M
MayorGrom
Guest
Right. That what I was posting here. The problem is that your formula makes sense if you look at 2018/2019 applicants. If you apply the same formula to 2020/2021 applicants, then the results will differ drastically. If IRCC completes 2018/2019 batch, the processing times should decrease (logically). The only way they can keep processing 2020/2021 applicants for 3 years consists of pulling resources somewhere else for the remaining of this year; thus, resulting in 3 years processing timeline.if they keep processing the backlog (starting with 2018/2019 applications), the average processing time will rise to 3yrs. Because the average processing time is based on the duration of the applications completed(processed). if they send out PPRs to all 2019 applications next month, the average processing time for next month would be 36months. Just a mathematical reality..
In the note, they haven't hinted to anything like deliberately reducing resources for FSW applications to extend the processing times.