The PR card renewal processing time is beginning to balloon-out it seems (111 days as of checking on IRCC's site yesterday).Just wondering why CIC takes such a long time to deliver PR card of the immigrants while the immigration process, for getting the PR, takes care of all the details and background checks beforehand?
Neither, apparently, is there any kind of Operations Research team at IRCC which would bat-through straightforward applications to alleviate the backlog and boost their productivity. That won't be a good idea, of course, unless and until some promotion-hungry middle manager thinks of it for herself, hehe.That's what I'm saying - they have a random number of staff not related in any way to the number of applications. So in most cases the staff is either idle or overloaded. There is no supply-demand mechanism involved.
Sure it doesn't work. It's a government. But it should be like this in order to function properly.dealing with supply and demand is not as simple as we may think. Hire when demand goes up and fire when it goes down is not how it works
You could say that for most governments..nothing newBecause IRCC is a bureaucratic tax-funded organization and as such has no incentives to do a good job. Their income is independent on the quality of service they provide.
Wow... it was at 63 days when I renewed mine last October (for the last time!).The PR card renewal processing time is beginning to balloon-out it seems (111 days as of checking on IRCC's site yesterday).
We can apply for PR card renewal once we're within 9 (nine) months of our current one's expiry date.
Mine's set to expire in March, so I'm going to apply for its renewal next month unless my citizenship application miraculously starts moving, hehe.
Yup. PR card renewal is shaping-up as the next disaster. Time for a Cabinet re-shuffle, Mr. Prime Minister; Mssrs. Hussen & Goodale, in particular.Wow... it was at 63 days when I renewed mine last October (for the last time!).
A.