Note I was not addressing anything about the progress of your case; I stated:I appreciate the inputs you are giving in regards to this matter. However; based on my experienced with my application right now, my application was not deemed non-routine. My background check and security clearance was completed only within 5 business days after receiving AOR. I am waiting now for my test-invite.
Assuming that you applied for citizenship with pre-PR will not gonna caused your application to be non-routine because the pre-PR status in Canada is a legal status as states in IRCC glossary.
As of today, my files is under normal processing time. I will update everyone in this thread if I get update regarding my application.
In particular, I was not commenting on your status or what the process is in your case other than as an example of an applicant providing an explanation and in effect pushing/compelling IRCC to process an application that was initially returned for being short of meeting the physical presence requirement.I am nowhere near familiar enough with the situation described by @SpiritualWonderBoy to comment on it or what it might mean in your situation [referring to the situation @Cannnada is dealing with].
Nonetheless, since (as you reported) your application was not accepted/returned not just once, but twice, that makes it non-routine (routinely processed applications do not get returned to the applicant or otherwise not accepted).
In regards to: "Assuming that you applied for citizenship with pre-PR will not gonna caused your application to be non-routine because the pre-PR status in Canada is a legal status as states in IRCC glossary."
Makes no sense. Any application can end up subject to non-routine processing no matter how perfectly completed by a fully qualified applicant. Many qualified applicants get finger print requests for example. If for any reason a processing agent has questions, that can trigger non-routine processing.
Moreover, if a client's pre-PR time in Canada is not documented in the client's GCMS, even if should count IRCC might not credit it UNLESS the applicant more or less insists and then is able to satisfy IRCC they had temporary resident status during that period of time. Just saying it's so is not enough. (Just like days in Canada as a PR, they count, but IRCC can question them and an applicant can be required to provide additional proof they actually were present.)
Reminder: the fact that an application encounters non-routine processing does not illuminate much. What matters is the particular non-routine processing involved. Some non-routine processing is minor and only minimally increases the timeline. Finger print requests, as mentioned, for example, and even returned applications which are easily fixed and quickly re-submitted.
Even some presence-questioned cases can be resolved in a relatively short time. These are often referred to as "RQ" cases, meaning the applicant gets a Residence Questionnaire, but these days not all presence-questioned (residency-questioned) applications get RQ'd, as it appears in some cases IRCC is conducting (or referring to CBSA's NSSD to conduct) residency-questioning investigations without making RQ requests. (So applicants can have a non-routine application without knowing it, since applicants are not advised if the application is undergoing investigation, and it will not show up in GCMS and call centre agents will not inform the applicant of it; even the fact they are conducting an investigation is confidential -- all the applicant will see is that others are getting scheduled for the oath sooner than they are.)
The risk is that if what the applicant submits is questioned, there is a significant chance that MIGHT cause RQ-related non-routine processing, and if that happens that can result in a much longer processing timeline. Not always. But if waiting six or ten weeks longer to apply can for sure eliminate doubts, waiting can mean taking the oath much sooner.