Did they reopen your application yet?Hi,
I applied for a TRV from India in Sept 2022 case was refused in Dec 2022. I submitted an application for leave and judicial review in Jan 2023 and in March 2023 I received a settlement offer from the DOJ.
How long does it take for the IRCC to reconsider the case after receiving the settlement offer?
If this process is going to take several months should I reapply for the TRV and include the settlement offer letter with the new application or await a response from the IRCC in relation to my initial application?
Not yet , just accepted the offer few days agoDid they reopen your application yet?
Hey that question was for someone else.Not yet , just accepted the offer few days ago
Any idea how long it would take as well
Unfortunately, a good majority of all Canadian federal workforce has been striking since the past week; let alone IRCC, even the Federal Court is having delays nowadays. I have also been waiting for my own re-determination decision after our settlement, although I don't think it's going to be anytime soon with the current trends.Not yet , just accepted the offer few days ago
Any idea how long it would take as well
I never witnessed strike in Canada before, do you think that could delay same as it happened with covid timeUnfortunately, a good majority of all Canadian federal workforce has been striking since the past week; let alone IRCC, even the Federal Court is having delays nowadays. I have also been waiting for my own re-determination decision after our settlement, although I don't think it's going to be anytime soon with the current trends.
Thank you, Fighter
Me neither, but I think there is a notable difference between this strike and the past ones: IRCC was not facing a huge backlog back then—it is now. This time, each day in strike means that the already-large backlog just keeps growing.I never witnessed strike in Canada before, do you think that could delay same as it happened with covid time
Unfortunately, a good majority of all Canadian federal workforce has been striking since the past week; let alone IRCC, even the Federal Court is having delays nowadays. I have also been waiting for my own re-determination decision after our settlement, although I don't think it's going to be anytime soon with the current trends.
Strikes have nothing to do with the current status of a workplace. Strikes happen quite regularly in Canada but the scale of strike is what was uncommon.Me neither, but I think there is a notable difference between this strike and the past ones: IRCC was not facing a huge backlog back then—it is now. This time, each day in strike means that the already-large backlog just keeps growing.
There's not much we can do at the moment. Expedited requests won't reach their office until after the strike, and pursuing a writ of mandamus would also take time, with the risk that IRCC could swiftly reject your application to "get rid" (i.e., dispose) of it.
It is rather pointless that we have to wait for a re-determination, especially when they admit their unreasonableness themselves and offer you a settlement; under the requirements that they 1) cannot use their AI assistant tool, Chinook, 2) have to assign another officer to your case. and 3) give you at least ten days for submitting your updated documents, rejecting you only means that they have to try harder in the next potential judicial review case to defend their actions. Then again, the rejecting officer never faces any repercussion or penalty, nor does the IRCC or Department of Justice ("DoJ") ever notify them of their "unreasonable" action; for that matter, Canadian law just seems to be full of these loopholes and questionable procedures.
I'm just glad that I did my Judicial Review myself and only paid the notarial and $50 CAD court fee; the IRCC might not process my re-determination in time for the upcoming university summer term, but I at least had my fun and learnt a lot of things from dealing with the Court and DoJ.
Government of Canada's website literally mentioned, among many other things, processing applications as one of the "[s]ervices partially or fully disrupted"; I think it is safe to say that the Strike, especially one of this scale, had quite a lot to do with the Federal Government's workplace in its entirety, let alone IRCC's capability to process normal (or even prioritized, as per their saying) applications.Strikes have nothing to do with the current status of a workplace. Strikes happen quite regularly in Canada but the scale of strike is what was uncommon.