@dpenabill Just curious. What do you do for a living? I have admired your posts since they're very detailed and erudite.
Thank you.
I'm old. More or less well past my professional days. I still run a business (on a work until I die retirement plan), and it's easy to guess it involves research and writing, something to do with jurisprudence one might also guess. But I have no expertise in either Canadian law or Canadian immigration, and no professional or occupational relationship to either. Indeed, what I do to earn a living is entirely for export abroad. Been over a quarter century already since I ceased being active in my profession in my home country.
None of which is much relevant. I make an effort to present information backed by sources or as reasonably explained, so there is no need to rely on me as a source, as an authority. Because, indeed, I am NOT an authority.
Not sure if this is the right way to do it but I have sent an ATIP request to IRCC with the following. I will keep you guys posted in case they respond with some useful information.
I am hereby making this request under Access to Information Act to find out what steps IRCC is taking to ensure to avoid the backlog of Citizenship applications.
I understand and appreciate the fact that we are in the middle of the pandemic; However, the lack of transparency on the part of IRCC about what is being planned for citizenship tests to avoid backlog worries me. I hereby request the following information under the Access to Information Act :
1. What steps are being considered to proactively prevent excessive backlog of citizenship applications?
2. How long is IRCC planning to postpone the citizenship tests?
3. Is IRCC considering switching to online citizenship tests?
4. Has any discussion about online testing for citizenship applicants been going on within the organization?
5. Has IRCC tried and contacted any vendors that provide online testing services to get an estimate of what the cost would be to switch to online testing for citizenship grant applications?
6. If IRCC is currently not considering online testing, what is the disaster management plan in place to avoid excessive backlog of citizenship applications?
7. If IRCC is currently not considering online testing at this time, please list the reasons as to why it is not being considered.
I respect your time; Looking forward for a satisfactory response to the items above.
Conceptually, for someone genuinely interested in doing the homework (and it does demand real work), this is headed in the right direction for getting access to internal government information.
For whatever that is worth in the context of this discussion.
However, successfully making productive Access to Information (ATI) requests tends to be a rather sophisticated endeavor. Outside requests within a narrow scope of this or that particular expertise (engineers seeking engineering project stuff for example), it is largely an enterprise engaged in by academics and journalists, with a lot of trial-and-error. Sometimes lawyers (but not as much as one might expect). There is no shortage of not-so-successful requests as well, represented in the open data inventory and online lists of completed access to information requests by requests resulting in a huge volume of "pages," but those are pages filled with irrelevant documents and information, as well as those generating nil results.
These are, of course, DIFFERENT from the ATIP requests frequently discussed in this forum. ATIP requests are for personal records. (Difference between a request for "general records" and request for "personal information.")
In reviewing lists of recent ATI requests and responses, it appears that the current government has a relatively flexible or liberal (nothing to do with what is politically "liberal") approach to interpreting and responding to the requests. Suggesting that you should get some response despite the general and deposition-like character of your queries. (Back when I was engaged more extensively in the ATI request process, when Harper was PM, the form of the query alone could generate a nil result unless it clearly requested government documents and records pertaining to the specified criteria in the request . . . queries in the form of a deposition question typically generated no relevant documents or records.)
The content of the documents and records that will be disclosed to you, in response to your request, may or not answer your queries. Indeed, this process often demands a trial-and-error approach . . . those requesting information refining their queries in each subsequent request.
I am not sure about how the government currently responds to these requests, but in the past they did not answer questions as such, but rather simply provided copies of documents and records regarding the subject matter of the question.
While you can make an effort to share copies of the records and documents here, once you have a response you can simply give us the reference number . . . it should be in the form A-2020-##### . . . and that will enable anyone who wants a complete copy of the response to obtain one directly from the government. The government will share the content of any completed request. (Not sure how Covid-19 is currently affecting this process; I suspect it is interfering more with the way the government responds to the original request, and not so much with requests for copies, but I do not know.)
As for others also getting engaged in this process, again for those sincerely interested in obtaining relevant government information, and genuinely ready to do the homework (real work), coordinated inquiries, and especially learning from the responses to other inquiries, is indeed a powerful tool in learning a lot about what the government is actually doing.
For now you may want to search the government's online data sets for completed access to information requests, to see how others have composed their queries. Without knowing how much relevant information your queries, as quoted in this thread, will generate, I suspect you will get few records, OR a huge number of not particularly relevant or illuminating documents. Yeah, making a request that gets what you want is not easy.
Worth noting, for example, relative to searching already completed requests, just using the search terms "citizenship" and "testing" generates 2,239 completed ATI requests from IRCC alone. Scores of which are barely relevant. Many not at all relevant.
But for sure, coordinated efforts by several can obtain a lot of information. And that information can be helpful. There were many involved in our efforts to dig up information on the Harper government's draconian Residence Questionnaire project, and we did indeed find out a great deal of information (even though much of it was redacted, resulting in a lot of "disclosed in part" responses to the ATI requests) . . . I had a stake in that one . . . dug up enough to persuade me to delay applying for citizenship for more than a year after I had become eligible, and enough to help me decide not only when to apply but how to respond to items in the application, especially as to employment history . . . and to help others similarly trying to navigate the process.
CAVEAT: all that said, I am not sure how what you can learn will be relevant to this topic or useful to those who are trying to encourage IRCC to resume processing, including tests and interviews, more aggressively.