To be clear, my observations are not intended to defend IRCC or the Canadian government. They do not need defending. That's not my purpose.
Rather, my observations are aimed at helping others better understand some issues by clarifying how the system works, which in the face of so many misconceptions oft repeated in a forum like this, sometimes requires some contextual analysis including the
why underlying how something works this or that way.
MAKE NO MISTAKE, client error in conjunction with a situational surge in the number of applications made, is almost certainly the main cause of the process going slow this year, perhaps lingering into next year.
In contrast, observations like the following illustrate a kind of narcissistic myopia, almost as if the government should gear its services to accommodate one individual:
The service is lacking from the government's end NOT my end. All these problems are government's problems / challenges not mine.
Sure, so you filed a PERFECT application and all the facts and circumstances in your life are obviously consistent with the information you provided, so a processing agent should quickly sail through assessing your case.
But you have to wait your turn in line.
So your getting in line with a perfect application is something like going into a store checkout line with three items, which will scan properly, having the exact change in hand, but the line is long and some in line in front of you have many more items and some are demanding multiple price checks, some have coupons which are not scanning properly, some have problems with their plastic working, among other issues, and more than a few are a bit like me, old and slow.
That is, the problem is applicants have to wait their turn in line behind others who like you made a PERFECT application. BUT also in line behind the many, many thousands who made mistakes, have complicated circumstances, who applied with a margin so small an extra effort to verify presence is required, among scores and scores of wrinkles and warts among those NOT-so-PERFECT as
thee.
Or are you special? and deserve to have your application moved ahead of others, thousands and thousands of others, because they did not submit a PERFECT application?
To be clear, in some important respects applying for citizenship is not like going through the checkout in the grocery store . . . it is about an application to the government to give you a GRANT of STATUS FOR LIFE, an IRREVOCABLE GRANT FOR LIFE (unless there was fraud, which obviously there was not since your application is PERFECT). It is not a process for which the government can simply open a few more check out lines at will. (Notwithstanding the bureaucratic realities, however, the system is OBVIOUSLY working, as IRCC will most likely successfully process and grant over TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND citizenship applications this year.)
There are, it is fair to estimate,
nearly a quarter MILLION applicants in line now. Probably near double the number in line a year ago. This much larger number is because the current government dramatically relaxed the requirements and as of last October in effect opened the gates for at least a few hundred thousand immigrants to become qualified a year or even more sooner than they would have under the prior law. Which is what the overwhelming majority of immigrants asked for and supported. By the summer of 2020 the surge should be well past and processing times will likely return to long-term norms . . . but even long-term historical norms have tended to range from approximately six months (or a bit less) for those going through the fastest, and nonetheless tending to be 8 to 12 months for MOST of those ROUTINELY processed (not counting the huge slowdown during Harper's government, when routine timelines were 18 to 24 months for a long while).
In the meantime, to be clear, among that quarter MILLION in queue now, the thousands and thousands in front of your PERFECT APPLICATION, there are many thousands whose applications fell rather short of being perfect. In
another thread (this should link) I detailed just a FEW of the MANY, MANY mistakes applicants make, little and not-so-little, but each one making it more difficult and TIME-CONSUMING for a processing agent to review and verify the applicant's information. Even just an extra 15 to 30 minutes per applicant adds up when there are thousands and thousands of applicants in line.
For a more extensive list of errors made, instructions not followed, complicated circumstances, just peruse the topic titles in this forum, page after page of applicants rushing to apply and then posting "OH-NO-I-made-a-mistake" queries.
Most of us who have gone through the process, and most going through the process now, appreciate the amount of effort IRCC applies to work through client errors, to the extent possible and reasonable, even though doing so demands all of us wait a little longer. Most of us prefer IRCC to exercise discretion and tolerance, to facilitate the path to citizenship even if we do not make a PERFECT application. I certainly did not make a perfect application, though I made a concerted effort to get as close to perfect as I could; but I also had some complicating circumstances, as many, many immigrants do, and that is simply the nature of the beast, many of us simply cannot be in a position to make a PERFECT application. Sorry we slow some of you down. But recognize we are more to blame for how slow the process is than IRCC.
Then there are those who insist their opinion rules no matter how contrary to the facts it is. (to be continued . . . )