egyo said:
With regard to a CJ hearing, I have a friend who went through it in Kitchener, and it went so well and he got the citizenship...this was in 2011. I am not sure if is is still the case or not. Anyway, i am not sure why I am optimistic about it
As I said, the key
risk is you are on track for a CJ hearing, that CIC has prepared a negative referral in effect arguing to the CJ why you should not be granted approval. That is a significant enough risk (but not at all a certainty) with serious enough implications, continued assistance from a competent lawyer is probably what you most need to do . . . hopefully you can afford this.
That is the
risk, not necessarily what is going to happen. But if you are in fact scheduled for a CJ hearing, it is very, very likely CIC will be arguing (in the referral) why your application should be denied. That is not how it was a year ago, let alone in 2011. The process has changed.
In particular:
A great deal has changed since 2011. In 2011
ALL grant citizenship applications had to be approved by a Citizenship Judge.
Bottom-line: for RQ'd applicants in a post-interview stage of processing, we have been seeing ATIP reports indicating, for some applicants:
-- FPAT required, or
-- FPAT prepared
We are in the dark in many respects so it is not certain, but "FPAT required" appears to signal that CIC was not satisfied at least to the degree that CIC has queued the application for the more thorough review of residency conducted attendant the preparation of the File Preparation Analysis Template. (The query posed by
look4d reflects an obvious example, "residence issues/concerns not resolved . . . [queued for
Officer review]".)
A Citizenship Officer, probably the same as the one completing the referral using the FPAT, will ultimately decide if the applicant has established residency (and otherwise is qualified), such applicant to be scheduled for the oath, or whether the applicant has failed to established residency, which applicant will be referred for a CJ residency hearing.
This is different than what was done prior to August 1, 2014. Prior to August 1, 2014
all citizenship applications had to be decided by a Citizenship Judge. After August 1, 2014, the only cases being decided by a Citizenship Judge are those in which CIC has determined that the applicant failed to establish residency.
This is a huge difference. It will take a long while for anecdotal reports of actual CJ hearings to more fully indicate the nature and character of the hearings after August 1, 2014. It will be much longer before we begin to see Federal Court decisions reviewing such cases.
This difference should not be underestimated. Prior to August 2014 if there was any question/concern about residency, it went to a CJ hearing. The CJ decided if the applicant's submissions resolved the question or concern. Obviously this encompassed a high percentage of qualified applicants, so obviously there was correspondingly a relatively high percentage of applicants going to a CJ hearing who were ultimately approved and granted citizenship.
For the post August 2014 process, we do not know CIC's criteria let alone to what extent it might be more strict than that employed by Citizenship Judges, so we do not fully know to what extent the odds are against applicants going to a CJ hearing after August 2014. But it is obvious that the odds are far more daunting now, for those who are actually scheduled for a CJ hearing, than they were prior to August 2014.
In other words, how it went for applicants who went to a CJ hearing in 2011 is
not informative about how it is likely to go now.
This leads to when "FPAT prepared" is indicated in the ATIP report.
FPAT prepared
We do not know whether "FPAT prepared" indicates the case is yet on track to be scheduled for a CJ hearing or not. It is possible that the FPAT prepared notation still precedes a decision by the Citizenship Officer.
The Citizenship Officer determines whether citizenship is to be granted, or if a CJ hearing will be scheduled.
This is why in my previous post I said it would be good news if the case is yet to be assessed and decided by the Citizenship Officer. A fair if not high percentage of such cases still have good odds of being approved and granted citizenship. But that it would be bad news if the case is past that stage and being referred to a Citizenship Judge, which would be for a hearing.
Of course cases are not decided by chance, not by a roll of dice, but are decided based on the particular facts and circumstances of the specific case as documented in the entire record of the case.
Applicants with good reason to be confident they met the qualifications, submitted sufficient proof, and for whom there is no reason CIC should doubt their credibility, should have little to worry about, even if they go to a CJ hearing. That said, however, again given the new process, it will be unusual for a case to be referred for a CJ hearing if there is indeed good reason for such confidence.
Odds are that a case referred to a CJ for a hearing now is a case which CIC has prepared a
negative referral, in essence a referral arguing why approval should be denied. And again, this is different than it was a year ago and before.
Your lawyer should be able to assess your case and indicate whether or not you should be confident, even if scheduled for a CJ hearing, or what you can do to improve your submissions, to sufficiently address the outstanding concerns CIC still has. Your lawyer is your best resource in this regard.
look4d said:
I would like please to ask about FPAT, as you mentioned it, I have that note in my ATIP : Applicant passed first test however residence issues/concerns not resolved at time of interview. File is being returned to RQ queue to be assigned to an Officer for review/analysis. FPAT required. WT
The above note was on 2nd July 2014, when I contacted CIC lately, they told me that my application is assigned to an officer on 6th January 2015.
Is FPAT is a sign for CJ hearing ?
This fits the "FPAT required" category. As outlined above, this means the application will go to a Citizenship Officer who will do the more thorough review of residency attendant completion of the FPAT referral. While we are not certain about the particular practices at this stage, most indications are that there is still a significant chance the Citizenship Officer will, upon completing the more thorough assessment, conclude that you have established residency, approve the application, and schedule you for the oath. There is, however, still a chance that the Citizenship Officer will not be favourably impressed and will complete the referral for submission to a CJ, for a hearing, in which case what I outlined above applies.
Thus, at this stage, you do not know. It could go either way.
It may be worth repeating, however, that what happens is not a matter of chance, but will be based on what is in the file. Thus again: Applicants with good reason to be confident they met the qualifications, submitted sufficient proof, and for whom there is no reason CIC should doubt their credibility, should have little to worry about. Even if they go to a CJ hearing.