Does a Citizenship Judge have the ability to ignore strict physical presence requirements now? If so, how much leeway do they have?
From what I understand, they do indeed have some leeway. I'm not sure how much.
If there is NO question of fact, that is, if it is established that the applicant is ONE DAY short of the requirement which applies to the applicant (such as one day short of 1095 days physical presence for applications made on or after October 11, 2017), NO, a Citizenship Judge has NO DISCRETION to nonetheless approve the grant of citizenship for an applicant the facts show has NOT MET THE REQUIREMENTS.
Indeed, if an applicant sends in an application with a presence calculation which shows, on its face, a total of 1094 days physical presence, or less, the application WILL BE RETURNED and not processed, no interview, no referral to a CJ, no exercise of discretion.
WHERE SOME CONFUSION TENDS TO ARISE IS VARIATIONS IN OUTCOME WHEN THE APPLICANT CLAIMS TO HAVE MET THE MINIMUM THRESHOLD AND IRCC'S REVIEW CONCLUDES OTHERWISE.
As long as there is a question of fact, a question to be determined, as to whether or not the applicant met the minimum threshold, that is a question which gets referred to a Citizenship Judge, and it is for the CJ to decide if the applicant has presented sufficient evidence to support a conclusion the applicant met the minimum. A CJ has rather wide discretion in deciding what the facts are. There is a very wide range of
REASONABLE INFERENCES that can influence the decision.
But if the CJ concludes, as a matter of fact, that the applicant was SHORT, even by a day, there is NO LEGAL AUTHORITY to approve a 5(1) grant of citizenship. (The Minister has discretion to grant citizenship under other authority in Section 5 of the Citizenship Act. This is rare, and only available in very unusual, compelling circumstances.)
Example: applicant applies with presence calculation showing 1103 days presence. IRCC has evidence to believe the applicant was absent at least an additional 9 or more days. Applicant still thinks, and asserts, that even taking away some days he still was present for at least 1095 days. Case goes to CJ. CJ hears the applicant's side and decides whether to accept the applicant's version, and if so, the CJ has discretion to approve the applicant for a grant of citizenship. (IRCC citizenship officer can appeal if the officer concludes the CJ's decision is not reasonable.) BUT if the CJ concludes the applicant fell short, by JUST ONE DAY or more, the CJ does NOT have discretion to approve.
ANOTHER SOURCE OF CONFUSION DERIVES FROM FOUR DECADES OF CASES WHEN THERE WAS A "RESIDENCY" REQUIREMENT AND CRAZY-BROAD DISCRETION.
Applications made prior to June 11, 2015 were processed based on a RESIDENCY requirement. Most cases were decided based on a physical presence test BUT CJs had legal authority to employ other tests, residency tests, pursuant to which some applicants were approved and granted citizenship even though they were SHORT of the then 1095 day physical presence test . . . indeed, more than a few were barely IN CANADA five or six hundred days, way, way short of the 1095 day threshold. Many years there were probably hundreds of SHORT-FALL cases decided by CJs, many of which were to approve a grant despite the short-fall.
So there are scores of anecdotal reports of applicants being short and getting citizenship. But they are applicants who applied prior to June 11, 2015.
AND THERE IS SOME POSSIBILITY THAT IRCC IS APPROACHING SOME BILL C-24 APPLICATIONS (applications made between June 11, 2015 and October 10, 2017) AS IF THE BILL C-6 PRESENCE REQUIREMENT APPLIES.
To be clear,
I DOUBT this. The only indication of it, so far, are some isolated reports that applications sent before October 11, 2017, using the Bill C-24 requirements version of the application and presence calculator (thus requiring 1460 days physical presence during six years) which were not received until after October 10, 2017, MIGHT be processed pursuant to the 3/5 rule rather than the 4/6 rule. This would not surprise me much, but of course that would be a rather small number of applicants (since news of the October 11 implementation date for the 3/5 rule was well enough in advance that anyone cutting-it-close relative to the 4/6 rule more likely waited to apply as of October 11, as indeed it is clear many thousands did).
BUT, for example, perhaps (a long shot at best is my sense) someone who applied prior to October 11, 2017, applying under the 4/6 rule, but it turns out actually fell short a bit, a few days, of the 1460 day threshold, MAYBE, and ONLY MAYBE (again, I guess NOT), IRCC is allowing such applicants to be processed under the 3/5 rule.
The latter would NOT be a Citizenship Judge decision. It would have to be a Minister approved IRCC policy. And given the explicit terms of the transition provisions (see Bill C-6), which specifically state that applications made on the date prior to when the new 3/5 rule took effect are to be processed according to the law in effect the day before, that is according to the 4/6 rule, I seriously doubt the Minister has legal authority to do this (but I am not sure of this; this falls in the range of interpreting legislation).
Otherwise: If there is a way to consider the application made as of a date on or after October 11, even if signed and sent before that, that is a different deal. The law which applies depends on the date the application is deemed "made," and IRCC has some discretion in deciding how to decide when applications are deemed made.