Speaking of what he specifically said, it was “we are waiting for your background check to be completed”. When I asked him how long does that take, he said “it can be as quickly as I get back to my desk or much longer. I would be able to tell.”
As to our file, during the interview I noticed that we received “checks” on all the items there was on it.
I was wondering though, we had our PR cards renewed last year (we received the renewed once June 2017). Wouldn’t the PR renewal process involves background checks of the nature you mentioned in your response?
Anyways, as you correctly mentioned, since my family and I are truly qualified and did provide all the truthful data and information, all we need to do is wait.
Can’t deny that I can’t wait hear back from them since I see many ppl receiving their Decision on the spot or next day. This probably set my expectations high when I was headed to the interview and test below being that I would know the decision on the spot, hence my disappointment when we didn’t receive this response
My sense is that a recent PR card renewal should, indeed, help the processing agent and Citizenship Officer assess the case and verify the applicants' information. However, there are many, many reasons why there is some additional inquiry or review in a particular applicant's case. For the qualified applicant I describe below, the reasons are largely incidental, not really important, beyond the applicant's control, and ultimately no big deal . . . even if those reasons mean the application goes into a queue for further evaluation after the test and interview, and thus causes some delay. There are many, many possible reasons, too many for applicants to attempt navigating around, and more than a few of the reasons can be tied to things the applicant never had any control over, like having a name similar to another client which triggers additional inquiry.
The reason may be a very minor reason and one that can be resolved in a very few minutes, BUT the application likely goes into a queue for someone to do whatever that matter requires, no matter how simple.
The WAIT is almost always, mostly, about the queue, not the task itself.
It could be something as simple as reviewing the CBSA travel history. Which probably takes no more than a minute or three. But this could (I am speculating here) separate an applicant from the group of applicants whose file immediately goes to the Citizenship Officer with, in effect, a Full-Speed-Ahead recommendation from the processing agent, and instead goes into a group of applicants for whom some additional inquiry is necessary. The latter group going into respective queues for the particular inquiry to be made. (Some into a queue for a processing agent to generate a Finger Print request, say; others into a queue for a processing agent to request updated RCMP or CSIS clearances; others into a queue for further review of the applicant's CBSA travel history; others into a queue for further inquiry into specific background factors, like verifying the applicant's employment history, or simply doing some searching on the Internet for information about the applicant; among many other possibilities.
Even if the task itself only takes a very little time, the applicant encounters a delay while the application is in a queue waiting for that task to be done. And the latter, the queue, is where the additional weeks and months get added to the overall timeline.
THE MAIN THING; the QUALIFIED APPLICANT:
For qualified applicants who have properly, responsively, and truthfully provided information, and who appropriately respond to notices or requests in the process (including, for example, attending the test and interview as scheduled), applicants who can
OBJECTIVELY, honestly say they know of NO reason why there should be a problem with their application,
THERE IS NO REASON TO WORRY.
The applicant's role is to WAIT, watch for notices from IRCC, and respond accordingly. At this stage that most likely means waiting until you get notice when the oath is scheduled, and showing up, taking the oath, and then celebrating according to one's preferences.
BUT the timeline between the various steps in the process can and often will VARY, sometimes by quite a lot, often by several or even numerous months.
It is likely there are reasons why one applicant's timeline is longer than another's. BUT for the qualified applicant I described above, that is largely incidental. The difference is NOT, not usually (by a big margin), anything to worry about. It is often, probably, related to details, particular facts and circumstances, the applicant had little or NO control over, and even if it is related to matters the applicant did have control over (such as amount of buffer over the minimum presence), once the applicant has submitted the application the applicant no longer has control over those.
Other than qualifying for urgent processing, BOTTOM-LINE is that there is almost NOTHING an applicant can do to accelerate the process after the application has been submitted. If there are facts or circumstances which could trigger additional inquiries or examination, the applicant has NO control over that. It will take as long as it takes.
Of course, THERE ARE WAYS TO CAUSE THE PROCESS TO TAKE LONGER after the application has been submitted. Lots of ways. Move abroad soon after applying. Miss an appointment. Fail to promptly respond to requests. Fail to keep contact information current. Get arrested. Give odd, conflicting answers during the interview. Fail the test. Among many, many more.
As to this in particular:
Speaking of what he specifically said, it was “we are waiting for your background check to be completed”. When I asked him how long does that take, he said “it can be as quickly as I get back to my desk or much longer. I would be able to tell.”
Thank you for the clarification.
There is a great deal about what is done behind closed doors we do NOT KNOW. I do not know precisely what the processing agent meant in referring to "we are waiting for your background check to be completed.”
I do know that is NOT NECESSARILY a reference to the RCMP or CSIS clearances. My sense, a strong sense, is that this is often NOT about waiting for either a RCMP or CSIS clearance, that it is more likely this is NOT what the next step is waiting for . . . even though, in some cases, that is the reason.
I am fairly confident that there is widespread misunderstanding about how and when further "background" checks are actually a reason for further waiting, and that this is often more or less an EXCUSE, an easy explanation, while the in fact reason for continued waiting could be any in a wide, wide range of potential reasons, such as some I noted above.
In any event, "background check" is a very, very broad concept. Any further review of an applicant could be fairly characterized as a "background check." Again, I do not know what processing agents mean, exactly, when they use this language. I simply recognize it is very likely this does NOT mean further steps are waiting for a formal clearance from the RCMP or CSIS, in many cases, and perhaps in most cases.
All of which is mostly about understanding the process better, so as to have more realistic expectations and less anxiety. This information does not change what the applicant needs to do. With some exceptions (and those applicants almost always know who they are and why), what the applicant needs to do, again, is WAIT, wait and watch for notices from IRCC, and then respond accordingly. Which, again, in your case probably means waiting to get notice to attend the oath.