I have citizenship test/interview on Monday and I just found out my two old passports are missing. I have only the current and valid passport. Has anyone been in this boat? what should i do in this case?
Make a concerted effort to find them.I have citizenship test/interview on Monday and I just found out my two old passports are missing. I have only the current and valid passport. Has anyone been in this boat? what should i do in this case?
They request disclosure and copies of bio-pages from all passports or travel documents which could possibly have been used during the eligibility period. Even if not actually used. If it is possible they could have been used during the five years prior to making the citizenship application they need to be declared in response to Item 14 (current (10-2017) version of application form) and bio-pages submitted. The original passports and travel documents must then be presented for examination at the interview.Wait..are *all* old passports required? I've all my passports from when I was a baby...does IRCC need to see all of them? If so, I need to somehow find them in time.
Or do they only need to see the passports I used to enter Canada, even if expired?
Good news. Congratulations.luckily i found the passports in my home. and today passed the test/interview
High probability this is NOT a problem.I have also lost my expired passport, but its expiration date was before my first arrival in Canada.
Actually, I entered Canada in June 2014 and became PR the same date, obviously I used my new passport (still valid) to get enter, my expired passport expiration date was for September 2013. Since my first arrival & PR date, I did not leave Canada.
To be more specefic,
My eligibility period is : from 10-2012 to 10-2017.
My previous (expired) passport validity: from 09-2008 to 09-2013.
First arrival & PR: June 2014.
I also sent a photocopy of its biographical page (together with photocopy of my current passport), because I usually keep an electronic copy of every document, then explained clearly in my citizenship application that I have lost my expired passport.
I really have no idea if this could be an issue in test/interview day, actually the expired passport has no business to do with my post-pr life time.
Good news. Congratulations.
High probability this is NOT a problem.
As you appear to discern, your older passport has no relevance to your Canadian status and no relevance to any time period you are claiming as credit toward meeting the citizenship presence requirement. So failing to present it should have little or no material significance. At most, you may be asked about it in the interview, but that should be perfunctory.
IRCC is a bureaucracy and bureaucracies tend to operate mechanically, so of course it would be best to provide the older passport. But as previously noted stamps in passports have less significance today anyway and many people discard or lose old passports.
An Irony: Canada actually destroys the old passport when a Canadian renews their Canadian passport UNLESS the person specifically requests that the passport be returned to them . . . and even when it is returned, the passport office will typically say the old passport is ONLY a souvenir or memento. In other words, the Canadian government considers destruction of the old passport the norm and that it has no official use, but then, in contrast, IRCC has the audacity to expect citizenship applicants to have preserved their old passports from other countries. Pure consistency cannot be expected from even the best governments.
Dear dpenabill,Good news. Congratulations.
High probability this is NOT a problem.
As you appear to discern, your older passport has no relevance to your Canadian status and no relevance to any time period you are claiming as credit toward meeting the citizenship presence requirement. So failing to present it should have little or no material significance. At most, you may be asked about it in the interview, but that should be perfunctory.
IRCC is a bureaucracy and bureaucracies tend to operate mechanically, so of course it would be best to provide the older passport. But as previously noted stamps in passports have less significance today anyway and many people discard or lose old passports.
An Irony: Canada actually destroys the old passport when a Canadian renews their Canadian passport UNLESS the person specifically requests that the passport be returned to them . . . and even when it is returned, the passport office will typically say the old passport is ONLY a souvenir or memento. In other words, the Canadian government considers destruction of the old passport the norm and that it has no official use, but then, in contrast, IRCC has the audacity to expect citizenship applicants to have preserved their old passports from other countries. Pure consistency cannot be expected from even the best governments.
This can range from a simple Finger Print request to the PPQ-QAE CIT 0205, or some specific request in between. It could be a request for more specific information related to passports or travel documents prior to the one you submitted.Dear dpenabill,
I finally got updated with this line in my ECAS:
4. We sent you correspondence on January 16, 2018. If you have not yet provided the information or the requested documents, please do so as soon as possible. Please wait until you receive the correspondence before sending us additional information, as the correspondence will outline all information that is required.
What do you think? What would it be probably?
Thank you.
Dear @dpenabill,This can range from a simple Finger Print request to the PPQ-QAE CIT 0205, or some specific request in between. It could be a request for more specific information related to passports or travel documents prior to the one you submitted.
The most common thing is a Finger Print request, which is inconvenient but ordinarily does not result in much of a delay in processing so long as the applicant promptly provides FPs, of course.
RQ or a PPQ (Residency Questionnaire or Physical Presence Questionnaire) is at the other end of the range. A lot of forum participants are reporting the PPQ-QAE which is purportedly a RANDOMLY issued Quality Assurance Exercise, but it is profoundly intrusive, requesting a lot of documents, a lot of information, and is a major inconvenience. And there is reason to be skeptical of IRCC's claim it is randomly issued.
So hopefully you will get something simple like a FP request.
You will find out fairly soon. Nothing to do but wait and see what it actually is.
I do not know how IRCC assesses differences in signatures on different documents. It happens, of course. People change the way they sign things. My signature on a passport from more than four decades ago (yeah, I'm an old dude) bears virtually no similarity to my signature on other passports, none at all my current passports (my current signature is a mere scrawl, maybe one recognizable letter). Even though I have not had any name change, as such, in the meantime.Hi all,
One question:
The signature on the biographical page of passport(s) must be same as the one on citizenship application?
I do not know how IRCC assesses differences in signatures on different documents. It happens, of course. People change the way they sign things. My signature on a passport from more than four decades ago (yeah, I'm an old dude) bears virtually no similarity to my signature on other passports, none at all my current passports (my current signature is a mere scrawl, maybe one recognizable letter). Even though I have not had any name change, as such, in the meantime.
But of course such differences will likely be noticed. And that can influence a processing agent's assessment. While current "investigatory" methods are confidential and rather strictly kept from the public, in the past it was revealed that CIC (this was before transition to IRCC) specifically compared the handwriting in signatures . . . including on identification as well as the PR card (which no longer needs to be submitted with the application but it was required then) and travel documents, and on the residency/presence calculation form as well as the application, looking for any differences in the handwriting.
Differences should not invalidate the application or document, but probably raise questions which IRCC may be able to resolve on its own (some countries require the signature on passports to clearly show the name which can be different from how the individual ordinarily signs things, so the passport signature obviously differs from signatures on other documents) or which will lead IRCC to make further inquiries. Since identity may be among the questions, this might trigger a Finger Print request, or it might lead to a question in the interview when that happens.
Obviously, how the signatures differ can influence the extent to which IRCC has questions. If it appears the documents were signed by different people, that obviously is likely to trigger more probing questions.