(plea for follow-up reporting continued from previous post)
WHY it is NOW so IMPORTANT to share information:
When I began following the process nearly a decade ago, Citizenship Operational Manuals detailed just about every step of the process, and did so in minute detail for many steps (such as assessment of residency). Changes, even small changes, were published by way of either an amendment to the respective operational manual or the issuance of fairly comprehensive Operational Bulletins. Additionally, denied citizenship applicants had a right of appeal so there was a steady stream of Federal Court decisions (around four dozen a year or so) illustrating actual cases, many of which illuminated particular details in the process, detailed the Minister's approach and arguments, and overall offered a window into how various situations and circumstances affected particular applicants. At the same time, CIC provided detailed statistics about processing timelines, publishing statistics on how long it took for 20% of applications to be processed, how long for 50% (the most useful statistic, the median, an approximation of the timeline MOST qualified applicants could reasonably expect), and how long it took for 80% to be processed (giving applicants an idea about the longest it might take so long as they were not subject to some non-routine processing like RQ). Back then every grant citizenship application had to be decided by a Citizenship Judge, and the Citizenship Commission (organization of Citizenship Judges) annually published a fairly comprehensive report about the number of applications made, number deemed abandoned or withdrawn, number denied, number granted, number of in-person hearings, total number decided, and details about the number of appeals and applications for mandamus and the outcome of all those, including number of appeals and applications for mandamus conceded by CIC, and so on.
All that information established a comprehensive background against which we could better understand the sporadic and oft times unreliable anecdotal reporting in the forum. The Citizenship Commission reports in conjunction with the official Federal Court decisions, in particular, established some known and certain parameters against which the forum anecdotal reports could be assessed. It was easier, then, to recognize troll pollution. It was easier to recognize when forum participants were erroneously reporting this or that event (this happens a real lot), and other than the trolls (they are always present and active), most would correct their account when prompted by what was known about how the process actually worked, usually with appreciation since the discussion typically helped them better understand what was happening and, in more than a few instances, helped them make decisions about how to best navigate the process going forward.
I still rely heavily on the body of information accumulated over the course of those years (and since, but recognizing that as the years have gone by our access to information has been continuously diminishing and in the meantime there have been many changes).
Then CIC, under the Harper government, began to limit sharing operational information, redacting important operational changes even in responses to ATI requests, reducing the amount of information publicly disseminated generally (such as timeline statistics), and overtly categorizing more and more of the process as confidential, not to be divulged to the public.
In the meantime, the Citizenship Commission stopped publishing reports or otherwise sharing much information at all about the disposition of citizenship applications.
Then Harper's government abruptly dropped the Citizenship Operational Manuals altogether and initiated the transition to PDIs (Program Delivery Instructions), many of which tend to be so general as to be glib, which offer barely a percentage of the information previously provided by operational manuals.
Then there were the changes implemented by Bill C-24 in 2014. The role of Citizenship Judges was radically reduced, so even if the Citizenship Commission was publishing an annual report it would offer dramatically less information. Among the biggest changes was the elimination of a denied applicant's right to appeal (which took effect in August 2014). Applicants still have a right to seek leave for judicial review, but the number of such applications actually granted leave, heard, and decided by the Federal Court have been reduced to a mere trickle. Indeed, in the last three years there have been fewer published decisions, in total, than a typical six month period prior to 2014, and the majority (a large majority) of these decisions are appeals by the Minister (the Minister does have the right of appeal). So far this year, for example, there has not been a single published Federal Court decision in a grant citizenship case, not even for an appeal brought by the Minister. The impact of this, in addition to severely limiting an applicant's access to review, has been to eliminate what had been a major source of information about how the process worked in actual practice, and about how CIC or now IRCC actually interpreted and applied the law.
The latter looms huge. Really huge. Since the number of applicant appeals was typically no more than three or four dozen a year, from among the tens of thousands of dispositions in citizenship application cases, the burden of the appeals could NOT have been a significant factor in deciding to eliminate the applicant's right of appeal. My strong sense is that the Harper government apprehended too much information was being divulged to the public given that Federal Court justices were discussing details about CIC policies, practices, and especially CIC's interpretations and in-practice application of the law, in their decisions. Without that body of ongoing information, we, the public, are severely handcuffed in our effort to better understand how things REALLY WORK behind the curtains in IRCC.
SO WE NEED APPLICANTS TO REPORT MORE. We need more comprehensive and detailed reports. We need particular facts rather than interpretations or conclusions. (The forum has long been rife with reports like "the CIC/IRCC agent was biased and discriminated against me and decided this or that because of this or that . . . " which offer no real information or insight; specific factual details are far more illuminating.) We need ACCURATE reports. We need detailed reports.
Scores and scores of routine applicants are sharing minute details such as the date they get AOR, IP, notice for the test, DM, and so on. Which is fine. It is nice to share. It is comforting to have fellow-travelers along the way. BUT most of that information can be gleaned relatively easily from general reporting AND it rarely provides information which applicants can actually use in making decisions. After all, for the vast majority of qualified applicants, once they have sent off the application the only decisions they need to make are very easily made: watch eCas and their mailbox, prepare for the test, and wait.
The more pressing need for additional information, in contrast, is that information
-- which will help PROSPECTIVE applicants decide WHEN to apply, based on what criteria (it seems the tendency is to answer the *when* question based almost entirely on when the applicant technically becomes eligible; prudent applicants will take much more than this into consideration before applying)
-- which will help those subject to non-routine processing better understand and better navigate the process; some of this is easy, and there is plenty of information in the forum, such as relative to a request for Finger Prints; in contrast, if and when an applicant gets involved in a presence-case (an application regarding which IRCC questions whether the applicant met the presence requirement), that is when things can get a lot more complicated and applicants could use more information to help them navigate the non-routine process AND, importantly, to corral anxieties (typically, understanding is at least somewhat comforting)
End-of-plea for follow-up reports.