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aseemrastogi2

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Feb 16, 2019
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MANMEET S. RAI:

What to make of all the documents and internal instructions posted earlier:

1. Applications are being processed. The pace may be slow, but most applications filed in 2019/2020 have been processed and most stages have been cleared. Some even have a decision made.

2. The applications have been grouped based on document expiry, medicals, etc. for the ease of finalizing them once border restrictions ease. See the documents posted earlier.

3. Until the borders re-open, the restrictions are significantly eased, and the federal government on the recommendation of Public Health Agency of Canada allows foreign travellers, IRCC cannot start issuing PPR/COPRs. Also once the PPRs/COPR are being issued, country-specific conditions will impact them and also the sheer volume of applicants who are all waiting. However, most PPRs are sent in batches and you will see a large volume of PPRs soon.

4. A PR applicant / FSW outland / PNP outland etc. are not separate categories under law. All restrictions and conditions applicable to a foreign national/traveller are also applicable for a PR applicant. Only after an applicant presents herself at the port of entry, is examined and admitted into Canada, they attain a PR status. Or when they are issued an e-COPR after virtual landing (for applicants physically in Canada). Stop looking for specific instructions for PR applicants/FSW/Outland applicants etc.

5. Federal elections are expected to be announced this month and will most likely be held in September. During an election, all federal agencies will continue to work as normal and any policy change for the long run will only take place after the new government is formed. However, some decisions may be delayed such as further reduction of border restrictions, but will not affect any applications already being processed.

6. Why is IRCC not issuing PPR/COPRs? The answer is simple. Until an applicant can travel to Canada issuing a travel document does not make sense as it may expire. When a document expires, the file has to be reopened, some checks may have to be re-done/extended and new documents issued. This is time-consuming as compared to finalizing an application and issuing a document for a file already open, knowing that the applicant can travel and there will no need to issue now documents.

If you are waiting for a decision on your application, expect news in September/October, based on the COVID situation in Canada and how far the border restrictions are eased.

Finally, do not get bogged down by rumours and fear-mongering. All the Twitter frenzy being targetted towards Canadian Immigration and Citizenship / Marco Mendicino, Minister of Immigration, should be instead targeted towards Justin Trudeau, and Public Health Agency of Canada, they are going to make a decision on when borders will be opened and for whom. IRCC will merely follow in their footsteps.

#ImmigrationMatters #immigrationlaw
So it seems that the June 21st decision to allow valid COPR holders was only for those with existing COPRs. And all the other finalization of applications will only happen after full border reopening i.e. 9th Sept 2021.
 
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Jaycejay

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Jan 4, 2020
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So it seems that the June 21st decision to allow valid COPR holders was only for those with existing COPRs. And all the other finalization of applications will only happen after full border reopening i.e. 9th Sept 2021.
Seems so. I’m very optimistic we would see PPRs being released in batches from September, as long as the epidemiological situation stays favorable. Apparently, IRCC is only following Federal government’s decisions. If they fully open the border, PPRs could start raining
 

aseemrastogi2

Hero Member
Feb 16, 2019
696
648
Western Canada: Alberta and Manitoba are home to some of Canada’s least-vaccinated areas

As provinces across the country implement their respective plans to lift COVID-19 restrictions, they point to this country’s vaccination rates – among the highest in the world – to argue that they can re-open safely.

But those seemingly robust national or even provincial rates hide pockets where small numbers of people have been vaccinated, as predominantly rural or remote regions lag behind the rest of the country.

The most extreme examples are on the Prairies: the northwestern corner of Alberta in and around High Level, and the southern tip of Manitoba in the Rural Municipality of Stanley. In both places, just 16 per cent of the population have had their first doses, which is just a fraction of places like Calgary and Winnipeg.

Those low vaccination rates are leaving residents vulnerable to the fast-spreading Delta variant and put those areas at risk of never having the level of protection public-health experts argue is needed to keep COVID-19 under control.

In the High Level region – which includes the 3,000 residents of the town of High Level as well as more than 20,000 residents in nearby communities, First Nations reserves and rural areas – the uptake is spread across age groups, including seniors. Just 30 per cent of people over 75 have received at least one dose; for teenagers, the coverage is about 12 per cent.

High Level Mayor Crystal McAteer, who has had two doses herself, told me that she believes the rates in her town are not too far off from the provincial average, but that the surrounding areas, where people are spread out and where some religious communities are especially resistant, help to explain the numbers.

Ms. McAteer also suspects the official rate is low due to the number of First Nations reserves in the High Level health area, which are often not included in the regional vaccination numbers, even though many of them have had very successful vaccination campaigns. About 29 per cent of the area identified as Indigenous, compared with less than 3 per cent across the province.

But she also acknowledges that some people have been taken in by misinformation online and she’s skeptical that things like the Alberta government’s vaccine lottery will do much to change that.

“We have horrible internet up here, we have horrible newspaper reporting, and people just are not getting the right information. They’re getting all their information from social media,” she said.

Norman Bueckert, a pastor at the High Level Christian Fellowship, said many people in his congregation have dutifully followed the COVID-19 rules, but many – including him – remain unconvinced about the vaccines.

He said there has been so much conflicting information floating around about vaccines that people just don’t trust public-health officials insisting the vaccine is safe. The provincial government’s decision to fence off a handful of churches and jail pastors who refused to abide by pandemic capacity limits has only bred more suspicion, he added.

Mr. Bueckert said he hasn’t closed the door permanently on the vaccine, and he doesn’t think all of the holdouts in his church have, either. He said people in his church believe COVID-19 is real – some have gotten sick and there are people in the community who have ended up in intensive care

“I’m not an anti-vaxxer, because I have all the other vaccines,” he said, “I’m personally not ready yet and don’t trust the vaccines.”

Data from Alberta Health shows that the region had lower vaccination rates than the rest of the province even before the pandemic. For example, by age two, about 26 per cent of children in the High Level health area had received the DTaP-HB-IPV-Hib vaccine – a standard infant shot that protects against several diseases including diphtheria, hepatitis B and polio – compared with about 77 per cent across the province as of 2017. The rate for the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine was 44 per cent, compared with 87 per cent across Alberta.

Alberta also lags behind the rest of the country for vaccine coverage; the province is near the bottom when it comes to first doses and is behind most other provinces for second doses, as well, despite leading on that metric early on. And like many places in the country, Alberta’s rural areas generally have lower vaccine uptake than the larger cities.

In Manitoba, it’s not just the Stanley area that has low rates. About 30 per cent of the total population in Winkler has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine – well below the 69-per-cent average across the province. The rate for the Rural Municipality of Stanley surrounds Winkler and extends south to the U.S. border.

Stanley Reeve Morris Olafson said access has been an issue that has discouraged some from getting vaccinated when they realize the “rigmarole” involved in waiting weeks for scarce appointments. He said that has gotten a lot better and he expects the numbers to improve.

He also noted that Stanley’s population is young – the median age is 23 compared with 41 in Canada – which has also pushed down rates.

Mr. Morris agreed that misinformation and conspiracies are a problem but he doesn’t think that’s the main issue.

“I think it’s more hesitancy than it is anything else,” he said.

Health officials in both provinces have pointed to a number of factors keeping people from getting vaccinated, from continued difficulty accessing vaccines in rural areas, distrust of the medical system, religious beliefs, and misinformation.

They say they are working with community leaders, churches, and others to slowly push up those numbers. Manitoba was the first province in Canada to introduce a lottery to entice people to get the COVID-19 vaccine. Alberta was the second.
 
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Jaycejay

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Jan 4, 2020
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Some interesting IRCC documents were posted in the Canadian Immigration Law FB page.

Seems outland applicants are being grouped into 3 categories for potential finalisation and COPR issuance from September based on travel restrictions that will be in place by then.

Link to join the group if anyone is interested in reading for themselves https://www.facebook.com/groups/EEwithLegalFalcon/?ref=share
Yeah it seems. He also posted a couple of eye-opening information on his page tonight. I’ve read every bit of them
 
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aseemrastogi2

Hero Member
Feb 16, 2019
696
648
Some interesting IRCC documents were posted in the Canadian Immigration Law FB page.

Seems outland applicants are being grouped into 3 categories for potential finalisation and COPR issuance from September based on travel restrictions that will be in place by then.

Link to join the group if anyone is interested in reading for themselves https://www.facebook.com/groups/EEwithLegalFalcon/?ref=share
Were you clear on the grouping? I was wondering if the grouping is only for those whose application is approved or for others as well?
 

Hokage

Hero Member
Feb 27, 2020
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"Check your application status:
We’re currently finalizing most applications we received between
October 25 and 31, 2020"

No update/movement on this yet? Have they perhaps finally paused processing of CEC apps for 2021 finalisation as one user tried to explain a couple of days ago. Was it you jaycejay or Impatientkangaroo lol?
 
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Santaclause

Star Member
Jan 29, 2020
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They haven't updated this info yet. It is supposed to be every week:

"
Express Entry applications
Last updated: July 27, 2021
Canadian Experience Class applications
We’re working at full capacity to process applications.
You may experience delays because we have a backlog of applications due to COVID-19.
We’re currently finalizing most applications we received between
October 25 and 31, 2020 ?
If your application is complex, it may take us longer to process it.
All other Express Entry applications
  • We have limited capacity to process applications and you may experience a delay.
  • If your application was approved on or before March 18, 2020, and your COPR has expired, you must follow these instructions.

"
 
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Jaycejay

Champion Member
Jan 4, 2020
2,296
5,644
Category........
FSW
"Check your application status:
We’re currently finalizing most applications we received between
October 25 and 31, 2020"

No update/movement on this yet? Have they perhaps finally paused processing of CEC apps for 2021 finalisation as one user tried to explain a couple of days ago. Was it you jaycejay or Impatientkangaroo lol?
@ImpatientKangaroo did and i also reiterated
 
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