I'm very well aware of that fact. I was just trying to answer your question about how they can ignore pre-PR time. All it takes is the passage of an amendment. It's really not that difficult.harry_aussie said:This law is in its proposal state and still need to pass,
That being said, I'm in agreement with you that this proposed bill will pass with almost no modifications. I just don't see too much opposition to this because Canadian citizenship requirements are literally the easiest in the developed world as far as I've researched and this bill just brings them more in line with other countries. In addition, from what I've read, I get a sense that there's been too much abuse of the current Citizenship Act and Canadians are getting tired of that. I'm certain that the the provisions that concern you and me the most (ignoring pre-PR time and lengthening the required residence) will pass.
The only question I have, which is really hard to answer, is whether the opposition in parliament will delay the passage long enough for me to be able to apply under the current act before the new act takes effect. I will be eligible to mail the application on June 2 of next year. If the last citizenship bill is any indication, there is some room for hope but I'm cutting it close and may just run out of luck. The last bill C-37 was introduced December 10, 2007, passed on April 17, 2008 and took effect exactly a year later, April 17, 2009. So we're talking one year and four months from introduction to coming into force. Assuming the same timeline for this bill, it would come into force June 6, 2015, four days after I'd be eligible to apply. Of course assuming the same timeline is a big assumption. These guys could ram the bill through much sooner.
I read the bill and the section about coming into force is actually interesting. They want certain sections to come into force FIRST, before the rest of the bill. These are sections that give the minister the power to do a few things unilaterally, like for example declare applications abandoned and close the file if an applicant has not responded to requests for information by CIC. This makes sense because there are way too many of these cases that are weighing down on the system. So there's some hope that the Governor-in-Council might delay the implementation of the rest of the bill for a few months, maybe even a full year, while these few provisions are in effect first. Fingers crossed!