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contact11

Full Member
Sep 21, 2016
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A bill to change Canada’s Citizenship Act has finally been passed by the Senate with amendments, bringing the legislation closer than ever to becoming law. As a result of this bill, immigrants to Canada would be able to apply for Canadian citizenship earlier and more easily than before.

In a vote of 45 for, 29 against, and zero abstentions, Bill C-6 passed the Senate at around 4 p.m. on May 3, 2017. Senators in Ottawa have asked their colleagues in the House of Commons to review the bill, including amendments added by the Senate after the draft bill was previously passed by the House of Commons in June of last year. The bill must receive royal assent before becoming law.

C-6 reduces the amount of time permanent residents have to live in Canada in order to become eligible to apply for citizenship, from four out of six years to three out five years. In addition, applicants who spent time in Canada on temporary status — such as on a work or study permit — would be able to count a portion of this time towards the three-year requirement.

The bill removes the intent to provide provision, and an increased number of applicants would be exempt from language proficiency requirements. The bill passed by the House of Commons last year placed an age range of 18 to 54 for language testing, but this was amended to 18 to 60 in the Senate following an amendment tabled by Independent Senator Diane Griffin.

While being read in the Senate, Senators passed a number of other amendments to the bill. Among these were a provision requiring the Immigration Minister to inform individuals who have their citizenship revoked due to fraud or misrepresentation that they have the right to appeal the decision in Federal Court. Bill C-24, the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act introduced by the previous Conservative government, removed the right to a Federal Court hearing for individuals subject to revocation of citizenship in cases where it was found that citizenship was obtained by fraud. Since C-24 came into effect, affected individuals have 60 days to respond in writing after being informed that their citizenship will be revoked.

Another amendment, tabled by Conservative Senator Victor Oh, would allow minors to apply for citizenship without assistance from their parents. Under existing laws, parents and children are treated as one unit when applying. If the parent’s citizenship application is rejected, the children or child included on the file can’t get citizenship either. In such a case, the child has to wait until the age of 18 to make another application.

“While it took almost a year to be passed by the Senate, that institution has stepped up to be one of sober second thought by giving the bill three readings and bringing in some important amendments,” says Attorney David Cohen.

“The spirit of the bill remains intact, however, and, if and when it becomes law, immigrants to Canada will have a quicker and smoother pathway to Canadian citizenship.
 
contact11 said:
A bill to change Canada’s Citizenship Act has finally been passed by the Senate with amendments, bringing the legislation closer than ever to becoming law. As a result of this bill, immigrants to Canada would be able to apply for Canadian citizenship earlier and more easily than before.

In a vote of 45 for, 29 against, and zero abstentions, Bill C-6 passed the Senate at around 4 p.m. on May 3, 2017. Senators in Ottawa have asked their colleagues in the House of Commons to review the bill, including amendments added by the Senate after the draft bill was previously passed by the House of Commons in June of last year. The bill must receive royal assent before becoming law.

C-6 reduces the amount of time permanent residents have to live in Canada in order to become eligible to apply for citizenship, from four out of six years to three out five years. In addition, applicants who spent time in Canada on temporary status — such as on a work or study permit — would be able to count a portion of this time towards the three-year requirement.

The bill removes the intent to provide provision, and an increased number of applicants would be exempt from language proficiency requirements. The bill passed by the House of Commons last year placed an age range of 18 to 54 for language testing, but this was amended to 18 to 60 in the Senate following an amendment tabled by Independent Senator Diane Griffin.

While being read in the Senate, Senators passed a number of other amendments to the bill. Among these were a provision requiring the Immigration Minister to inform individuals who have their citizenship revoked due to fraud or misrepresentation that they have the right to appeal the decision in Federal Court. Bill C-24, the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act introduced by the previous Conservative government, removed the right to a Federal Court hearing for individuals subject to revocation of citizenship in cases where it was found that citizenship was obtained by fraud. Since C-24 came into effect, affected individuals have 60 days to respond in writing after being informed that their citizenship will be revoked.

Another amendment, tabled by Conservative Senator Victor Oh, would allow minors to apply for citizenship without assistance from their parents. Under existing laws, parents and children are treated as one unit when applying. If the parent’s citizenship application is rejected, the children or child included on the file can’t get citizenship either. In such a case, the child has to wait until the age of 18 to make another application.

“While it took almost a year to be passed by the Senate, that institution has stepped up to be one of sober second thought by giving the bill three readings and bringing in some important amendments,” says Attorney David Cohen.

“The spirit of the bill remains intact, however, and, if and when it becomes law, immigrants to Canada will have a quicker and smoother pathway to Canadian citizenship.

This is good news, thanks for sharing. How long do you think it would take for it to become law?
 
Canada247 said:
This is good news, thanks for sharing. How long do you think it would take for it to become law?

In my opinion it shouldn't take a long time as only Royal assent is required which is like a rubber stamp.
 
ssas said:
In my opinion it shouldn't take a long time as only Royal assent is required which is like a rubber stamp.

Not sure about that. The Bill has now first to go back to the House. After the House approves the bill, it will go back to the Senate for rubber-stamping and become law.

I don't know what the process is and timeline to send a bill from Senate to the House <-->The House debating about the bill and finally (if approved as is) sending back to Senate <---> and complete rubber-stamp. Any idea?
 
So you could use 2 year IEC visa and then 1 yr of PR to become a citizen?
 
mtc1992 said:
So you could use 2 year IEC visa and then 1 yr of PR to become a citizen?
Found it:

"Prospective citizens accumulate a half-day for every day spent in Canada as a temporary resident or a protected person, up to a maximum of 365 days, and one day for each day spent in Canada as a permanent resident. For example, a foreign student present in Canada for two years, who completes a masters’ program and subsequently becomes a permanent resident, can count the time spent in Canada as a student (up to 365 days) towards the three-year total required. Under Bill C-6, applicants must have permanent residence at the time of submitting their application for citizenship (clause 1(1)(c))."

http://www.lop.parl.gc.ca/About/Parliament/LegislativeSummaries/bills_ls.asp?Language=E&ls=C6&Mode=1&Parl=42&Ses=1&source=library_prb
 
mtc1992 said:
So you could use 2 year IEC visa and then 1 yr of PR to become a citizen?

Before C-24, I believe you could count pre PR time spent in Canada by dividing said time in half. I think they're going back to

So I wonder if you could become a citizen with 4 year study permit + 3 year PGWP + less than 1 year as PR.
 
mortywaves said:
Found it:

"Prospective citizens accumulate a half-day for every day spent in Canada as a temporary resident or a protected person, up to a maximum of 365 days, and one day for each day spent in Canada as a permanent resident. For example, a foreign student present in Canada for two years, who completes a masters’ program and subsequently becomes a permanent resident, can count the time spent in Canada as a student (up to 365 days) towards the three-year total required. Under Bill C-6, applicants must have permanent residence at the time of submitting their application for citizenship (clause 1(1)(c))."

http://www.lop.parl.gc.ca/About/Parliament/LegislativeSummaries/bills_ls.asp?Language=E&ls=C6&Mode=1&Parl=42&Ses=1&source=library_prb

Ah, up to 365 days. Didn't know about that.

So you can't do what I proposed ;D
 
ashu1710 said:
Before C-24, I believe you could count pre PR time spent in Canada by dividing said time in half. I think they're going back to

So I wonder if you could become a citizen with 4 year study permit + 3 year PGWP + less than 1 year as PR.

Ah, so I'd need 2 years as a PR and could use one year of my IEC to make 3? I mean it makes sense, it's still time spent in Canada.
 
There is already a better and an informative thread with ONLY FACTS and accurate next steps:

http://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/bill-c6-messages-between-the-hoc-and-the-senate-facts-only-t488982.0.html


Please don't pass assumptions and kindly read that thread.

Spyfy has done an incredibly remarkable job in providing factual updates and summarizing the contents, progress and potential outcomes of Bill C-6.

Main points we are interested in, are: 3/5 years residency requirement and pre-PR time spent will be counted as half day for one day spent in Canada up-to a maximum of 1 year!

Cheers!
 
zam7 said:
There is already a better and an informative thread with ONLY FACTS and accurate next steps:

http://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/bill-c6-messages-between-the-hoc-and-the-senate-facts-only-t488982.0.html


Please don't pass assumptions and kindly read that thread.

Spyfy has done an incredibly remarkable job in providing factual updates and summarizing the contents, progress and potential outcomes of Bill C-6.

Main points we are interested in, are: 3/5 years residency requirement and pre-PR time spent will be counted as half day for one day spent in Canada up-to a maximum of 1 year!

Cheers!

Or you can find the same info with 10 second google search and another 10 second of using your favorite browser's 'search in page' functionality. But I guess that's considered remarkable nowadays with most people being lazy :D
 
Suppose, we worked on WP/Student Permit for 5/3 years before getting PR, how much time from 5/3 years, it would be considered for the citizenship?