He has to withdraw this one and send another one right after... He has a big buffer now.send a new one. you gained plenty of days providing that you ve been in canada
He has to withdraw this one and send another one right after... He has a big buffer now.send a new one. you gained plenty of days providing that you ve been in canada
If you actually read the previous posts in this thread, the answer to this question should have been readily apparent. In your application you claimed enough credit to meet the qualifications, and that meets the completeness requirements, which means IRCC must, in effect, accept your application and then fully process it to determine if you in fact meet the requirements.Why did IRCC ALLOWED MY APPLICATION TO GET THIS FAR KNOWING I DID KNOW MEET THE REQUIREMENT FOR PHYSICAL PRESENCE JUST LIKE THE PERSON WHO STARYED THIS THREAD.
Beyond that, the observations offered by @frange otherwise emphasize that the presence-requirement, 1095 days credit, is an absolute requirement. One day short means the application MUST BE denied. And presence in Canada after the day the application was made DO NOT COUNT. This warranted emphasis given what appears to be a misunderstanding:They let your app get this far because verifying it is one of the last steps. Some offices do that before tests , some do that after. For most part of your waiting since submission, your app was most likely just sitting somewhere. Based on experiences shared by people here, when they receive your application they’d only check the attached residency calculator worksheet to see if you have claimed enough days, but for the last step they’d actually have to verify whether what you claimed were true
(context/full quote below). . . By [the time of the test] I was legally physically present for the 1095 days.
Hi
My situation is kind of similar. I have applied For citizenship. My app was received on Jan 8, 2018. I came as a visitor on a one entry visitor’s visa. Long story sort, I was out of status after my visa expired 6 weeks after I arrived. I applied for Pr March 2014. I received work permit August 2015 and landed November 2015. My application for citizenship was accepted even though I was not legally present for 1095 days but I was on Canadian soul for from May 2013 until I applied Jan 8, 2018. Since pr I have travelled outside the country with a total absence of 41 days. My app went into process feb 20 2018 and I got a test invite nov2 2018 ( exactly 3 years on my landed date). By this time I was legally physically present for the 1095 days. My test was nov21, 2018. I applied for my gcms notes every month or two since I applied. On the application- the physical prende calculator where it had my status and the amount of days beside it, IRCC WROTE. ‘ non verifiable) I am worried because I think they will refer me to citizenship judge or deny app which if they do I will just reaaply. Any thoughts on why my app went this far ?
Oh btw I called them 2days ago and they said they are verifying my physical presence.
You have made some very important points. I will let the forum knows what communication I got from IRCC whether a referral to CJ or refused application. Thanks for the time you took to break down the times I will be credited for and the possible outcome of the application. I accept your reasoning behind why IRCC initially accepted my application. Btw, I work for Canada post in Sydney so I hand delivered my application myself, this is irrelevant as I didnt need to explain this bits of my life, but since you said it was irrelevant or does not add up there you go. Lastly, I was sponsored.If you actually read the previous posts in this thread, the answer to this question should have been readily apparent. In your application you claimed enough credit to meet the qualifications, and that meets the completeness requirements, which means IRCC must, in effect, accept your application and then fully process it to determine if you in fact meet the requirements.
And then @itsmyid made it clear enough:
Beyond that, the observations offered by @frange otherwise emphasize that the presence-requirement, 1095 days credit, is an absolute requirement. One day short means the application MUST BE denied. And presence in Canada after the day the application was made DO NOT COUNT. This warranted emphasis given what appears to be a misunderstanding:
(context/full quote below)
To be clear: How many days you were present in Canada by the time of the test DOES NOT MATTER.
What matters is how many days you were present in Canada in the five years preceding the date you applied for citizenship, for which you would be credited:
-- a full day credit for each day present after landing
-- a half day credit for each day present prior to landing, but only days you had lawful status as a temporary resident of Canada (visitor status is a temporary resident status)
-- NO credit for days in Canada without status
Moreover, the burden of proof is on the applicant. So, getting the credit can depend on the applicant affirmatively proving actual presence on any or ALL the days the PR claims presence. AND, potentially, PROVING STATUS AS WELL.
All of that was already explained in previous posts in this topic. And, to be frank, is readily discerned from IRCC information about eligibility for a grant of citizenship. It is not that complicated.
What all this means for you, however, in particular, for this particular application, is NOT so easily discerned. Among somewhat relevant facts you offer a lot of irrelevant facts, and leave out some crucial details, and you offer some questionable details. (Example: you report that your application was received on Jan 8, 2018 BUT you also report you applied Jan 8, 2018, which seems highly unlikely unless you completed the application and somehow had it delivered to IRCC Sydney the very same day.)
FOR NOW YOU ARE OBVIOUSLY IN A WAIT AND SEE MODE. How this is going to go, how it will turn out, will largely depend on the calculation of credit for days in Canada, as I outlined above.
Getting back to your primary question, as to how or why your application has reached this stage, IF IRCC has concluded you are short days, as @itsmyid noted: IRCC does NOT reach a conclusion about the facts until it has seen and evaluated enough evidence to VERIFY the applicant's calculation, or enough to conclude there is a QUESTION about the veracity of the applicant's presence calculation.
The acceptance of the application is based merely on it being complete. If the applicant claims status and presence that adds up, in the applicant's presence-calculation, to a total of 1095 days credit, that meets the completeness check. BUT the completeness check says NOTHING, nothing at all, about whether IRCC believes the applicant's information is true and accurate. That is to be determined.
Basically, you claimed you are entitled to credit for at least 1095 days and that you meet the presence requirement. Canada is a RULE-OF-LAW country. This means a government agency or official cannot simply conclude a person is not entitled to citizenship. The applicant is entitled to a FAIR PROCEDURE. The applicant is entitled to have a complete application processed.
And, moreover, the presence requirement is different from other requirements. A Citizenship Officer can assess other requirements and if the Citizenship Officer determines the applicant does NOT meet those qualifications, the Citizenship Officer can deny the application. There is still a substantial procedural process IRCC must follow. Fairness letters for example. An opportunity to respond. But a Citizenship Officer can make the final decision as to those issues (like whether there is a prohibition barring the applicant from being granted citizenship).
BUT a Citizenship Officer CANNOT deny the application based on a conclusion the applicant failed to meet the 1095 day requirement as long as the applicant has at least a prima facie claim of presence meeting the requirement. If IRCC (per the decision-making of the responsible Citizenship Officer) concludes the applicant did not meet this requirement, based on NOT counting days the applicant claims presence, the Citizenship Officer must then MAKE a CITIZENSHIP JUDGE REFERRAL. The case then goes to a CJ who will ordinarily hold a hearing, which is more like an interview with the applicant, before the CJ decides what the facts are, whether the applicant has met the burden of proving presence in Canada that meets the 1095 presence requirement.
That process tends to take a very, very long time.
SHOULD YOU WAIT TO SEE HOW THIS GOES or SHOULD YOU WITHDRAW AND RE-APPLY?
I cannot say. I doubt anyone here can say with any confidence. MY GUESS is that you will need to re-apply BUT I am far from confident about this GUESS.
And I am NOT even sure whether the issue in your case actually qualifies as a Presence-Case which would require referral to a CJ.
OBVIOUSLY YOU WILL NEED CREDIT FOR DAYS BETWEEN MARCH 2014 AND AUGUST 2015 IN ORDER TO MEET THE PRESENCE CALCULATION. PERHAPS PLUS SOME.
JUST AS OBVIOUSLY, YOU SUBMITTED A PRESENCE CALCULATION COUNTING THOSE DAYS. PLUS SOME?
If the question is NOT whether you were present in Canada those days, but whether those days get credit or not, based on whether you had lawful status in Canada those days or not, I DO NOT KNOW if that constitutes an issue which a Citizenship Officer can make a final decision about, or whether that would require the referral to a CJ.
My GUESS is that a Citizenship Officer can make this decision. It seems likely that IRCC is the final arbiter of what status an individual has. And that appears to be the key question for your application: did you have status for at least 600 or so of the days you were present in Canada prior to August 2015.
Here's the arithmetic:
-- November 2 2015 to January 8, 2018, minus 41, totals around 748 days. Status is certain. These count full credit.
-- August 2, 2015 to November 1, 2015, totals 92 days. Status appears to be certain. Credit 46 days.
Total of for sure credits: 794 days. This is still 301 days short, for which you would need to be present WITH some status at least 602 days in order to get this credit. Even if you also for-sure get the credit for the six weeks on a visitor visa, that would add up to 21 days credit, and that still leaves you short by around 280 days.
So you need credit for those other days.
And ordinarily it would be fairly easy to conclude that you will NOT get credit for those days. In which case you fall short. In which case EVENTUALLY this application will be denied.
BUT there are, perhaps, other factors in play. Was your PR application based on refugee grounds? Was your PR application an inland spouse sponsored application? Is there any basis for concluding you had IMPLIED STATUS during that additional time period.
There are many potential questions leading to a range of possible results. My guess is that you will NOT be credited for some of that time, and thus this application will fail. BUT that is just my GUESS. I do NOT know.
Assuming, as it appears, that you did not have status for enough days to get enough credit to meet the presence requirement, it is to some extent curious that IRCC has not directly made this an issue. And there are other reports about applications not passing the completeness check, and thus being returned rather than processed, when IRCC identified a lack-of-status issue. So I was not summarily dismissing the question itself. It is merely that the answer is no mystery: the claim of presence was sufficiently made to require IRCC, so to say, to fully adjudicate it, which takes time.You have made some very important points. I will let the forum knows what communication I got from IRCC whether a referral to CJ or refused application. Thanks for the time you took to break down the times I will be credited for and the possible outcome of the application. I accept your reasoning behind why IRCC initially accepted my application. Btw, I work for Canada post in Sydney so I hand delivered my application myself, this is irrelevant as I didnt need to explain this bits of my life, but since you said it was irrelevant or does not add up there you go. Lastly, I was sponsored.
Thanks @dpenabill for your clarification and you advise him/her diplomatically to withdraw his/her application and then reapply right after if she/he doesn't to waist time .
1- In order to pretend to be in implied status, IRCC has to receive the PR sponsorship application and send its AOR while the applicant is in legal status in canada. Not the time the application is reached or delivered to IRCC. Otherwise, she/he is out of status and days unlawfully accumulated in Canada are void.
If CJ approves an application based on unlawful presence, the citizenship can be revoked at any time even after 50 years since it was granted by mistakes or illegally granted. Be aware of that.
2- @dpenabill ... According to your calculation, this applicant is under 1095 days rules and is short by around 280 days. There's no way that he reaches 1095 days unless they calculate unlawfull days in Canada.
Everybody knows that any application will be accepted or citizenship granted with less than 1095 days.
Conclusion:
He/she has the final decision to make by choosing which step is better for him/her. If she is in a rush for his/her citizenship, he/she has to withraw the application and then reapply right after. If not, he/she can wait for even months or years.
And finally, if your citizenship is granted based on unlawfull presence, it is against immigration laws and can lead to its revocation at anytime.
Did you read somewhere in her post that she was out of status for months.I say it’s best if you stop posting your long statements to members on this forum, as it gives them no hope and most of the information you provide is filled with assumptions. Furthermore, anyone who was present in Canafa prior to becoming a permanent resident with temporary resident status is able to count these days as a half day credit, up to a maximum of 1 year. Anyone who spent sufficient valid temporary resident status can count the credit as a portion when they are eligible to apply. This was also part of the amendments to the Citizenship Act that took effect last year. Please stop asking him for advice as his responses are simple assumptions and just gives you bad hopes, as if he ‘knows’ everything.
It’s not as simple as that. Some applicants found out the hard way...Furthermore, anyone who was present in Canafa prior to becoming a permanent resident with temporary resident status is able to count these days as a half day credit, up to a maximum of 1 year. Anyone who spent sufficient valid temporary resident status can count the credit as a portion when they are eligible to apply. This was also part of the amendments to the Citizenship Act that took effect last year
I believe u can use this below website for image uploading and post url of image hereHow do i add pictures of the doc that was sent to me?
Well man its clear the rejection is certain bcz being illegal does not count towards residence days. You have two options as per my understanding
I think you can just submit a new application- if you haven’t left Canada you should have more than enough days now.Hello everyone,
Following up. This is the correspondent I got from IRCC re the aforementioned situation. What do you guys think? Should I redo the calculations to reflect up to today or when I initially sent the app dec 2017?