haody said:
I think any old case will have to sent to citizenship judge for approval even after August 1st. If there is concern, the CO will prepare FPAT to judge. Doesn't matter if it is prepared before or after Aug 1st. The new law doesn't apply the old case, or the new law does not effect how to handle the old case.
For clarification:
The new
procedures do apply to processing, regardless of when the application was made. Thus, regardless of when the application was filed, or RQ was issued, there will be
no referral to a Citizenship Judge if a CIC Citizenship Officer approves the grant of citizenship. There is no referral to a CJ for language or knowledge of Canada issues either.
Only cases which will be referred to a Citizenship Judge after August 1st are those with residency issues, applicants for whom the CIC Citizenship Officer is
not satisfied.
Previously, all so-called "residency cases," which applied to any applicant issued RQ unless there was a subsequent decision determining it was not a residency case, involved using the FPAT to prepare the referral for the Citizenship Judge, even if CIC was in effect submitting it for a
file review (sometimes called a "paper review"), which would not involve a CJ hearing, let alone a referral which in effect enumerates CIC's reasons why the applicant should not be approved.
So, prior to August 1st, the mere fact that the application involved a referral using the FPAT did not necessarily indicate there would be a hearing with a CJ.
As I noted, my guess is that after August 1st, the FPAT (or a revised version thereof) is still in use, but perhaps only for those cases actually being referred to a CJ . . . which most likely means it is a residency case in which CIC is not satisfied the applicant met the residency requirement.
Thus, probably, a post-August 1 FPAT is not good news for an applicant. It quite likely means that CIC opposes the grant of citizenship, although the applicant still has an opportunity to go to a hearing with a CJ and make the case why the applicant is qualified, in particular to make the case that the applicant met the residency requirement.
By the way: when there are changes to law it is typical for the new law governing
procedure to apply to matters already in process, but new substantive law (what the requirements or qualifications are for example) only applies to new matters (new applications) after the substantive provisions take effect. So, it is entirely normal that applications already in process are now being processed pursuant to the new procedures, including in particular the so-called
one-step decision-making process, pursuant to which the Minister (CIC Citizenship Officers in practice), decide all citizenship applications except those for which CIC is not satisfied the applicant met the residency requirement.