Hello! I am looking for the “IRCC Field Operational Manual” in which page 30 is the chapter about non-computer based entries. Can anybody help me find it, please?
I’ve checked IRCC website, section about manuals, and it’s not there. Possibly, the one I’m looking for is outdated or canceled, but I need exactly that one.
Hello and only from memory,
This looks to be something archival that would have to be sought through a request to whatever the IRCC library or archives for their departmental records of long lost instruction manuals. This is very old stuff and the odds are slim that it is retained anywhere.
Non-computer based entries = NCBs
In the pre-computer world when it was Citizenship and Immigration Canada their "intranet" (for the lack of a better term because I am old) was the cobalt-based Field Operations Support System (FOSS). A monitor and a keyboard and a document printer - all originating in the early 1970s.
I believe that they finally, and reluctantly put a bullet into FOSS about 15 years ago (2010ish). It was
the system until early in the new millennium. Updating FOSS instructions probably ceased after the Global Case Management System (GCMS) was introduced.
Sorry, boring but it speaks to manual maintenance and retention. There was a National Case Management System (NCMS) wedged between FOSS and GCMS so lots of effort to forget FOSS was happening. If there is no legal requirement to archive instructional manuals then it went into their dumpster years ago.
FOSS captured a rudimentary Client History, producing and recording documents issued (they also did paper doc's that cold be manually entered afterwards if they remembered to do it), inadmissibility reports, removal orders.., and "FOSS notes", or "notes to FOSS," in lingo for the courts, and simply NCBs to the staff of CIC.
CIC was it - there was no CBSA (2004) yet. So - the border, inland - faciliation and enforcement - all of it was in one department.
NCBs were notes to other employees and they had no paper unless someone printed it and attached to their paper-loving files. It might alert the next person to something like a suspicion, or be a note from NHQ to advise them of anything new - yada yada - "call ---- at xxx-4567 if the subject appears at any POE," or "after issuing limited entry he was observed chasing a beaver down Moose Avenue." They had expiry dates (it comes to me out of the fog of time) because the old Cobalt machine needed routine purging).
If this doesn't help - so sorry. Getting modern manuals to remain current is a challenge for them, and what you are looking for isn't likely to be collected (or even undertood) by today's departmental staff because it's ancient history.