i got this email yesterday from Buffalo office because of i am asking them about my application status it was almost 9 mon with out any progress their answer surprise me.
Changes to immigration law in 2008 allow us to set, through ministerial instructions, the number and type of applications considered for processing each year, and the order in which these applications will be processed.
Under the first set of instructions we used our new authority under immigration law to control the type of applications received, but not the number. We learned that wasn't sufficient. With so much competition and interest in immigrating to Canada, applicants, and sometimes consultants, look for ways to fit applications into the eligibility criteria in effect at the time. Therefore, before we introduced a cap on the federal skilled worker program as part of the second set of ministerial instructions, the number of applications we received exceeded our ability to process them in a timely way.
* We are committed to reducing processing times. With the introduction of the cap under the second set of instructions, we have limited the intake of new federal skilled worker applications to better match the number we can actually process within the annual levels plan tabled in Parliament.
*
Our goal is to make the immigration system more responsive to labour market needs. By prioritizing federal skilled worker applications received on or after June 26, 2010, we are responding to the most urgent labour market needs first.
*
Because they reflect Canada's current labour market needs, federal skilled worker applications under this most recent set of ministerial instructions are processed on a priority basis - within 12 months of receipt. For example, the first person to receive a decision under the second set of instructions did so within three months.
*
The length of time it takes to finalize an application varies from one visa office to another since visa offices face different challenges operating in different countries, regions and even in different offices within the same region.
so what do u think?
Changes to immigration law in 2008 allow us to set, through ministerial instructions, the number and type of applications considered for processing each year, and the order in which these applications will be processed.
Under the first set of instructions we used our new authority under immigration law to control the type of applications received, but not the number. We learned that wasn't sufficient. With so much competition and interest in immigrating to Canada, applicants, and sometimes consultants, look for ways to fit applications into the eligibility criteria in effect at the time. Therefore, before we introduced a cap on the federal skilled worker program as part of the second set of ministerial instructions, the number of applications we received exceeded our ability to process them in a timely way.
* We are committed to reducing processing times. With the introduction of the cap under the second set of instructions, we have limited the intake of new federal skilled worker applications to better match the number we can actually process within the annual levels plan tabled in Parliament.
*
Our goal is to make the immigration system more responsive to labour market needs. By prioritizing federal skilled worker applications received on or after June 26, 2010, we are responding to the most urgent labour market needs first.
*
Because they reflect Canada's current labour market needs, federal skilled worker applications under this most recent set of ministerial instructions are processed on a priority basis - within 12 months of receipt. For example, the first person to receive a decision under the second set of instructions did so within three months.
*
The length of time it takes to finalize an application varies from one visa office to another since visa offices face different challenges operating in different countries, regions and even in different offices within the same region.
so what do u think?