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Author Topic: CSIS & CIC CHECKS.  (Read 813 times)
shibuya
Champion Member
******

Posts: 1567
Ratings: +160
Category........: Other

« on: March 23, 2011, 09:53:12 pm »

Nature of CSIS Advice to CIC

The Service's security screening assessments are provided as advice to
CIC in one of four forms:

No Reportable Trace (NRT)-a report given to CIC when the Service has no
adverse information on the immigration applicant.

Inadmissible Brief-advice provided when the Service has concluded, based
on information available to it, that the applicant meets the criteria
outlined in the security provisions of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act.

Information Brief-advice provided by CSIS that it has information that
the applicant is or was involved in activities as described in the
security provisions of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, but
that it is of the opinion that the applicant does not fall into the
class of persons deemed to be inadmissible under the Act.

Incidental Letter-provided to CIC when the Service has information that
the applicant is or was involved in non-security-related activities
described in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (for example,
war crimes or organized criminal activity) or any other matter of
relevance to the performance of duty by the Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, as set out in section 14( b) of the CSIS Act.

Immigration Security Screening Programs

Under the authority of sections 14 and 15 of the CSIS Act, the Service
conducts security screening investigations and provides advice to the
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC). Generally
speaking, the Service's assistance takes the form of information-
sharing on matters concerning threats to the security of Canada as
defined in section 2 of the CSIS Act and the form of "assessments" with
respect to the inadmissibility classes of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act.

Immigration requests for security screening resulted in 445 briefs from
CSIS to CIC-242 information briefs and 203 inadmissible briefs. Of those
requests, the median time required for a "no reportable trace" (NRT) was
57 days, for an information brief 400 days and for an inadmissible brief
461 days. For the year previous, the median figures were 55 days, 401
days and 498 days, respectively.

Unlike previous years, the Service reported on citizenship applications
as a separate category. An information brief with respect to a
citizenship application took a median time of 129 days.

Applications for Permanent Residence from Within Canada

The Service has the sole responsibility for screening immigrants and
refugees who apply for permanent residence status from within Canada. In
2008-2009 the Service received 33, 837 such screening requests. Of these
requests, 21, 950 were immigration applications and 11, 887 came through
the Refugee Determination Program.

According to the statistical information provided by the Service, the
time required for the Service to issue a recommendation on an
immigration application varies considerably depending on how the
application was filed. Those applications filed using the Electronic
Data Exchange from within Canada took a median of 45 days, and
electronic filings within the Refugee Determination Program took 55
days. For those applications filed on paper, the median turnaround time
for immigration applications from within Canada was 70 days; for
applications from the U. S. it was 150 days, and for paper applications
from within the Refugee Determination program 94 days.

Application for Permanent Residence from Outside Canada

Immigration and refugee applications for permanent residence that
originate outside Canada or the United States are managed by the
Overseas Immigrant Screening Program under which the Service shares
responsibility for security screening with CIC officials based abroad.
Generally, CSIS only becomes involved in the screening process either
upon being requested to do so by the Immigration Program Manager or upon
receiving adverse information about a case from established sources.
CSIS reports that this division of labour allows the Service to
concentrate on higher-risk cases.

I
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fariza
Champion Member
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Posts: 1701
Ratings: +71
Category........: FSW1

« Reply #1 on: March 23, 2011, 10:04:55 pm »

Nature of CSIS Advice to CIC

The Service's security screening assessments are provided as advice to
CIC in one of four forms:

No Reportable Trace (NRT)-a report given to CIC when the Service has no
adverse information on the immigration applicant.


Unlike previous years, the Service reported on citizenship applications
as a separate category. An information brief with respect to a
citizenship application took a median time of 129 days.

Application for Permanent Residence from Outside Canada

Immigration and refugee applications for permanent residence that
originate outside Canada or the United States are managed by the
Overseas Immigrant Screening Program under which the Service shares
responsibility for security screening with CIC officials based abroad.
Generally, CSIS only becomes involved in the screening process either
upon being requested to do so by the Immigration Program Manager or upon
receiving adverse information about a case from established sources.

CSIS reports that this division of labour allows the Service to
concentrate on higher-risk cases.


Great info for the security check insight Shibuya. Thanks for sharing... 129 days even it takes for NRT seems reasonable..
It also seems Program manager/VO has lot of discretion whether or not to request for CSIS... This is probably the very important factor makes the delay for the security chk and for getting PPR in many cases or more specifically applicants from specific countries......
Logged

App filed : 01 Aug 2009 ;        In process : 26 Feb 2010
Med Req: 08 Dec 2010  ;         PPR         : 30 May 2011  
Decision Made and Visa stamped : 07 June 2011
Landed: July 23 2011
PR Card Received: October 2011
canadaforall
Champion Member
******

Posts: 1331
Ratings: +57
Category........: FSW1
App. Filed.......: 30th January 2009
Doc's Request.: February .12 .2009
AOR Received.: 30. 08.2009
IELTS Request: no
File Transfer...: 16.2.2009
Med's Request: march 27th 2012
Med's Done....: 5 april 2012
Interview........: waved
Passport Req..: March 27th 2912

« Reply #2 on: March 24, 2011, 12:06:20 am »



Hi Fariza and Shibuya,
                              Yes from your post you have reminded me of something i saw in my Caips notes , but did not know the meaning and i have never asked anyone.


"FOSS verified, no adverse information"  what is the meaning of this statement, it is related to what you are saying?

Thanks and waiting.
Logged

January 30th 2009  : Application Filed
 february 12th 2009 :
 June 30th 2009      : Documents sent to Visa Office
  february 23rd 2012 : In process with received by Visa Office in the inside details. address also disappeare
27th March  medicals, pcc,
fariza
Champion Member
******

Posts: 1701
Ratings: +71
Category........: FSW1

« Reply #3 on: March 24, 2011, 12:19:56 am »

So far I know FOSS applied to Applicant whose application being processed within Canada the similar prototype is CAIPS for applicant outside Canada... FOSS keep records of inland applicants  and in my assumption "FOSS verified no adverse information might be from a note derived from a applicable security chk... Shibuya might have better explanation...
Logged

App filed : 01 Aug 2009 ;        In process : 26 Feb 2010
Med Req: 08 Dec 2010  ;         PPR         : 30 May 2011  
Decision Made and Visa stamped : 07 June 2011
Landed: July 23 2011
PR Card Received: October 2011
eyeoftheocean
Hero Member
*****

Posts: 598
Ratings: +12
Category........: FAM
Visa Office......: Vegreville
App. Filed.......: Jan 2009
AOR Received.: Jan 2009
File Transfer...: June 2009
Med's Done....: Dec 2008    2nd Meds done Jan 2011 Medical Results have been received March 11
Interview........: AIP interview Aug 09  Security interview May 2010

« Reply #4 on: July 05, 2011, 07:30:54 pm »

So what does AVRES SECURITY really mean ? thats what is said on my FOSS notes, also CSIS sent my assessment to the CBSA for a final decision, is this bad news HuhHuh? and they have had it for almost 12 months  Shocked
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