Hi there,
I just had my judge hearing.
This is my timeline. Pardon all the detail, but I was looking for this information while I went through it all so hopefully it may help someone in the future:
- Oct 2000: arrived in Canada as an international student
- Feb 2006: Got married to Canadian citizen, but continued being a student and didnt apply for PR until the following year.
- March 2008: Became permanent resident
- March 2010: Applied for citizenship
- Feb 2011: CIC started processing citizenship application
- June 2011: Wrote exam and passed (20/20). Then the worst happened - I was told I was 47 days short of the 1095 at the time of my application. I made a mistake when calculating the days I guess. I was told to submit a Residency Questionnaire to demonstrate my quality of life in Canada (it was 100+ pages of tax invoices, mortgage, bank statement, employment letter, marriage certificates, etc going back 5 years before my application). I was told to wait to be scheduled for a hearing with a citizenship judge, which could take up to two years.
- September 2013: More than two years later, I get scheduled for my citizenship hearing, but guess what? I was away on vacation (for one week) and I missed it. This is where I learned that: (a) Even though you've waited for years, you only get a couple days notice in the mail for this hearing, (b) if you're planning on going on vacation you should tell CIC so they dont book you at that time, (c) if you miss your hearing they will reschedule you one final time, they said it would take a couple of months but for me it took over a year, you will have to fax your CIC office a letter explaining why you cannot/could not make it to the hearing, (d) the application will say "abandoned/cancelled" online for a couple of weeks if you miss your hearing, but then after the process your fax they will reopen it.
- October 2014: Got scheduled for the hearing with the citizenship judge again
How the hearing went:
It was easy, breezy and it lasted 15 minutes. The judge was super friendly. I brought with me all the originals I had submitted with my RQ, but the judge didnt ask to see anything. He talked about the process why it is important to get the math right, and not be any days short to avoid delays. He said "the law is clear, you need 1095 days to apply". That said, he was very nice and I felt like he was on my side. He asked me how I made that mistake, and I just said it was an error in my math and I that at the time I didnt think it would cause any problems, given how CIC takes a year to even look at the application. He wrote it down and spent some time talking about the law. He didnt quiz me on my knowledge of Canada, he said that was done during my citizenship test (which I aced) so he didnt see any need to do it now. It was a very comfortable, friendly chat and he sent me on my way. He said he would make a decision, which the government could still appeal if they found the need to. Given how easy the meeting went, I figured the decision would be favorable. The following day I called CIC call center and they said my citizenship had been granted and that I should just wait to be scheduled into the oath ceremony. How long that will take, they did not say. I will give you guys an update.
All this to say, get your math right when applying for citizenship! And learn from my mistakes
I'll let you know when I'm sworn in, but in the mean time good luck to anyone reading