No, Senate break for Christmas - New Year is from 23rd Dec 2016 to 30th January 2017. Not three months. That is in the SummerHigh park said:there is in fact an upcoming break in 3 weeks for 3 months,
No, Senate break for Christmas - New Year is from 23rd Dec 2016 to 30th January 2017. Not three months. That is in the SummerHigh park said:there is in fact an upcoming break in 3 weeks for 3 months,
Conservatives did that in 3 days and passed C24. It is possible but liberals want to 'respect democracy and institution by having fair debate'. Wt d helllll.......High park said:Alright then. My question still holds - will they be going through the 2nd reading/ committee/ 3rd reading stages in the next 3 weeks?
In December 2020.Hasan9999 said:Hi,
If I land in mid December 2016 live continuously, when I will be eligible to apply for Canadian citizenship under current rules?
Thanks in advance.
Hasan
Sorry for the wrong quote. You are correct. It's not 3 months. They were going on break in Decemeber and then returning back in Feb. it makes 6 weeks instead of 3 months but due to months, I got confused.subha_1962 said:No, Senate break for Christmas - New Year is from 23rd Dec 2016 to 30th January 2017. Not three months. That is in the Summer
I don't know and as I said, its not on top priority right nowHigh park said:May I ask who this conservative member is? And yes, there is in fact an upcoming break in 3 weeks for 3 months, so does this mean that they will go through the 2nd reading, committee, and third reading in those 3 weeks?
Hello,richard1234 said:Hi guys,
I am following this thread regularly. But recently I got confused on the permanent residents benefit from the proposed new rule (C-6). I presume that the new rule (3/5 and 1 year of pre-PR residency count) applies to everyone regardless their landing time. Is my understanding wrong? I came Canada in 2012 April as a student and I landed in July 2015; if proposed C-6 is passed, when am I eligible?
Based on my understanding, if it goes back to 3 years, I will be eligible for citizenship in July 2017 (2 years after PR and 1 year from Pre-PR; 3 years in total).
Can someone clarify me if I am wrong?
Thanks.
Yes, when C-6 becomes effective (if it ever does) - it will apply to all regardless of when they landed. The point made earlier which may have confused you - mentioned those "affected" will not benefit from C-6, i.e. those affected are the ones who had to "wait longer than 3 years" to be eligible for Citizenship due to C-24 which became a law last year, i.e. by the time the new bill C-6 becomes a law - those impacted candidates would've already been eligible under the 4 years rule.richard1234 said:Hi guys,
I am following this thread regularly. But recently I got confused on the permanent residents benefit from the proposed new rule (C-6). I presume that the new rule (3/5 and 1 year of pre-PR residency count) applies to everyone regardless their landing time. Is my understanding wrong?
yes, correct.richard1234 said:I came Canada in 2012 April as a student and I landed in July 2015; if proposed C-6 is passed, when am I eligible?
Based on my understanding, if it goes back to 3 years, I will be eligible for citizenship in July 2017 (2 years after PR and 1 year from Pre-PR; 3 years in total).
Can someone clarify me if I am wrong?
galant said:The bill to be discussed today in senate-22 Nov-2016.
Unbelievable! It is right that someone said they plan to implement this in Summer 2018!spiritsoul said:
The bill C-6 has been also skipped for today already, unfortunately.