In regards to the subject of this thread and the OP's query, that has been largely addressed, including in particular here:
this normally happens when you are close to 1095 days and have travels during the eligibility period. They have to look at everything closely and many times they go for second review if officer is not clear about anything. This is my experience from multiple posts on this forum and is NOT official reasoning.
It is not apparent the OP's application is even subject to a delay. Processing timelines vary considerably.
That said, applying with 1100 days is
cutting-it-close, close enough there is a significant risk IRCC could have moved the application into a processing stream in which the application is subject to more scrutiny, more screening, than it otherwise would have. Odds are this will not cause a significant delay UNLESS there is additional cause for concern. Since this is entirely within the scope of investigatory processing, IRCC does NOT share information about it, not even as to the application being in a queue for such screening.
Unfortunately, RQ-related non-routine processing, especially if it involves either a referral to CBSA NSSD for background investigation as to the applicant's physical presence, or it involves full blown RQ, or both, can cause quite lengthy delays. There is no indication this is happening, or will happen to the OP (
@lightspeed97). But the OP will mostly need to wait to see where things go next. Not likely that a ATIP request will provide any advance notice of what will happen next.
Forecasting how these things will go is very difficult, near impossible, and is largely speculation. But
in the absence of any indication there is an issue looming, best guess is that things are on track, OK, and even if IRCC is taking a closer look, things should work out and proceed within the range of what is seen generally . . . meaning the oath could be scheduled any day or it may be weeks or even a few months.
Outside Canada Off-Topic Tangent:
Without digging into the OP's other posts there appears to be NO hint that the processing of applicants known or perceived to be relocated outside Canada is relevant here. So the subsequent outside-Canada discussion may be, in the context of this thread, a red herring, a totally off-topic tangent.
But to the extent some of the commentary here suggests there is no correlation of risks associated with IRCC perceiving applicants to have relocated outside Canada after applying, that suggestion is NOT accurate, not close.
There is merit to the statement as other applicants outside Canada have mentioned the same interview request.
I believe this is a general “feeling” of the applicants and this feeling has now attained a mythological status.
There is NO hint that recognizing there is IN FACT a correlation between being outside Canada for an extended time, after applying, and an increased RISK of delays, including non-routine processing causing delays (request for proof of return to Canada for just one example, which obviously is NOT a delay for non-routine processing applicants IN Canada encounter) has "
now attained a mythological status." On the contrary, most references to this are balanced, duly noting the variability, and meanwhile there continues to be a large number of posts minimizing the correlation, and many outright challenging whether there even is a correlation (despite the extent to which it has been clearly documented). It warrants noting that many (perhaps most) of such challenges appear rooted in a
belief that IRCC should not consider or be influenced by an applicant's location outside Canada after applying, disregarding it is patently clear that in SOME cases IRCC does.
Best to set aside beliefs. Leave religion and superstition and "
feeling" out of it. For the purpose of helping applicants make decisions, what is useful is information, figuring out as best we can how things actually work; at least to the extent we know and can learn what is relevant to the decision-making that will aide applicants navigating the system, both before and after applying.
To be clear, there has been plenty of reliable anecdotal reporting from applicants who have encountered delays related to being outside Canada which is disproportionate to comparable applications for those who continue to live and work in Canada after applying.
That is, the correlation between being outside Canada and SOME (a significant number but how many among those outside Canada is unknown) applicants encountering delays is well established.
Moreover, historically relocating outside Canada after applying has been explicitly targeted. For a time, in fact, just living outside Canada after applying provided sufficient grounds to deny an application even though the applicant otherwise fully met the requirements. While this was (appropriately) deemed excessive, draconian, so for good reasons repealed, many of the underlying reasons for that approach almost certainly continue to have some influence in IRCC decision-making.
Let's be honest: anyone claiming IRCC processing agents and citizenship officers are NOT prone to have questions, if not increased concerns about applicants who have relocated abroad after applying, is either lying or delusional.
The known information makes it clear that:
-- MANY applicants outside Canada are NOT negatively impacted but, rather, are routinely processed and scheduled for the oath comparable to routinely processed applications made around the same time and processed in the same local office, but
-- MANY applicants outside Canada encounter delays in processing disproportionately compared to others, and that this is BOTH:
-- -- in terms of numbers affected, and
-- -- in the extent of the delays encountered
Figuring out who, when, and to some extent why the disparity, is tangled in some mystery. Applying this information to a particular applicant who is outside Canada is largely speculative, at least unless and until there is some action by IRCC manifesting otherwise, such as the applicant getting notice they will need to provide proof of return to Canada, or the applicant is subject to RQ-related non-routine processing requests.
But some general correlations are easily figured out. For the applicant who, in terms of meeting the physical presence requirement, is
cutting-it-close, the safe bet is that this in conjunction with relocating outside Canada after applying at least increases the risk of non-routine processing. It does NOT necessarily mean non-routine processing, but for any applicant whose application already has an increased risk of non-routine processing, no advanced degrees in rocket science necessary to map the risk trajectory if the applicant has also relocated and is living abroad after applying.