Hi everyone,
I have been reading many news and posts regarding to the new Bill C24 since it does make a great impact on my life. I sincerely hope to borrow the extensive knowledge and experiences of this forum to help make one of the biggest decisions of my life.
Allow me to introduce my background first. Back the days, I came to Canada on Sep, 2006 as a student, then graduated from school and have been working till now. In May, 2013, I became a PR. During the recent two years, I have traveled a lot, both work and vacation related. As result, I still fall short of approximately 80 days to meet the 1095 days of physical presence after the 2 year anniversary.
According to the new law, the Pre-PR time will not be credited, even I have spent almost 9 years in this country, and am very well intended to live here for the lifetime. This new bill will make me wait till at least late 2017 to be qualified since I will certainly need to travel abroad in the next 2 years. In addition, the processing time can be very unpredictable by that time as well, which means I may not become a true Canadian until 2019.
I was hoping the government would at least value the time that many of us have spent here before becoming the PR. This is the part of the new law that saddens me the most. Not to mention the new citizenship law de-values the citizens who carry the foreign background, in a way.
I would say the new bill will most likely take effective by the beginning of July. Given the fact that I will be eligible to apply the citizenship by this May, even I do not have the full 1095 days in the pocket, my questions is - is it worthy to take the risk and apply anyways? What are the chances to get approved by the judge? How troublesome the KOO test, the questionnaires or any other things required can be???
I am just so close to be fully eligible. It's really hard to not take the chance and wait another 2 or 3 years. I am not very familiar with how the judge and government work regarding to these shortfall cases. Any advises would certainly help and be appreciated.
Thanks,
I have been reading many news and posts regarding to the new Bill C24 since it does make a great impact on my life. I sincerely hope to borrow the extensive knowledge and experiences of this forum to help make one of the biggest decisions of my life.
Allow me to introduce my background first. Back the days, I came to Canada on Sep, 2006 as a student, then graduated from school and have been working till now. In May, 2013, I became a PR. During the recent two years, I have traveled a lot, both work and vacation related. As result, I still fall short of approximately 80 days to meet the 1095 days of physical presence after the 2 year anniversary.
According to the new law, the Pre-PR time will not be credited, even I have spent almost 9 years in this country, and am very well intended to live here for the lifetime. This new bill will make me wait till at least late 2017 to be qualified since I will certainly need to travel abroad in the next 2 years. In addition, the processing time can be very unpredictable by that time as well, which means I may not become a true Canadian until 2019.
I was hoping the government would at least value the time that many of us have spent here before becoming the PR. This is the part of the new law that saddens me the most. Not to mention the new citizenship law de-values the citizens who carry the foreign background, in a way.
I would say the new bill will most likely take effective by the beginning of July. Given the fact that I will be eligible to apply the citizenship by this May, even I do not have the full 1095 days in the pocket, my questions is - is it worthy to take the risk and apply anyways? What are the chances to get approved by the judge? How troublesome the KOO test, the questionnaires or any other things required can be???
I am just so close to be fully eligible. It's really hard to not take the chance and wait another 2 or 3 years. I am not very familiar with how the judge and government work regarding to these shortfall cases. Any advises would certainly help and be appreciated.
Thanks,