Data is good. Information is good. Sharing is good. Much appreciated.
Perhaps I should qualify, getting data and information is good. And I expect and hope this is also good data. Relying on the integrity of IRCC is, for the most part, warranted, but some here tend to challenge or outright dismiss information coming from IRCC.
Not all the information provided is data. Beyond the data there is illuminating stuff, here and there, in this material. The outline of the process on page 196 (of the pdf file), for example, helps affirm what we know about the "steps" taken in processing grant citizenship applications. Comparison with the seven steps that take place in the local office, as listed on page 213 (despite redactions), helps to further illuminate how the process actually works. Another view of workflow or steps in processing is on page 252. There is also the table about time allocated for the various steps, which similarly illuminates information about the particular steps in the process, beginning on page 257. Of course these outlines need to be viewed and understood in context with other information and what we otherwise know about how things actually work.
Some take the particular steps in the process for granted, but many queries and misguided commentaries in the forum obviously are rooted in either not knowing or misunderstanding the process. It always helps to get more information reinforcing or correcting what we already know about how the process actually works.
The allocation of time (again, see table beginning on page 257) is illuminating. Actual time spent "processing" an individual's citizenship application appears to TOTAL, on an average, barely two hours plus a bit. And knowing how averages work (compared, say, to the median), this indicates that IRCC personnel spend significantly less than a total of two hours on the majority of applications. As I have often emphasized, the vast, vast majority of time applications are merely sitting in queue waiting for the next step . . . so it takes a year to 18 months (and more for too many) for personnel at IRCC to spend a total of less than two hours dealing with the application.
All this comes with a big CAUTION . . . apart from the statistical reports, these are COPIES of documents which are not necessarily operative information. Many of the included copies are documents about assessments or projections or strategies or recommendations. Nonetheless, among the more interesting aspects addressed is the prospect of knowledge of Canada testing potentially migrating to online testing permanently, not just as a temporary measure during the Pandemic, and centralizing that.
Back to the data: there are three salient, overriding observations:
-- as of September 11, 2021 there were over 400k applications in process, an absolutely staggering number
-- rate of applications reaching a disposition (meaning, mostly, the grant of citizenship) have been improving significantly during the year, but
-- IRCC continues to fall further and further behind
Some Particular, Distinguishing Data Points:
Data shows big swings . . . for GTA offices applications resolved (vast majority are grants of citizenship, some refusals, some other dispositions) week of August 15 to 21, 2021, total resolved is 2155, while during the week September 5 to 11, 2021, total was just 819
page 131
Compare that to the best week for the GTA from December 6, 2020 to Jan 2, 2021, which was the week December 13 to December 19, 2020, which saw final dispositions in just 120 cases that week. There was a total of just 371 for the GTA for the entire month (four weeks). (page 61)
Note that the GTA had 108,859 applications in process as of September 11, 2021 compared to 84,697 as of January 3, 2021 . . . illustrating that during this year IRCC continue to fall further and further behind at an rapid, depressing, and it needs to be said, unacceptable rate. (pages 132 and 62)
Likewise note that all the Western region, all the offices from Winnipeg to BC, had 113,143 applications in process as of September 11, 2021 compared to 87,411 as of January 3, 2021 . . . not falling behind at the same rate as offices in the GTA, but still very much too much in the wrong direction. (pages 132 and 62)
There are many comparisons worth examining and interpreting. Compare, for one isolated example
-- the number of test ready applications as of September 11, 2021:
-- -- Vancouver Office 7,008 and for all Western offices in total, 32,730
-- the number of "Under Review" (post-test mostly I believe) as of September 11, 2021:
-- -- Vancouver Office 5,578 and for all Western offices in total, 37,332
-- ceremony ready compared to scheduled:
-- -- Vancouver Office 3,699/766 and for all Western offices in total, 16,316/2,647
And compare that with the numbers as of January 3, 2021
-- the number of test ready applications as of January 3, 2021:
-- -- Vancouver Office 7,684 and for all Western offices in total, 28,981
-- the number of "Under Review" (post-test mostly I believe) as of January 3, 2021:
-- -- Vancouver Office 3,821 and for all Western offices in total, 19,345
-- ceremony ready compared to scheduled:
-- -- Vancouver Office 311/40 and for all Western offices in total, 1,386/153
Odds and ends
-- "
Around 50% of clients in the testing inventory require a program integrity interview" (page 136). Note that under pre-covid procedures, ALL adult applicants were subject to the PI interview. The PI interview, by the way, is repeatedly referenced as a "choking" point, a step in the process which is a bottleneck significantly slowing processing down.
Note regarding data about criminality and security clearances (pages 140 to 172):
As I have occasionally commented, for the vast majority of applicants these clearances have little or NO impact on how the application proceeds through the process . . . all the attention given to these in some topics here is largely misplaced. That said, while that is still largely my view, the data might suggest that, in contrast, there could be a significant number of applications waiting on the individual applicant's Security clearance. Caveat: this data is difficult to interpret.