Short answer..No. However, you can look at the spreadsheet here and get a sense of average processing times for people who SHARE their info here. You must also remember that October has been crazy in terms of the number of applications. So historical averages don't mean much as they are going to be skewed by October's surge. Test dates will also vary by the processing office.Does anyone know how long on average it takes from the date of your AOR to the date you get called to take the knowledge test?
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BE REALISTIC because of crazy numbers of October i expect double digit longer than average between AOR to Test date. And they still havent finished opening October apps and its December they are supposed to open November apps now which means CIC havent hired more stuff, but if you have already AOR it can take total of 120 days on previous 80-90 days of previous pre c6. And if u travelled during your elibillity expect even longer delays because alot of people have messed up Q.9.
the only way i can see if CIC hire more people in SYNEY office for them atleast to avoid backlog.
but i am realistic i guess it will be 120 days due to October so many apps and thats if your app is complete and they dont request stuff documents before test date whixh means people who travelled and lived abroad during their eligibillity period will very likely spend 8-12 months before they even get test date because if thwy request police clearance and some other paper works the local office is even notorious for long delay of opening those forms.
they retuned many apps because of Q9.I travelled during eligibility period
What do you mean by Q9?
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No I have not submitted it tthey retuned many apps because of Q9.
IF U GOT AOR DONT WORRY ABOUT IT NO MATTER HOW U ANSWERED.
I believe the OP referred to question 9c. If you have lived abroad during the eligibility period and not as a crown servant, the general wisdom of this forum is that you are better off answering Yes to question 9c, fill in your name on CIT0177 and mark all other fields as not applicable. You may or may not choose to additionally include an explanation letter stating that you don't intend to claim credit for crown service abroad, which is why the form 0177 was marked not applicable.No I have not submitted it t
I am going to submit it tomorrow
I travelled for 1 month outside Canada
Should I fill an extra formal?
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No I have not submitted it t
I am going to submit it tomorrow
I travelled for 1 month outside Canada
Should I fill an extra formal?
Thanks
And this is why I never ever jumped to any band wagon without reading the questions carefully.I believe the OP referred to question 9c. If you have lived abroad during the eligibility period and not as a crown servant, the general wisdom of this forum is that you are better off answering Yes to question 9c, fill in your name on CIT0177 and mark all other fields as not applicable. You may or may not choose to additionally include an explanation letter stating that you don't intend to claim credit for crown service abroad, which is why the form 0177 was marked not applicable.
Oh I am not on that bandwagon personally. I submitted mine with a No and at peace with my decision but I have read some of the well reasoned arguments in favour of Yes and come to the conclusion it doesn't hurt the application. So if someone is submitting a new application, my advice for what it's worth, is to choose the extra cautious route and save the forum from 20 new threads worrying about correlation between 9C and various stages of the application.And this is why I never ever jumped to any band wagon without reading the questions carefully.
Q 9 clearly states what it means.
I dunno who or where it came from you ought to say YES on it even if you where or are not a crown servant while living outside the country for a specific period of time.
This is why there is a Days Calculator. For those who still are confused, it’s in this document you state all your absences from canada and where you where at the time.
Anyways, free country. Do whatever you want, so long it’s lawful.
I believe, it is the other way around. One should say NO if not falls into one of eligible categories. To satisfy oneself, one may decide to write an explanation letter stating why selected NO even though lived equal to or more than 183 days outside Canada.I believe the OP referred to question 9c. If you have lived abroad during the eligibility period and not as a crown servant, the general wisdom of this forum is that you are better off answering Yes to question 9c, fill in your name on CIT0177 and mark all other fields as not applicable. You may or may not choose to additionally include an explanation letter stating that you don't intend to claim credit for crown service abroad, which is why the form 0177 was marked not applicable.
Thats great then.Oh I am not on that bandwagon personally. I submitted mine with a No and at peace with my decision but I have read some of the well reasoned arguments in favour of Yes and come to the conclusion it doesn't hurt the application. So if someone is submitting a new application, my advice for what it's worth, is to choose the extra cautious route and save the forum from 20 new threads worrying about correlation between 9C and various stages of the application.