As a sign of how little interest there is in this bill now, it's not even on the Order Paper to be discussed, and the agenda is set until May 12th. I bet it doesn't even show it's head until the fall. They've got to get the Budget through first.
The delay reason is not because the government has no interest in the bill but the government needs time to discuss the amendments internally before going to the HoC.Coffee1981 said:As a sign of how little interest there is in this bill now, it's not even on the Order Paper to be discussed, and the agenda is set until May 12th. I bet it doesn't even show it's head until the fall. They've got to get the Budget through first.
Here is the link to your post from back then:Coffee1981 said:I did not claim it was dead forever. I claimed that the Government is not going to support any of the 3 amendments.
So you in fact said the bill is dead. You were NOT talking just about the amendments.Choose to believe what you want. I'm telling you because my friend was in meetings all day today. The bill is DOA on its return to the House. The age limit for language was the poison pill.
Indeed. Of course they need a bit to study the bill and the government won't put a motion on the agenda until they made up their mind. I expect weeks but not months.Whocares said:The delay reason is not because the government has no interest in the bill but the government needs time to discuss the amendments internally before going to the HoC.
What is the difference between the arrival date and when you became a permanent resident?kirtivsingh said:Try this calculator:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/citizenship-calculator/article34574747/
Not necessarily for everyone. Many people arrive first in Canada on a work or study permit.Whocares said:What is the difference between the arrival date and when you became a permanent resident?
Isn't the arrival date same as when I became a permanent resident (written on the back of the PR)?
This is the 1000th time this question is asked. Look at the other posts. E.g. the FACTS ONLY thread that has a long summary in the beginning.RanRan said:Hello,
Anyone knows when will the HoC discuss/ vote on the bill? how would we know there schedule? do we have a voice in this as constituents?
Under the new regulation, I am eligible to apply since March 4th, 2017
Sorry for this stupid question but I am getting an error.Rigly68 said:Not necessarily for everyone. Many people arrive first in Canada on a work or study permit.
Guys, don't trust that globe and mail calculator. That is not a reliable source. Just do the calculation yourself:Whocares said:Sorry for this stupid question but I am getting an error.
I landed (also written on the back of my PR) (March 2012). I returned back home and came back to live (July 2014) and spent 800 days outside Canada.Whatever I put I get an error??
Could you help me?
lol,,, i bookmark that globemail calculator website though....oh well i'll remove it....hehehehspyfy said:Guys, don't trust that globe and mail calculator. That is not a reliable source. Just do the calculation yourself:
- Take todays date
- Go five years back
- Count the days you were in Canada not being a PR, call them X
- Count the days you were in Canada being a PR, call them Y
- Divide X by 2 and call it Z.
- If Z is more than 365, replace it by 365
- Z+Y, that is your day count. I must be more than 1095
Might be cause you will have to apply for PR renewal as per the processWhocares said:Sorry for this stupid question but I am getting an error.
I landed (also written on the back of my PR) (March 2012). I returned back home and came back to live (July 2014) and spent 800 days outside Canada.Whatever I put I get an error??
Could you help me?
Yes lol. Actually I am currently filling the formsJsidd said:Might be cause you will have to apply for PR renewal as per the process
Thank you.spyfy said:Guys, don't trust that globe and mail calculator. That is not a reliable source. Just do the calculation yourself:
- Take todays date
- Go five years back
- Count the days you were in Canada not being a PR, call them X
- Count the days you were in Canada being a PR, call them Y
- Divide X by 2 and call it Z.
- If Z is more than 365, replace it by 365
- Z+Y, that is your day count. I must be more than 1095
Coffee1981 said:I did not claim it was dead forever. I claimed that the Government is not going to support any of the 3 amendments.
The Privy Council Office doesn't want to jam the Federal Court with 200 extra + cases a year. Especially with the Jordan decision. They're going to move for McCoy's amendment to be abolished and create an appeal mechanism at the Immigration and Refugee Board instead, additional hearings, with a judicial review at the FC after.