I said no and did not attach any explanation letter. I got aor.
but did u live outside Canada during your eligibility period?
This illuminates nothing.
Reminder: AOR merely means the application has been received (AOR means, after all, "Acknowledgement of Receipt") and has cleared a
completeness screening. It signals NOTHING about the merits of the application.
Explanation for why AOR for an application containing a misstatement of fact in response to 9.c offers NO illumination:
For an applicant who checks "no" for item 9.c, that will of course pass the completeness screening. Even if that is a misrepresentation (a willful misstatement of fact), it will pass the completeness screening. Thus, AOR signals nothing about whether making such a misstatement of fact in response to 9.c is OK.
Thus, for the applicant who checked "no" for item 9.c when to the contrary, in fact, the applicant did indeed live abroad during his or her period of eligibility,
the obvious and remaining question is how will IRCC handle this when it assesses the application and applicant.
In particular, will IRCC --
-- consider this to be a misrepresentation (since the response is a statement contrary to the facts)
-- an oversight/mistake (of little or no import)
-- a misunderstanding of the question (again, of little or no import), or
-- will IRCC recognize the question itself is misstated or misleading, and treat the response as essentially Not Applicable (thus of NO import)
We are mostly confident it will be the latter, as it should be the latter, since it is clear the question itself is misstated or misleading, and for the vast majority of applicants (for any applicants who are not requesting credit for time living abroad pursuant to the Crown service provisions) the item is indeed Not Applicable.
Obviously, those who diligently strive to answer all questions truthfully will be inclined to check "yes" in response to item 9.c if they in fact did live outside Canada during their eligibility period. For these applicants, for those truthfully checking "yes" but who are not seeking the Crown service credit, a quandary arises because they are then instructed to complete and submit CIT 0177, which has no relevance to them at all.
Their options include (in addition to checking "yes") --
-- doing nothing more (no explanation, no CIT 0177)
-- handwriting NA or "Not Applicable" close to the "yes" checked on the application
-- submitting a CIT 0177 with NA prominently written on it
-- attaching a supplemental page to the application with an explanation that CIT 0177 is not relevant (or "not applicable")
All of these SHOULD be OK.
These should be OK, including the first, that is checking "yes" and not including a CIT 0177 form,
BUT there may be some risk this is an approach which might NOT pass the completeness screening. This is the approach for which an AOR would offer some actual information (or, for which a returned application referencing failure to include CIT 0177 would tell the tale). This is because the script followed in conducting the completeness screening might instruct the processing agent to verify that a CIT 0177 is included, or an explanation for why not, if there is a "yes" check for item 9.c. I doubt this is what the completeness screening script instructs, but of course we do not know for sure.
It is far more likely that 9.c does NOT factor at all in the completeness screening. That AOR signals nothing about how IRCC is handling responses to this item.
Nonetheless, it would be helpful to learn if any applicant who checked "yes" and did nothing more has received AOR.
Whereas, AOR for an applicant who checked "no" tells us nothing.