At the risk of perpetuating an off-topic tangent, but otherwise to highlight a suggestion that this topic is perhaps the best source of information about how long PR card processing is taking and there is little need to hog call centre resources for updates --
I understand that is hard to believe and there's no way to proof it but I've been calling IRCC weekly since the first week of January to ask for an update and usually the response I get is that my renewal application has been approved in December and that the next step is to print the card. However, when I called yesterday they said my app was approved in December and when they sent it for printing in December they encountered this ink issue which is why my card hasn't been printed and emailed.
I have no trouble believing some, apparently including you, not only waste their own time but also pose an excessive and unreasonable burden on IRCC resources by repeatedly making useless inquiries. It is not like calling the guy at a local garage asking when your car is going to get fixed. It's a bureaucracy. A big bureaucracy. And currently a big bureaucracy bogged down for a wide range of reasons, some reasonable, some not reasonable. Obviously, those who impose unnecessary demands on IRCC resources are part of the problem.
You should be aware that there are scores and scores of temporary and permanent immigrants in Canada who have questions which call centre agents may very well have answers that could help them navigate their way forward, and many of them do not have as much free time as others might, especially those who are in demanding day time jobs with very limited windows of time to make telephone calls. In contrast, you are not going to be bumped up in the queue because you make a nuisance of yourself. This probably comes across judgmental, but please consider the limited resources involved and there are scores and scores of others who actually could use help from call centre agents, and who are having difficulty getting through due to call volumes.
You might have noted I did not call you out particularly and I prefaced my remarks by honestly saying I am generally reluctant to call out less than credible anecdotal reports, even though there is no shortage of them in this forum. There is not much to be gained doing that. And even in regards to the content of the report involved here, a call centre agent reporting an ink problem causing the delay, I couched my comments in an acknowledgement that is within the realm of possibility. I did not mean to actually initiate an exchange into the veracity of your report. After all, it does not matter, as it is something that will affect all PR card production equally, and the timeline between a decision made and the date the card is actually produced and delivered will affect PR card applicants uniformly. It is just one more aspect of current circumstances slowing down the process.
As I noted at the outset of this post, this topic is probably as good a source of information about the processing timelines as anyone can access. No need to hound call centre agents. Nothing to be gained doing that. Some harm doing that.
Hopefully, now, back to the stream of detailed timeline reports this topic is valuable for . . .