You gave up American citizenship before applying? If so why then? And why at all? Do you have another nationality or are you stateless until you get Canadian citizenship?Your post is full of ASS-umptions. And you're simply being a dork if you think this falls in the category of "complaining about everything" where it falls under complaining about something that "affects everything." I wouldn't bother replying to you, however, since, it's a public forum, I do want to encourage others to hold themselves to higher standards and not stay quiet if they don't see any progress on their application. YES, even if it's under 12 months mark.
1. How is it fair for someone's application to show "in transit" for 4 months after being received? What does it even mean in this day and age?
2. It's been 11 months since I've been in the process without a test invite. No other communication from them since. When I asked for my GCMS notes in June 2018, I got a copy that was last updated on 15th December 2017?
3. Every time I call, it's the same answer. Everything looks good, and you will hear from us soon. I'm 6 weeks away from hitting 12 months, and I'm supposed to believe someone is going to take care of it just in time, and everything will be fine.
4. I don't buy any background check BS which took 7-8 months I believe. For someone who's been here 19 years. Never had any run-ins with the law and filed/paid all his taxes. How hard is it to figure it out?
I love Canada, I've given up American citizenship and chose this country instead. I personally will not stay quiet till this department of government gets their act together.
I will be lawyering up immediately if I go over 12 months mark. After I get my citizenship I will continue to get myself heard. I encourage everyone else on this forum who has similar experiences to write to the immigration minister. To his credit, I've always gotten a reply back from his office.
If you applied 11 months ago, you applied when a ton of other people applied because a swath of people who were previously ineligible (all the PR people from October 2013 - October 2014) became eligible due to C-6 coming into effect that month regarding residency obligations.It’s right that they never guaranteed 12 months, but rather (from my useless new webform response, freshly received a couple of hours ago) “Although the estimated time may vary, rest assured that we are making the necessary efforts to process your application within established processing times.”
But the reality is: after 11 months of waiting, including “in transit” for nearly 4 months and then 3 months in local office with no change, it is hard to believe they are “making the necessary efforts” to process my application, it actually looks more like they are not making any efforts at all except telling me that they are making some imaginary efforts that nobody can see any results to prove
This is wrong. Processing times in 2015 to most of 2017 were lower (4-7 months) because of C-24 and the changes to residency requirements from 3 to 4 years. Officers making more decisions on citizenship apps came into effect with C-6 only earlier this year (delayed rule). Yet backlog is increasing anyways. Looking at the October - December 2017 times people are going 9-12+ months now from app received to oath. As another poster mentioned, there's no guarantee of an app being prior to 12 months, it's entirely based on a multitude of factors, ranging from staffing, to complexity of the application, backgrounds, and so on.Your whole argument is that people should just shut up and not complain (or be disgusted) if their processing time exceeds one year and you're very adamant about it. Not sure if you remember when the processing time was 2 or more years, if people thought the way you think, we would've stayed that way. But people complained and the government listened and corrected this by allowing officers to make the decisions which reduced times significantly. The government here is to serve people, not the other way around. Jeez, even the most difficult bureaucrats have more compassion than you.
I was impatient as well when I sat there almost half my application waiting between the test and oath, but reality is, you have to be patient, regardless of how hard it is. I simply stopped looking after a while, including on these forums, and went along my daily routine until I got the invite.