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FEB , MAR 2021 on wards Paper Based PR Applicants (PNP) waiting for AOR/MR/PPR/COPR - Let's join here and share application updates and status

H06

Hero Member
Sep 26, 2017
422
131
Surrey BC
Category........
PNP
Visa Office......
CIO NS
NOC Code......
1215
Job Offer........
Yes
App. Filed.......
15 March 2021 (Paper Application)
Doc's Request.
24-02-2022 Schedule A ( Dependant)
AOR Received.
24-02-2022
Med's Request
03-03-2022 Medical Passes (old medicals)
Your words make me relieved. Thanks again. Please keep us posted how it goes with yours as well.

I have another friend who submitted PR application in Jan 2020, and got AOR Feb 2020. Application has went through some requests, and she complied all requests. However, about 6 months ago, she found one silly document checklist mistake (checked more than 5 dependent whereas she does not have), and raised an webform for revised form. Since then, she's still waiting for the outcome (estimated completion date was September). In Aug, the agent confirmed all passed, not started security. Do you think that her application is having some problems?
I don’t think typing errors would have much effect on the outcome and on the safer side webform is updated. So it’s all dependent on case to case basis on the outcome .. some get result in a year and some are waiting for more then a year for no obvious reason or reasons best known to them. Sad but true .
 

Georgexcz

Newbie
Oct 13, 2021
3
0
I called ircc today morning at 8 32 am... They asked my uci and other details and asked if i have tfn or not.... They gave me tfn and confirmed that ur filed was received at 27 January 2021
Which option you selected when you call that number? The system asked me for my application number which I am eager for! Thank a lot in advance.
 

Google_zra

Newbie
Sep 17, 2021
6
0
Hello Guys, How can an Outland applicant submit a webform to change his contact details and address as outland applicants don't have UCI number or application number. Any suggestion will be highly appreciated.
My AR was 29 March 2021
 

Vics

Newbie
Apr 12, 2020
8
1
Hi,

Has anybody from March 2021 received their AoR? Please share your delivery date too.

Thanks
 

Jane Ogbu

Member
Jul 1, 2020
15
2
Hello Guys, How can an Outland applicant submit a webform to change his contact details and address as outland applicants don't have UCI number or application number. Any suggestion will be highly appreciated.
My AR was 29 March 2021
I am an outlander and I have application number under OID streams.
 

soccer_007

Hero Member
Oct 7, 2020
842
237
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2021/10/27/new-immigration-minister-inherits-backlogs-migrant-worker-issues.html
New immigration minister inherits backlogs, migrant worker issues
By Alec Regino, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, New Canadian Media
Wed., Oct. 27, 2021

In a post-election shakeup that has seen Prime Minister Justin Trudeau overhaul his Cabinet with an assortment of new faces in key places, Nova Scotia MP Sean Fraser will now be leading the immigration portfolio.

Of the nine newly-minted members of Trudeau’s front bench, Fraser is slated to take the Citizenship, Refugees and Citizenship Canada department from outgoing minister Marco Mendicino, who served for a little under two years.

Mendicino will now be responsible for the Department of Public Safety. Under him, the government promised to welcome an unprecedented 400,000 immigrants to Canada per year from 2021 to 2023 to support long-term economic growth.

Fraser, whose name has been floated for cabinet positions in previous years, was first elected as the Member of Parliament for Central Nova in 2015. Prior to his appointment as minister, Fraser served as associate minister of finance and held a number of parliamentary secretary roles.

“I am humbled to have been appointed by (Prime Minister) Justin Trudeau to serve as the Minister of Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship,” Fraser tweeted on Tuesday. “Immigration will remain a key pillar of Canada’s recover and I’m committed to ensuring that we continue to have the workers we need, where we need them.”

Fraser will be tasked with overseeing an IRCC that faces a number of key challenges exacerbated by the pandemic, namely the backlog of unprocessed immigration applications and pressing labour shortages across many sectors all over Canada.

Canada’s immigration system came to a standstill following the onset of COVID-19 in March 2020. While the IRCC has made efforts to continue processing applications online, many immigrants have been left in the dark, with many feeling frustrated due to a lack of communication, minimal updates, and long waiting times.

On Twitter, many individuals responded to the appointment of Minister Fraser by expressing hope that the cabinet shuffle will expedite longstanding immigration backlogs.

As of July 31, more than 748,000 people had a pending temporary residence application as students, workers, or visitors, close to 562,000 were waiting for permanent residence, and the backlog for citizenship was around 376,000, the Toronto Star reported.

A fresh face in the cabinet is also an opportunity for the Liberal government to address pre-existing labour issues for migrant workers.

The Migrant Workers Centre (MWC), a non-profit dedicated to advancing fair immigration policy and labour standards for migrant workers, penned a letter to Trudeau on Oct. 22 calling for a number of initiatives that would increase immigration to aid with economic recovery. These include calls to increase caps on the number of applications processed, phase out employer-specific work permits, and introduce increased protections for exploited workers.

Increasing permanent residency pathways are also “a simple way to increase Canada’s immigration numbers with those who have already been working in Canada and contributing to our country’s communities and economy.”

According to a survey conducted by Environics Institute in Sept. 2021, eight in 10 Canadians agree that immigration has a positive impact on the economy of Canada.

“It makes sense that we recognize the important contributions of migrant workers throughout this pandemic,” MWC staff lawyer Amanda Aziz says. “Canada’s economy has been supported by migrant labour. We’re hopeful that that recognition will continue and lead to some more significant changes in terms of better and fair immigration policy.”