Hello people,
I have sent the following email to Minister Hussen: Ahmed.Hussen@PARL.GC.CA
Anyone else in the same boat is welcome to copy and send it too. Or add anything else that bothered you about the new citizenship application.
Cheers,
rmorgan
Subject: Ambiguous Wording of Question 9C in Citizenship Application Leading to Returned Applications and Loss of Goodwill for the Liberal Party
The Honourable Ahmed D. Hussen, PC, MP
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship
Dear Minister,
Thank you most sincerely for your efforts for Bill C-6 which was of great importance to many Canadians, and future Canadians, as it ended the Conservative effort to divide Canadians by having a two-tiered citizenship as well as their imposition of unnecessary hurdles to citizenship.
The provisions of Bill C-6 which came into effect on 11th October allowed me to apply using the new citizenship application form.
I would like to bring to your urgent attention that some of the questions in the new citizenship application form were not very clearly worded, particularly Question 9C which reads as follow:
9 c) During your eligibility period did you live outside of Canada: Yes No
If you checked YES please complete and submit the Residence Outside of Canada form (CIT 0177) with your completed application, along with the print out of your Physical Presence Calculator.
A large portion of the applicants have indeed lived outside Canada during the eligibility period (the period 5 years before their application), and so they must check YES in 9C above. However, the application then requests them to complete the Residence Outside of Canada form CIT 0177 which is ONLY applicable to Crown Servants or their family members and NOT applicable to the vast majority of the applicants.
On the discussion forums (www.canadvisa.com/forum) some applicants have advocated that this question 9C should only be answered by Crown Servants and/or their Family Members, so other applicants should simply check NO as their response. However, others fear that answering a simple YES/NO question with a NO response when one has indeed lived outside Canada during the eligibility period would leave one open to the threat of revocation of citizenship anytime in the future (say under, a future Conservative Government) for having made a false/misleading statement in their citizenship application. Accordingly, some applicants who have lived outside Canada during their eligibility period (but are NOT Crown Servants or Crown Servant family members) have checked YES to 9C, and NOT submitted Form CIT 0177.
The reaction of IRCC to the above varying answers to Question 9C has not been confirmed. However, there are anecdotal reports that some applicants who checked YES and did not submit Form CIT 0177 were issued with an AOR (Acknowledgment of Receipt of application) by ICRC, while some other unlucky ones have had their applications returned.
We fully understand that rolling out a new citizenship application format under time pressure was bound to be accompanied with a few hiccups. However, managing the hiccups smoothly will go a long way to continue to add to the reservoir of goodwill for you and the liberal party. But this goodwill may be threatened if citizenship applications are returned simply because the applicant has answered Question 9C in its current ambiguous form truthfully as a YES, even when that involved not being able to meaningfully complete/submit the additional form CIT 0177.
In view of the above, it is my earnest hope that IRCC will show flexibility for the applicants who have answered this question in its current ambiguous form as follows:
a) Applicants who answered YES to 9C but did NOT complete and submit form CIT 0177 will continue to have their applications processed, rather than returned,
b) Applicants who answered NO to 9C will NOT be considered to have made a false/misleading statement when their accompanying Physical Presence Calculator printout clearly claims that they did, in fact, live outside Canada during their eligibility period.
May I also request you to have this ambiguity in the new Citizenship form removed at the earliest and issue a new version of the form, where Question 9C can be amended (to read something similar to as follows):
c) During your eligibility period did you live outside of Canada as a Crown Servant or with a Crown Servant Family Member (Spouse, Common-law partner or Parent): Yes No
If you checked YES please complete and submit the Residence Outside of Canada form (CIT 0177) with your completed application, along with the print out of your Physical Presence Calculator.
Thank you for your kind attention to the above,
Yours truly
Name
Address
Email:
Cell:
I have sent the following email to Minister Hussen: Ahmed.Hussen@PARL.GC.CA
Anyone else in the same boat is welcome to copy and send it too. Or add anything else that bothered you about the new citizenship application.
Cheers,
rmorgan
Subject: Ambiguous Wording of Question 9C in Citizenship Application Leading to Returned Applications and Loss of Goodwill for the Liberal Party
The Honourable Ahmed D. Hussen, PC, MP
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship
Dear Minister,
Thank you most sincerely for your efforts for Bill C-6 which was of great importance to many Canadians, and future Canadians, as it ended the Conservative effort to divide Canadians by having a two-tiered citizenship as well as their imposition of unnecessary hurdles to citizenship.
The provisions of Bill C-6 which came into effect on 11th October allowed me to apply using the new citizenship application form.
I would like to bring to your urgent attention that some of the questions in the new citizenship application form were not very clearly worded, particularly Question 9C which reads as follow:
9 c) During your eligibility period did you live outside of Canada: Yes No
If you checked YES please complete and submit the Residence Outside of Canada form (CIT 0177) with your completed application, along with the print out of your Physical Presence Calculator.
A large portion of the applicants have indeed lived outside Canada during the eligibility period (the period 5 years before their application), and so they must check YES in 9C above. However, the application then requests them to complete the Residence Outside of Canada form CIT 0177 which is ONLY applicable to Crown Servants or their family members and NOT applicable to the vast majority of the applicants.
On the discussion forums (www.canadvisa.com/forum) some applicants have advocated that this question 9C should only be answered by Crown Servants and/or their Family Members, so other applicants should simply check NO as their response. However, others fear that answering a simple YES/NO question with a NO response when one has indeed lived outside Canada during the eligibility period would leave one open to the threat of revocation of citizenship anytime in the future (say under, a future Conservative Government) for having made a false/misleading statement in their citizenship application. Accordingly, some applicants who have lived outside Canada during their eligibility period (but are NOT Crown Servants or Crown Servant family members) have checked YES to 9C, and NOT submitted Form CIT 0177.
The reaction of IRCC to the above varying answers to Question 9C has not been confirmed. However, there are anecdotal reports that some applicants who checked YES and did not submit Form CIT 0177 were issued with an AOR (Acknowledgment of Receipt of application) by ICRC, while some other unlucky ones have had their applications returned.
We fully understand that rolling out a new citizenship application format under time pressure was bound to be accompanied with a few hiccups. However, managing the hiccups smoothly will go a long way to continue to add to the reservoir of goodwill for you and the liberal party. But this goodwill may be threatened if citizenship applications are returned simply because the applicant has answered Question 9C in its current ambiguous form truthfully as a YES, even when that involved not being able to meaningfully complete/submit the additional form CIT 0177.
In view of the above, it is my earnest hope that IRCC will show flexibility for the applicants who have answered this question in its current ambiguous form as follows:
a) Applicants who answered YES to 9C but did NOT complete and submit form CIT 0177 will continue to have their applications processed, rather than returned,
b) Applicants who answered NO to 9C will NOT be considered to have made a false/misleading statement when their accompanying Physical Presence Calculator printout clearly claims that they did, in fact, live outside Canada during their eligibility period.
May I also request you to have this ambiguity in the new Citizenship form removed at the earliest and issue a new version of the form, where Question 9C can be amended (to read something similar to as follows):
c) During your eligibility period did you live outside of Canada as a Crown Servant or with a Crown Servant Family Member (Spouse, Common-law partner or Parent): Yes No
If you checked YES please complete and submit the Residence Outside of Canada form (CIT 0177) with your completed application, along with the print out of your Physical Presence Calculator.
Thank you for your kind attention to the above,
Yours truly
Name
Address
Email:
Cell:
Last edited: