Hello everyone, I’m just in a fix and kind of stressed. Replies would be highly appreciated.
So I had my test day before, the test went well but not my interview and the CO said she would review my application again and let you know about our decision.
Now, I have completed my days before my application. I mostly stay here but travel often to the US since my husband works and lives there (I have not applied for his sponsorship too because he travels extensively) that was one of the questions in the interview too as why I haven’t applied for his sponsorship.
And I travel a lot to our home country to meet family and spend time with husbands family. But I travel back to Canada.
I got a decision made today but no correspondence email from them.
I’m just very stressed and curious. Is there a possibility of denial of application on this basis (husband not living in Canada)
Helpful replies would be appreciated.
Odds are very good there is NO cause to worry.And what exactly was the intent to reside claus? I think I’m confusing it with something else.
And does it apply to me?
I was on and off the country in between the process of my application. I was out of the country for about 6 months and then got back.
Foremost, references to former law requiring an intent to continue living in Canada are TOTALLY IRRELEVANT to you and totally irrelevant to everyone else. Pay that NO MIND at all. When the intent to reside provision was repealed, effective as of JUNE 19, 2017 (the October 2017 changes were about other provisions), the new law explicitly declared that the intent provision was to have NO effect on ANYONE, even those who applied when there was an intent requirement and had their application decided when that was still in effect.
The degree of questioning you encountered was most likely rooted in concerns about your ties abroad, which are clearly extensive and important ties (especially a spouse living and working abroad, and with no status to live in Canada), and which tend to raise questions about the accuracy of the applicant's presence calculation. So of course IRCC was OBLIGATED (it has a mandate to enforce the law and rules) to more closely scrutinize your qualifications for citizenship and, in particular, more closely review your presence calculation to verify, to make sure, that you did in fact meet the presence requirement.
The Decision Made indicates the odds are very, very GOOD you passed that scrutiny . . . assuming that your presence calculation does in fact show you were present in Canada for at least the minimum number of days during your eligibility period.
Note: An applicant who claims to have met the requirements will NOT be denied citizenship based on not meeting the presence requirement without first being issued RQ-related requests. Then, IRCC cannot unilaterally deny the application for falling short of the presence requirement if the applicant still claims to have met the requirement. In such a case, where IRCC concludes the applicant did not meet the requirement, but the applicant still claims he or she did, IRCC must refer the application to a Citizenship Judge who would ordinarily hold a hearing before a decision is made.
TO BE CLEAR REGARDING THE INTENT TO RESIDE CLAUSE (it is simply NOT relevant):
To see the published version of Bill C-6 that received Royal Assent and was thus duly adopted into law as of June 19, 2017, see http://www.parl.ca/DocumentViewer/en/42-1/bill/C-6/royal-assent
It is also easy to read the versions of the Citizenship Act in effect at various times
-- for current version, effective since October 11, 2017, see http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-29/page-2.html#docCont
-- for version in effect between June 19, 2017 and October 10, 2017, see http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-29/section-5-20170619.html
-- for version in effect between June 11, 2015 and June 18, 2017, see http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-29/section-5-20150611.html#wb-cont
-- for version in effect between June 19, 2017 and October 10, 2017, see http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-29/section-5-20170619.html
-- for version in effect between June 11, 2015 and June 18, 2017, see http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-29/section-5-20150611.html#wb-cont
While I can readily offer the following observations from memory, they are all confirmed in the above linked sources.
REPEAL WAS EFFECTIVE JUNE 19, 2017Applications under the new rules (Intent to reside clause removed) kicked in from October 11, 2017.
Bill C-6 repealed subsection 5(1)(c.1) in the Citizenship Act, the so-called "intent to reside" provision, EFFECTIVE JUNE 19, 2017.
This is prescribed in Section 1(5) in Bill C-6. This became effective upon Royal Assent (June 19, 2017). Numerous provisions in Bill C-6 took effect immediately upon Royal Assent, including this one. (Another big one which took effect immediately: repeal of provisions authorizing revocation of citizenship for persons convicted of certain criminal offenses.)
Yes, there were numerous other provisions in Bill C-6 which did not have a coming into force date until fixed by an order of the Governor in Council. The provision most are acquainted with is that prescribing the presence requirement. In particular Section 1(2) in Bill C-6 replaced the Bill C-24 presence requirements, as prescribed in subsection 5(1)(c)(i) in the Citizenship Act, with the 1095 days in five years rule, which pursuant to Section 27(2) in Bill C-6 would come into force on a day fixed by order of the Governor in Council. And the order fixed October 11, 2017 as the date this provision would take effect. Several other provisions, such as those governing who is required to meet language and knowledge of Canada requirements, also took effect, per Governor in Council order, on October 11, 2017.
INTENT REQUIREMENT DEEMED TO NEVER HAVE APPLIEDIf she signed her application prior to October 11, the old rule with the intent to reside requirement would have applied.
As I noted above, subsection 5(1)(c.1) in the Citizenship Act (see version of Act in force from June 11, 2015 to June 19, 2017) was not only repealed by Bill C-6, pursuant to Section 1(5) in Bill C-6, the transitional provisions in Bill C-6, specifically Sections 16 and 17 in particular (again, link to Bill C-6 is above), prescribe that the intent requirement "is deemed never to have applied" and to "not apply" to then still pending applications.
So there is NO ONE, NO ONE for whom the intent requirement has any applicability whatsoever.