It took them 110 days to send this, because they had to disinfect each digital letter one by one from Covid-19!
Full document: https://docdro.id/h4pmWq9
Full document: https://docdro.id/h4pmWq9
What a joke. This has been on Liberal platform since 2019 election campaign.Additionally, should an announcement be made around the Government's commitment to
eliminate citizenship fees, there is likely to be an impact on intake and inventory volumes. At
this time, it is too early to predict whether there will be any impact on volumes in FY 2022/23
https://liberal.ca/our-platform/eliminating-citizenship-application-fees-for-permanent-residentsA re-elected Liberal government will:
- Make the application process free for permanent residents who have fulfilled the requirements needed to obtain it.
I don't understand this "modified FIFO model" fully. I don't think it is explained adequately in the report. If anyone else understood it better, please do a english to english translation here. If I understand correctly, there is still two queues: one for paper-apps and other queue for e-apps. They would pull out apps from paper-queue mostly and once a while they would pull out an app from e-apps queue. maybe?
I do not gaslight. It is total horse pucky to claim I do. I make a concerted effort to actually read sources for what they actually say.@dpenabill , are still planning to gaslight the people in this forum in this topic? It is clear that e-apps not a priority.
They are just adding the time of most files that were waiting pre-pandemic shutdown. I hope you are smart to understand nuances. Lets say 100 people who applied on paper are waiting on IRCC then pandemic happens, so 50 people apply during the shutdown on paper and 50 apply during the shutdown online. Even if both are processed at the same speed, the paper applicants would appear to have a longer processing time than the online apps. But you should also consider that a lot of people are waiting forever since before the pandemic.I do not gaslight. It is total horse pucky to claim I do. I make a concerted effort to actually read sources for what they actually say.
While there are many nuances among other details and factors to consider if fully assessing how things are going, one salient sample from the recently shared information, quote:
In May 2022, processing times for e-apps rose to 14 months while paper continued at 27 months. While e-app processing times have increased, the DN has plans to render decision on more e-apps than required by the monthly targets, which may aid in managing processing times.
Efforts to confuse, mislead, misinform, and harass anyone who disagrees will undoubtedly persist. But no advanced degrees in linear algebra necessary to know that a 14 month processing timeline is faster than 27 months, and this does not in any way signal that paper applications are given priority processing over e-apps.
Exactly. Paper applications are at a 27 month average because they include almost all the 2020 and all prior ones, which were all paper because the online application wasn't rolled out until December 2020. December 2020 online applications were the only online applications that were prioritized. Average processing time for 2020 applications seems to be 2+ years, and average 2019 applications are 3+ years. 2021 paper applications seem to be at an average of maybe 10-12 months. That all roughly averages out to a bit over 2 years, or 27 months.They are just adding the time of most files that were waiting pre-pandemic shutdown. I hope you are smart to understand nuances. Lets say 100 people who applied on paper are waiting on IRCC then pandemic happens, so 50 people apply during the shutdown on paper and 50 apply during the shutdown online. Even if both are processed at the same speed, the paper applicants would appear to have a longer processing time than the online apps. But you should also consider that a lot of people are waiting forever since before the pandemic.
How do you explain May 2022 paper apps already received their citizenship certificate while Jan 2022 are just getting first ghost updates and test invites?
As I have said . . .They are just adding the time of most files that were waiting pre-pandemic shutdown. I hope you are smart to understand nuances. Lets say 100 people who applied on paper are waiting on IRCC then pandemic happens, so 50 people apply during the shutdown on paper and 50 apply during the shutdown online. Even if both are processed at the same speed, the paper applicants would appear to have a longer processing time than the online apps. But you should also consider that a lot of people are waiting forever since before the pandemic.
How do you explain May 2022 paper apps already received their citizenship certificate while Jan 2022 are just getting first ghost updates and test invites?
The proposition I disputed, because at best it was misleading, not just because it was self-centered me-first whining, was the claim that IRCC was prioritizing paper applications ahead of online applications. Malarkey weeks ago. Malarkey still.Well, it seems rather obvious that IRCC fell way short of doing everything it could, and fell well short of taking reasonable steps to adapt to the pandemic as it unfolded. It does indeed appear that IRCC dropped the ball, rather badly, and has continued to be painfully slow adapting and catching up. A two plus year processing timeline speaks for itself, illustrating a failure to competently adjust. After all, the grant of citizenship is NOT discretionary. IRCC has a legislated mandate to process citizenship applications and grant citizenship.
Out of spite? You're going to vote for PP just for that?When you guys get the rights to vote, please make Trudeau a full time clown again.