To be clear, my previous post was responding to this:
arambi said:
This is truly the very definition of malice. It very unfortunate that CIC does not punish these vicious officers who receive the taxpayer money as salary then viciously treat the same taxpayer. I wonder if it ever crossed their mind that they are mistreating those from whom they are getting their daily bread...
The irony is that RQ was implemented to catch applicants who abuse the process; now it's being used to abuse honest applicants. Very sad indeed..
This accusation of
malice against the individual who issued a pre-test RQ, describing that individual working at CIC as a
vicious officer engaged in the
mistreating of taxpayers, is based on the post by
Prospective Canuck which says that a pre-test RQ (RQ contemporaneous with the AOR) was issued despite the inclusion, with the application, of a RQ response (on a copy of the RQ form no less, which is not available directly from CIC except via ATI requests and as sent to individuals actually issued RQ).
This is in the same vein as previous insults aimed at CIC personnel for being "lazy" if RQ was issued by someone at Sydney despite there being (purportedly) full proof of residency included with the PR application.
OK, I confess, whenever there are personal insults flung at individuals, named or unnamed, that tends to offend my sensibilities. Insults are not information, they are just insults.
In contrast, I am sure that most of those working for CIC are trying to do their job as they are instructed to do it. To accuse those individuals of
malice or malfeasance or
laziness is, to me, offensive.
And that is particularly so in regards to an element of the processing such as this, where it is almost certainly the
criteria the CIC personnel are
instructed to apply which results in the issuance of RQ at Sydney, and not any malice, malfeasance, or laziness.
Regarding the purported quotes from OB 407-D:
Perhaps the language quoted is indeed taken from OB 407-D. I cannot say for sure, and that is because OB 407-D is not a public document. But I have seen the original OB 407 (with substantial redactions of course), numerous internal CIC memos discussing it and its subsequent "clarifications" and amendments, and the quoted language is inconsistent if it is in the context of applying the triage criteria at the Sydney screening stage. Moreover, language like "it is worth noting that" (purportedly quoted from OB 407-D by
Prospective Canuck) does not comport with the language typically used in these Operational Bulletins.
Prospective Canuck said:
“Operational Bulletin 407-D states, in pertinent part:
It is worth noting that:
• The Residence Questionnaire (RQ) only requests documents that cover the applicant's relevant period
• The officials must only take recourse to the Residence Questionnaire (RQ) on rare occasions, where they cannot obtain the information otherwise
• The officials can resolve most cases that have minor residence issues easily without requiring a Residence Questionnaire (RQ)
As mentioned above, the local office must only issue the Residence Questionnaire (RQ) to applicants as a measure of last resort. Therefore, the local office would only do this when they cannot obtain the information otherwise.”
To be frank, this quote bears the characteristics of a secondary description rather than a direct quote from the OB. Moreover, while the first and third of the three bulleted items appears to be consistent with what I know about OB 407 and its subsequent versions, the second is not (in the context of Sydney screening).
But in any event, it is clear that the quoted material is in reference to what is done at a
local office.
Whereas, the RQ referenced here was issued concurrently with the AOR, thus clearly issued by
CPC-Sydney, not a local office.
Why This Matters:
This topic is about being issued RQ despite including, essentially, proof of residency in the application. This example, like many others, illustrates that RQ may indeed be issued despite submitting proof of residency with the application.
This is not due to laziness on the part of the individual at CPC-Sydney who issues the RQ.
This is not due to malice on the part of the individual at CPC-Sydney who issues the RQ. (The accusation of "malice" is particularly over-the-top.)
The issuance of RQ by CPC-Sydney ordinarily is because there were factors or circumstances in the application, or the application considered against information of record at CIC, that constitues a
risk indicator, as defined by CIC internal practices, by the "triage criteria," for which the individual doing the screening at Sydney is required, as part of his or her job, to issue RQ.
If the RQ trigger exists, RQ is issued.
Submitting proof of residency with the application is not going to change that.
The ongoing debate about the efficacy of including additional documents with the application:
arambi said:
I ran a statistical study that showed that those who send extra docs where less likely to receive RQ than those who did not send extra docs. Numbers don't lie. This subject was put to rest
By the way, extra docs can be few pages whereas RQ is typically several hundreds pages... Do not mix both...
The recommendation from my study was to send KEY OR CRITICAL extra docs not full RQ docs.
Hardly a "statistical study," and not an examination of evidence from which one could rationally draw conclusions sufficient to make "recommendations."
Numbers may not lie. But . . . no, there was no where near sufficient data to support a recommendation that applicants
should submit any additional documents. Which is not to say that the inclusion of a few critical or key extra documents will necessarily have a negative impact either.
And in any case, that is
not at all relevant to instances in which applicants submit a large number of documents or otherwise provide the equivalent of a response to RQ.
Regarding which, it is probably worth noting, in so far as the anecdotal reports I have seen in conjunction with the instance reflected in CIC internal memos and in at least one Federal Court case, it appears that submitting a lot of documentation with the application tends to more often correspond to the issuance of RQ than not . . . but of course it is impossible to draw any cause-and-effect conclusions from those few instances, particularly since it appears likely that those who have done this have done so where there are circumstances otherwise likely to result in RQ anyway.