With no intent to detract from ongoing monitoring of efforts to complete processing, particularly for those applicants who were previously scheduled for the oath only to have the ceremony cancelled in response to Covid-19 (which appears, for the time being, to be the only group actually being scheduled for and taking the oath virtually), some irony is too precious to overlook.
The Global News article, by Stephanie Levitz, quotes a government communication:
"IRCC needs to act quickly to develop (i) updated and new strategies, and (ii) processes and digital systems to cope with the rapid change it is undergoing."
When a bureaucracy the size of IRCC says it needs "
to act quickly" that reminds me of a tortoise at the edge of a highway considering its action plan for getting to the other side. Or, as I am wont to say "
bureaucracy is what bureaucracy does."
To be clear, however, much like a tortoise going from one place to another, even a big and cumbersome bureaucracy like IRCC will get where it is going. Perhaps not so quickly as those waiting prefer. But it will get there. That is, sooner or later, with the odds leaning later for the time being, IRCC will be granting citizenship to qualified applicants. Those who have already had a scheduled oath ceremony cancelled first. Others to follow.