I am sorry to say that but your application will be rejected for not meeting residency eligibility. If you withdraw and reapply, you will save plenty of time on your next attempt. Good luck
You don't know that. He may or may not save time by withdrawing and reapplying under new law, but you don't know that either. People on here should not speak in such absolutes about what will happen in cases they don't know much about......Diplomatru said:I am sorry to say that but your application will be rejected for not meeting residency eligibility. If you withdraw and reapply, you will save plenty of time on your next attempt. Good luck
I am not saying that my opinion equals to legal advice. CJ hearing + appeal by IRCC can take two years or more. IRCC will never grant citizenship without court order in such a case.links18 said:You don't know that. He may or may not save time by withdrawing and reapplying under new law, but you don't know that either. People on here should not speak in such absolutes about what will happen in cases they don't know much about......
The thing is that even if you are 5 days short the CO can grant the citizenship without going to a CJ but cannot refuse it. So I agree with links18, nobody should be that absolute without any knowledge on the case.Diplomatru said:I am not saying that my opinion equals to legal advice. CJ hearing + appeal by IRCC can take two years or more. IRCC will never grant citizenship without court order in such a case.
I have never heard of such cases.Icebergmoma said:The thing is that even if you are 5 days short the CO can grant the citizenship without going to a CJ but cannot refuse it. So I agree with links18, nobody should be that absolute without any knowledge on the case.
This is the first time I also hear such thing.Diplomatru said:I have never heard of such cases.
The new procedures of the c-24 bill have been applied right after the royal assent (mid june 2014). That means that before 2015 June 11th, the residency was still not defined as purely physical in the law. So, an officer can grant the citizenship if after a RQ you have successfully demonstrate that you strong ties in Canada.2.5.6 Role of Citizenship Judges (Clause 12)
Clause 12 sets out new section 14, which establishes a more limited role for citizenship judges in processing citizenship applications. The Minister will refer an application to a citizenship judge only if he or she is not satisfied that the residency requirements are met.
Yes, you are wrong.Icebergmoma said:http://www.lop.parl.gc.ca/About/Parliament/LegislativeSummaries/bills_ls.asp?ls=c24&Parl=41&Ses=2#a49
The new procedures of the c-24 bill have been applied right after the royal assent (mid june 2014). That means that before 2015 June 11th, the residency was still not defined as purely physical in the law. So, an officer can grant the citizenship if after a RQ you have successfully demonstrate that you strong ties in Canada.
If he/she's not sure, the application will be transfer to a judge.
I may be wrong but that's what I understand.
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/tools/cit/admin/decision/judge.aspWhen to refer an application to a citizenship judge
Applications must be referred to a citizenship judge where an officer is not satisfied that the applicant meets any of the following requirements, assuming all other requirements for citizenship have been met.
For applications received before June 11, 2015
The applicant is a permanent resident.
The applicant has accumulated at least 3 years (1095 days) of residence in the 4 years immediately before the date of their application.
You are in wait mode. This happens. There is probably nothing you can do to accelerate the process or even discern what will happen next until something does happen.YNSAFDARI said:What is the best way to address the issue, like through my ATIP i found that I am 1091 days, meaning short of 4 days according to the officer. Should I write a letter or call CIC to find out or wait for their letter or refusal (hope not). Please advice.
YNSAFDARI said:Just received my ATIP, the officers comment says " Applicant has fallen below 1095 days ". Physical presence = 1091 mentioned on ATIP, Basic residence = 1402.
And this notes are of 3rd Dec 2015, but so far neither I have got refusal letter nor Oath. I had filled up the form as per the best of my knowledge without hiding anything.
Can anyone shed any light on this status? What are my chances of making it as it wasn't done intentionally just missed few days.
Icebergmoma's responses are the most accurate, as well as observations by links18.YNSAFDARI said:What is the best way to address the issue, like through my ATIP i found that I am 1091 days, meaning short of 4 days according to the officer. Should I write a letter or call CIC to find out or wait for their letter or refusal (hope not). Please advice.
robw said:I hate to say it, but your chances are practically zero. It has to be 1,095 by their calculation. I can't imagine this ending up in no other way than a rejection. Perhaps, maybe, you get an RQ, but likely this will end in rejection.
Sorry...
Diplomatru said:I am sorry to say that but your application will be rejected for not meeting residency eligibility. If you withdraw and reapply, you will save plenty of time on your next attempt. Good luck
Regarding the latter, it is simply not true that IRCC will not grant citizenship without a Federal Court decision. In fact, again, there are credible reports that CIC and then IRCC (which is new name for CIC) have granted citizenship to some shortfall applicants without even referring the case to a Citizenship Judge.Diplomatru said:I am not saying that my opinion equals to legal advice. CJ hearing + appeal by IRCC can take two years or more. IRCC will never grant citizenship without court order in such a case.
This, in particular, is indeed how it is.Icebergmoma said:The thing is that even if you are 5 days short the CO can grant the citizenship without going to a CJ but cannot refuse it. So I agree with links18, nobody should be that absolute without any knowledge on the case.
Diplomatru said:. . . you are wrong.
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/tools/cit/admin/decision/judge.asp
Even if it's 1094 days the case will still go to a CJ, which is a waste of time because CIC will challenge that in court leaving single digit percent chances for a positive outcome and delaying the process by a few years.
Well, I suppose it may indeed be the first time Politren has heard of this, and perhaps that should come as no surprise. But that actually does not appear to be the case or the first time Politren heard of an applicant being approved despite a shortfall; and indeed earlier in this thread this same individual posted:Politren said:This is the first time I also hear such thing.
(Note: this one is accurate.)Politren said:Under the old rules the people still could be approved with a shortfall of actual physical presence.
chx said:I read several times on this board that it's futile now and they won't grant exceptions now. That's not so. Every case is different. I was short by 157 days (however 133 of those were for helping out with my baby nephew as a medical necessity) and yet here we are: I am invited to take the oath on Apr 5.
My timeline in Vancouver:
Application received March 6, 2013.
Processing started May 2, 2013.
RQ sent to me November 28, 2013. We (I had a lawyer up to this point) answered somewhere second half of December.
Test May 7, 2014. Did 19/20. Yes, I am annoyed at not doing 20/20.
Interview with a citizenship judge at the Surrey office February 16, 2016.
Oath invite sent on Mar 2, 2016 for Apr 5, 2016.
Another thing which might or might not have helped: I have filed for a second time last November under the new rules because at that point I did have enough days under the new rules but I didn't send the proper form for withdrawal of the old one and on Dec 9 I got a call from the Nova Scotia office saying a) if you want to withdraw your old application you need to send a form not just a plain letter b) if I did withdraw I would need to retest c) I should wait until the end of January before withdrawing the old one... Surprise, surprise: I got my notice for the hearing just before the end of January. And then it is not impossible that both the judge and the CIC office have seen the futility of refusing my old application. I can't say. Every case is different.
jman1200 said:Hi
I just this forum joined to share my experience. This site provided me valuable information so I'd like to return the favour.
I applied for Citizenship before reaching Physical Presence and it got granted. Now, I do not advise anyone to do this.
My particular situation:
- I had the number of calendar days required to apply for citizenship.
- I was 100 days short to meet the physical presence. My absences were due to vacation, I work and live in Canada.
- Applied in Oct 2012.
- I decided to apply because the requirements were changing back in Nov 2012 and if I had waited, I needed to prove I knew English which I learned when I was a kid and I didn't want to take any kind of tests.
- In Dec 2013 they asked for additional documents, a Residence Questionnaire which I sent with 100+ pages of documents to prove I lived here.
- In Aug 2014 I wrote and passed the Citizenship test. Official that reviewed my file after the test told me that because I applied before meeting the physical presence my application will have to be reviewed by a judge and that it could take up to 8 months. Said that I'd be better if I withdrew my application and re-apply. I decided to take my chances.
- Oct 2015. Once my application exceeded the 36 months, I called the call centre to inquiry about my file and why it was taking so long.
- Nov 2015 got an appointment to meet a judge. Judge reviewed my file and asked my about my ties to Canada, I was able to tell he followed the Koo test I read about somewhere. Judge was very nice to speak with.
- Jan 2016. My application was granted.
If I had known I'd take so long and that I was going to be under so much stress thinking it was going to be rejected, I'd have waited to meet the physical presence and write the English proficiency test. Many friends that applied after me, got their application approved within 8 months.
My advise, wait until you meet all the requirements.
dpenabill said:The Ryeome Lee decision (this should link) is a fairly straight-forward ruling upholding the decision by the Citizenship Judge. This applicant was ultimately 21 days short (1074 days actual physical presence), even though she declared more days present in her application.
This was both a credibility case (Minister challenging the CJ's approval in part because there were, allegedly, unresolved credibility issues) and a shortfall case. Justice Southcott even suggested a different decision maker might agree with the Minister, or at least have reached a different conclusion than the CJ, but that is not enough to overturn a CJ's decision.
One interesting aspect of this case is that the CJ applied the Papadogiorgakis test for residency. That is one of the alternative qualitative tests that can be applied to applications made prior to June 11, 2015. For several years the qualitative test usually applied is that often referred to as the Koo criteria. Koo specifies far more specific parameters for determining if the applicant was resident-in-Canada for at least three years even if absent some of those three years. The Papadogiorgakis test is quite vague, the focus of inquiry on whether the applicant has shown that his or her life has been centralized in Canada.
In any event, Ryeome Lee was short, but the CJ found she was resident-in-Canada per the Papadogiorgakis test and approved her application. The Minister appealed, and lost.
[This is a partial quote; go to linked discussion for full post and context, and observations by others.]
dpenabill said:Many, many applicants have taken the oath after having been issued RQ.
. . .
How these cases go is very much dependent on the particular facts and circumstances, especially the extent to which the applicant is clearly a settled resident of Canada, but also on certain details including, for example, whether pre-landing credit is involved, extent of residential ties generally, overall duration of applicant's life in Canada (applying with 1099 days basic residence, and a shortfall in actual residence, does not make a good case), in addition to more general factors which can be influenced by detailed factors, credibility looming very large in the latter part of the equation.
Regarding credibility, again it is a huge factor.
[Again, this is a partial quote; see linked discussion for full post and context.]
That should be enough doing homework for others. There are many other topics in this forum which discuss many aspects of this.dpenabill said:Foremost, as I already noted, preparing for a hearing with a Citizenship Judge is a big topic.
There are many, many individual details which factor into what makes a better case versus what is difficult to overcome in a given case.
That said, the real opportunity to prepare for a Residency Case hearing with a Citizenship Judge was in the submission of a response to CIT 0171, the RQ (Residence Questionnaire), and frankly how the case turns out will be in large part dictated by what has already been submitted.
[Again, this is a partial quote; see linked discussion for full post and context.]
This is about Bill C-6 and the provision to repeal the current provision requiring applicants have an intent to continue to reside in Canada.Politren said:The Intend to reside clause will be removed ONLY for those who will apply after the Royal Assent.
It doesn't have retroactive effect.
For all those who have applied between June 11th 2015 up until the Royal Assent of this Bill, the Intend to reside clause will remain effective until the Oath.
dpenabill said:Shake my head. No. Totally wrong.
Section 1(5) in Bill C-6 repeals the entirety of Section 5.(1)(c.1) in the Citizenship Act; Section 5.(1)(c.1) contains the so-called Intent to Reside requirement. This provision, the repeal of the intent requirement, will be effective on the date Royal Assent is given.
It's applicability and effect are prescribed by sections 16 and 17 in Bill C-6.
Section 17 in Bill C-6 explicitly states that Section 5.(1)(c.1) will NOT apply to pending applications. Simple. As of the date section 1(5) in Bill C-6 comes into force (which, again, will be the date of Royal Assent), anyone with a pending application will no longer be subject to the requirement.
Moreover, for anyone who applied after June 11, 2015 and who has already become a citizen, Section 16 in Bill C-6 explicitly prescribes that Section 5.(1)(c.1) in the Citizenship Act will be deemed to NEVER have applied.
That's as retroactive as a law can get. Once Bill C-6 is adopted and receives Royal Assent it will be as if there never was an Intent to Reside requirement.
Caveat: Bill C-6 remains subject to amendment and there is no guarantee it will be adopted. Definitely no guarantee as to when it will be adopted.
Simply put, I don't believe this information because it clearly contradicts departmental policy on shortfall cases and dpenabill is not a CIC employee to prove me wrong or vice versa on this matter. The only factor that I will take into consideration is what's written in the law / CIC website.Exports said:In short, it means that COs recently Hv approved some cases of shortfalls under old rules without intervention of CJs- though various factors such as offices etc.