Ah yes, the "non-routine" claim, allows the IRCC to take their sweet time in actually dealing with an application. In our case almost 2.5 years now and still no final decision on our inland spousal sponsorship plus PR application; absolutely pathetic in my view that it has taken 10 months plus to complete a final background check on one individual which is holding up approval of our application and none of the relevant parties involved are willing to be held accountable for this BS.
This is a thread in the
Citizenship forum about non-routine processing of citizenship applications. It is, in particular, a discussion about the non-routine processing of applications on behalf of Canadians (Canadian PRs) not Foreign Nationals. Should be obvious that despite describing respective applications as "
non-routine" there are big differences between processing a Canadian (PR) applying for citizenship versus processing a Foreign National's application to obtain status in Canada.
That is, you are off-topic, posting in the wrong forum. Processing, including processing time lines, reasons for non-routine processing, and the nature and scope of background screening for PR applications in the family class, are different from issues affecting the processing of citizenship applications. There are other forums at this website more relevant to that and I believe you have been engaged in discussions about the situation there.
. . . chatted with an IRCC agent yesterday . . . Conversation was fine, the agent did go into my file and see an eligibility check was approved in Sept. 2024, and confirm that my application is considered non-routine, which presumably means they can take as long as they want to complete a simple background check.
Foremost, for PR applicants, if IRCC or CBSA or CSIS see any reason to make inquiry beyond what the applicant has declared, including information about any potentially accompanying family member (which is often the sticky part of things), or what is indicated in supporting documents (including police certificates), it is
NOT a "
simple background check."
Secondly,
NO, it is not true that when an application is considered non-routine that "
presumably means they can take as long as they want" to complete processing. Leading to . . .
Anyone know if you can launch a law suit against the Feds for their incompetence, not referring to Mandamus here.
If you are actually serious (not just ranting) about pursuing legal recourse, actually the lawsuit to bring would be an application for a Writ of Mandamus, an action asking the court to compel the Minister to do what the law mandates be done. That would not be a suit for "
incompetence" as such, but a lawsuit alleging that IRCC has failed to do what the law requires it to do.
To successfully (not frivolously) file a lawsuit there must be grounds, and while it gets a lot more complicated that generally means legal recourse for grievances (based on wrongs, injuries, breaches of contract, or such) must be based on seeking either redress for the wrong (fixing the wrong) or compensation for the injury or loss caused by the wrong. And the particular wrong and resulting injury must be specified.
If IRCC has wrongfully failed to timely process a visa application, the legal redress available is to sue for an order to compel IRCC to timely process the application. That is, to seek a Writ of Mandamus, an order that IRCC fix the wrong done. Such a suit can include a claim for the costs of having to pursue the action in order to get the IRCC to do what it should (as prescribed by law), but it appears the courts tend to be rather stingy in awarding such costs. There is no recognizable cause of action for compensation for a failure to timely process a visa application (not like there is in a suit for negligence causing a physical injury which results in loss of employment, as one example, in which the injured party can recover compensation for financial losses resulting from the injury).
Does not take much to file (
launch) a lawsuit against a particular entity, such as a lawsuit more or less against IRCC by filing a legal action against the Minister of IRCC. A lawsuit for "
incompetence," however, is bound to be summarily dismissed as frivolous and the only real question is whether costs will be assessed against the party bringing the suit, and if so how much they would have to pay for bringing the suit. Since you would almost certainly be proceeding
pro se (self-represented rather than by a lawyer) the court might be lenient and not impose costs or at least not a lot of costs (so long as you have not been a repeat offender, so to say).
I say that such a suit would almost certainly be made
pro se because it is very unlikely you could find a lawyer who would file a frivolous suit (there is no cause of action against the IRCC for "
incompetence" generally).
That said . . .
For many, too many, IRCC's track record pushes the reasonable-processing-time envelope, and for a significant number (and this has been particularly the case in processing PR visa applications) IRCC crashes well beyond that, and on many occasions the courts have indeed had to step in and compel IRCC to
fix the situation. And yeah, that was the result of suits for a Writ of Mandamus. (Although on occasion advocates have managed to push through political solutions as well.)
No, it is not true that IRCC "
can take as long as they want." Again, recourse for unreasonable delays lies in seeking a Writ of Mandamus.
Meanwhile, perhaps the most common bog into which applications get stuck is indeed the background criminality or security screening. That involves more than what is done for routine clearances. In these scenarios it is usually CBSA or CSIS that is holding things up, whoever the file has been referred to for conducting an investigation. Not IRCC (although IRCC is sometimes guilty of not sufficiently pushing those agencies for results). Sorting out which among such cases involves an unreasonable delay, let alone documenting which agency is responsible for the delay and getting legal recourse, can be tricky and difficult, recognizing that much if not nearly all that is involved in conducting an investigation is confidential information.
Plenty there to complain about . . . even rant . . . better to do so, nonetheless, in the relevant forum and topic.
Or better yet, do the homework, organize a coherent and persuasive exposition of relevant facts and issues, and engage in productive advocacy, perhaps starting with letters to MPs or contacting the media (in either case, best to really nail down precise facts based on reliable, credible sources; general ranting tends to sound like noise to be readily dismissed). I suppose, given the social climate of these times, it should not surprise me how many rant, as if it really matters, but we see so few here engaged in actually trying to formulate effective advocacy toward improving how things work.
Meanwhile, even though some citizenship applicants (generally a small percentage, but that still adds up to many) get similarly bogged down with background criminality or security screening (some in process for eight or ten years, even seen one recently stalled for over twenty years), most prohibition issues do not stall citizenship application processing anywhere near comparable to how long visa applicants suffer.
One of the more common holdups for citizenship applicants is background screening to verify physical presence.
Leading to
on-topic observations and what non-routine processing entails for citizenship applications . . .