficial for 22-23.
- Prioritization of electronic applications would also drive paper applicants in the inventory to submit duplicate e-applications trying to achieve a faster decision, and put the department at high risk for mandamuses, as well as the possibility of increased processing times due to the work required to assess multiple applications for the same client