Hi, I am thinking of requesting ATIP from CSIS as well because during my interview officer said that it is the only thing left that they are waiting and After receiving that will send oath invite.
Any advice from your side would be appreciated
Today I did my test/interview and was told by the officer that no concerns with my application but waiting for CSIS security check and they got my RCMP checks done. Officer said that it adds about a month or so in the over all process time of the application. As soon. As they receive it they will call me for oath.
Any one in this forum know what is the average time after the interview for oath if CSIS security is still pending?
Odds are very high there is
NOTHING to WORRY ABOUT. The odds are very high there is NO NEED to make any further ATIP applications. NO NEED to do anything other than WAIT and WATCH for notice from IRCC. Odds are very good you can RELAX.
That is,
UNLESS you already know there is some reason to worry. In which event you already know what that is and you do not need to make any ATIP application to learn about it . . . and, after all, an ATIP application is NOT at all likely to provide any information you can use or is even much if at all informative.
Also note that obtaining any real information from CSIS is very, very unlikely. An ATIP request directed at CSIS is even more useless than the typically useless ATIP application to IRCC.
Also note that interviewers and call centre agents often make rather casual comments referring to outstanding "background" checks which are commonly (sure, not always, but usually) a way of simply telling applicants they need to WAIT, and little or nothing more, and the reason why the applicant needs to wait really is NOT about waiting for a security or criminality background check to be completed (even though technically their statement is truthful, that there is a background check outstanding in the file, but often the clearance has already been submitted just not recorded as such, a lot like how applications are in fact received in CPC-Sydney but as far as IRCC is concerned the application is NOT yet received, not until AOR, which can be several weeks or even months after the application is actually there).
LONGER EXPLANATION:
Unless you are aware there is an actual reason for Canadian authorities to be concerned about you, to apprehend you pose some kind of security risk or that you have some security or criminality issues in your background, it appears you may be overthinking things, perhaps way, way overthinking things.
Recognizing that you have reported making ATIP requests before, I am curious whether you made any actual decisions and took some specific action based on the information you received. After all, the overwhelmingly vast majority of ATIP records reported in this forum offer NOTHING of any real use. Sure, more than a few forum participants insist they benefited from obtaining a copy of their records, but very, very few of these credibly report obtaining any information which was in fact used in making a decision or taking any action . . . meaning that having obtained these records made NO DIFFERENCE in what actually happens.
The vast majority of reported ATIP requests here are an exercise in self-deception, fooling oneself into believing they are taking some kind of control over how it goes, or otherwise reassuring oneself.
This is NOT to dismiss the situations in which it is prudent to make ATIP requests. There are some circumstances in which it is indeed a good idea to make the ATIP application (but most of these, not all but most, are situations in which the ATIP request should be a very carefully composed CUSTOMIZED application, which demands doing a lot of homework first) And most of my posts in the forum are about the more complicated and tricky issues, about situations in which applications can and do take complex side trips into more involved and sometimes hazardous non-routine processing, and for a small percentage of those whose case has gone that way, it may indeed be prudent to make the ATIP application to the appropriate agency or minister.
A caveat: most "non-routine" processing is nonetheless fairly ordinary, "routine" in a practical, general sense even though it is something in addition to the formal "routine," and thus in IRCC terms "non-routine."
In contrast, there are full-blown RQ cases, suspected-fraud cases, cases involving complicated prohibition, criminality, or security issues, among other situations in which there are more serious non-routine elements, such as referrals for potential cessation of status. Very, very FEW applicants get entangled in these things. Those at risk for more serious non-routine processing almost always know what it is about without having to get any information from Canadian authorities. There are always some exceptions, but for the overwhelmingly vast majority, if there is a reason to be concerned, the applicant already knows about it. Thus, for the vast majority, for those who honestly know of no reason why there might be a more serious non-routine element lurking in their case, there is indeed NO REASON TO WORRY, no reason to overthink things, NO REASON to pursue ATIP applications.
I understand some people need to feel more in control, to be confident they are doing what can be done to get their application through the process. But generally ATIP applications are of little or, more commonly, NO use.
ATIP applications to CSIS especially so. Indeed, very few would know how to even begin composing an application which would generate any real information. Generic applications are especially worthless.