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C-6 Citizenship Applications, Frequently Asked Questions

robw

Hero Member
Mar 10, 2014
286
91
Hello lads,

One final question - I have completed my IELTS in 2010 and will send a copy with my application - However, I answered NO to this question – “Did you successfully complete the LINC or CLIC courses at CLB 4/NCLC 4 or higher from January 1st 2008 to October 31st 2012” as I was not clear if the IELTS falls under this category.

Is this correct?
IELTS doe not fall under the category of LINC or CLIC courses, so your answer was correct.
 

jaihanuman

Hero Member
Nov 27, 2012
285
5
Canada
Category........
Visa Office......
CPP-Ottawa
NOC Code......
2174
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
12-12-2012
Doc's Request.
06-11-2013
AOR Received.
30-01-2013
File Transfer...
30-01-2013
Med's Request
06-11-2013
Med's Done....
07-11-2013
Interview........
no
Passport Req..
22-11-2013
VISA ISSUED...
01-12-2013
LANDED..........
01-02-2014
For the below Point - Government issued Driving Licence in Canada is fine or we need to get from our origin Country?
  • if you had a passport in the past 5 years:
    • photocopies of 1 piece of government issued identification with your name, date of birth and photograph
 

mazamilam

Hero Member
Jan 26, 2015
389
39
Toronto
Category........
FSW
Visa Office......
Ottawa
NOC Code......
0621
App. Filed.......
11/05/2015
Doc's Request.
23/07/2015
AOR Received.
11/05/2015
IELTS Request
Done 8.5
Med's Request
Upfront Medicals
Med's Done....
06-04-2015
Passport Req..
24/07/2015
VISA ISSUED...
04/08/2015
LANDED..........
23-08-2012
The online calculator says '' Please list all your absences outside Canada ". Do we have to list the absences even before becoming PR? ( Since, I landed as a PR).
No, you only have to list all your travels from and to Canada. If you traveled to other countries from and back to your home country, you do not have to list those travels because you are not traveling from and back to Canada.
 

mazamilam

Hero Member
Jan 26, 2015
389
39
Toronto
Category........
FSW
Visa Office......
Ottawa
NOC Code......
0621
App. Filed.......
11/05/2015
Doc's Request.
23/07/2015
AOR Received.
11/05/2015
IELTS Request
Done 8.5
Med's Request
Upfront Medicals
Med's Done....
06-04-2015
Passport Req..
24/07/2015
VISA ISSUED...
04/08/2015
LANDED..........
23-08-2012
For the below Point - Government issued Driving Licence in Canada is fine or we need to get from our origin Country?
  • if you had a passport in the past 5 years:
    • photocopies of 1 piece of government issued identification with your name, date of birth and photograph
A Canadian Driving license is preferred.
 

jaihanuman

Hero Member
Nov 27, 2012
285
5
Canada
Category........
Visa Office......
CPP-Ottawa
NOC Code......
2174
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
12-12-2012
Doc's Request.
06-11-2013
AOR Received.
30-01-2013
File Transfer...
30-01-2013
Med's Request
06-11-2013
Med's Done....
07-11-2013
Interview........
no
Passport Req..
22-11-2013
VISA ISSUED...
01-12-2013
LANDED..........
01-02-2014
Thank you for the confirmation.
 

arise

Star Member
Feb 18, 2012
114
26
Category........
Visa Office......
CHC, Islamabad
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
17-11-2011
Doc's Request.
15-12-2011
Nomination.....
02-02-2012
AOR Received.
13-04-2012
IELTS Request
NA
Med's Request
26-06-2013
Med's Done....
26-07-2013, Received on 15-08-2013, in process 30/10/2013
Passport Req..
(new born medical + RPRF + Passport request) all received on 5-11-2013, Decision made on 25/11/2013
VISA ISSUED...
04/12/2013
LANDED..........
14/1/2014
Hello,
I did my masters from the Netherlands in a year which doesn't fall in my eligibility period. I was a student there. Question 13 asks to list Immigration/citizenship status in any year. Do i have to fill my student status? The instruction guide says, you have to fill in the chart if you were student, refugee, ciitizen etc. Thought i would double check with the forum members, how they responded
 

mazamilam

Hero Member
Jan 26, 2015
389
39
Toronto
Category........
FSW
Visa Office......
Ottawa
NOC Code......
0621
App. Filed.......
11/05/2015
Doc's Request.
23/07/2015
AOR Received.
11/05/2015
IELTS Request
Done 8.5
Med's Request
Upfront Medicals
Med's Done....
06-04-2015
Passport Req..
24/07/2015
VISA ISSUED...
04/08/2015
LANDED..........
23-08-2012

dakar23

Full Member
Jul 26, 2012
41
0
There is nothing you can do now but wait . . . at the least until you receive AOR.

After that there are multiple ways you might choose to go forward, such as submitting a supplemental correction AFTER you receive AOR or waiting to the interview and be prepared to correct it then. It will probably be worth a telephone call to the help centre to specifically ask what should you do if you left a trip out of the presence calculation, but you still have enough days to qualify for citizenship.

Nonetheless, what you actually then do, that will need to be a decision you make based on your own personal judgment.

Many applicants make such mistakes. The IRCC website actually encourages applicants to wait longer to apply precisely to be sure they have enough days to meet the presence requirement, allowing for mistakes made in the presence calculation. IRCC is well aware that applicants make such mistakes innocently and is generally very forgiving . . . so long as, of course, it does appear to be an innocent mistake.

Four weeks is probably a big enough omission it is worth sending off, at the least, a supplement explanation to be added to your application, describing the omission, precisely giving the dates of travel (date of exit and date of return to Canada), country or countries visited, reason or purpose of the travel, and an explanation for the omission (whatever the truthful explanation for making the mistake is). It might warrant a revised presence calculation, but probably better to wait for direction from IRCC before doing that.

The risk, of course, is that making such an error naturally raises concerns that there may be other omissions of travel as well, and broader concerns about how reliable your information is generally (an applicant's credibility, after all, is about how much IRCC can rely on the applicant to accurately report the facts, and a significant error in reporting the facts can indicate cause to not rely so much on the applicant's accounting of facts). So a timely acknowledgement of the error and correction, together with an explanation which makes sense, should fairly easily allow IRCC to catalog this as a typical innocent mistake. No harm, no foul.

There is no way to acknowledge and correct the error until you receive AOR.

The reference to AOR leads to a tangent:



I absolutely concur with "Don't panic and just wait."

Beyond that, there are always at least three outcomes (but recognizing there are multiple paths even among these three), not just two:
-- application returned
-- application results in grant of citizenship
-- application is denied

Perhaps ironically, one of the possible outcomes you reference, the possibility the application is returned, has NOTHING to do with the issue raised by the OP's query. An entry error in the physical presence calculation, including the omission of a trip, will not result in an application being returned UNLESS the error on its face invalidates the presence calculation or shows that the applicant did not meet the minimum physical presence requirement.

In particular, failing to enter a whole trip in the presence calculator has NO impact on the completeness check. This kind of error does not result in the application being returned.

By the way, while there are errors for which one can say (and on occasion I probably have said) that the worst case scenario is that the application is returned, that is not nearly so bad as more serious worst case scenarios (such as being accused of making a material misrepresentation), and not nearly so bad, even, as non-routine processing resulting in full blown RQ. That is to say such an error is not all that serious, that the worst case scenario is NOT SO BIG A DEAL. A returned application is nothing to worry much about, so long as what is required to make the application complete can be included in re-submitting the application. Yes, this delays when the oath will be taken. Not by much more than how long it takes to re-submit a complete application.

Sure, all applicants want to get it right and submit an application that is complete, that goes into process, on track for routine processing which leads to taking the oath sooner rather than later. There is no need to fret over mistakes that might render an application incomplete, however, since such mistakes are readily and, ordinarily, easily corrected.

Failing to disclose a whole trip in the presence calculation, however, again, is NOT the kind of error which results in an application being returned.

The other scenario you proffer is possible but the prudent applicant will not idly stand by to see if things turn out this way. The omission of travel totaling 28 days is a substantial omission of fact, even if it does not result in the presence calculation falling short of the minimum required. Odds of IRCC discovering the additional time abroad are substantial. An intentional omission of this magnitude could be very serious. But of course applicants do indeed make such mistakes and IRCC will recognize many such failures to accurately report the facts do indeed happen because of innocent mistakes. But a discrepancy of this magnitude virtually demands clarification, correction, and probably at least enough of an explanation to satisfy IRCC it was a mistake and not a willful omission of material fact.

Which brings up the variable paths to other possible outcomes, namely the various modes of non-routine processing, full blown RQ looming as the more ominous.

In particular, unless there is a timely acknowledgement of the error, a credible correction, and a credible explanation, an omission of this magnitude could easily trigger non-routine processing. At the least this would likely entail a more probing interview and some collateral inquiries to verify the applicant's information otherwise is reliable, in large part verified as accurate. It will likely trigger a closer analysis of travel history, address history, and work history. It could easily trigger full blown RQ for which the applicant will need to submit extensive additional information and documentation, which not only is inconvenient and often results in long delays, and it can be profoundly intrusive into the applicant's privacy, and depending on how much documentation the applicant has to actually prove time in Canada, can put the outcome of the application at risk.

More than a few applicants have reported missing whole trips and not even realizing it until the interview, or not acknowledging it until the interview, and while some incurred small delays, for many their acknowledgement and explanation during the interview has sufficed to satisfy IRCC it was a more or less innocent error. Obviously, this only suffices if there is enough of a margin over the minimum that it is clear they applicant nonetheless met the minimum physical presence requirement.

An omission of nearly a full month (28 days) is big enough, however, probably better to be proactive in correcting it with IRCC rather than waiting until the interview. After AOR of course.



Hi, thanks for your kind reply.
I also think that application will not return.
If returns its ok if not , I will do as follows:
*I will try to call them take their advise
*Also once I get AOR I will send amendment along with the explanation.

thanks again
 

mazamilam

Hero Member
Jan 26, 2015
389
39
Toronto
Category........
FSW
Visa Office......
Ottawa
NOC Code......
0621
App. Filed.......
11/05/2015
Doc's Request.
23/07/2015
AOR Received.
11/05/2015
IELTS Request
Done 8.5
Med's Request
Upfront Medicals
Med's Done....
06-04-2015
Passport Req..
24/07/2015
VISA ISSUED...
04/08/2015
LANDED..........
23-08-2012
Hello,
I did my masters from the Netherlands in a year which doesn't fall in my eligibility period. I was a student there. Question 13 asks to list Immigration/citizenship status in any year. Do i have to fill my student status? The instruction guide says, you have to fill in the chart if you were student, refugee, ciitizen etc. Thought i would double check with the forum members, how they responded
Yes, definitely include that status in your answer. It basically asks you for all your immigration statuses you have held, EVER! Be as complete as possible.
 

Canven84

Hero Member
Oct 17, 2017
211
43
Hello,
I did my masters from the Netherlands in a year which doesn't fall in my eligibility period. I was a student there. Question 13 asks to list Immigration/citizenship status in any year. Do i have to fill my student status? The instruction guide says, you have to fill in the chart if you were student, refugee, ciitizen etc. Thought i would double check with the forum members, how they responded
Hi,
"Question 13 asks to list Immigration/citizenship status in any year" ... So you need to fill your student status in the Netherlands, not only from the eligibility period.
 

JaneK

Newbie
Oct 30, 2017
1
0
I used my home address for question 11 that corresponds to work information :( and my spouse name in the contact as a mean to confirm that I'm physically there during my work period. I'm so worried that my app will be returned due to this. any ideas?
Regarding to the gap. I put e.g, 2013-10 ended my first job and 2013-11 started my next job. Would this be sufficient and appropriate? it does not show the date when printed the form.
Thank you in advance
Not sure if anyone reply to her question (I tried to browse through but couldn't find any) but I think I made the same mistake ( stupid me I found this forum after mailing my packages :( ).

Anyway I listed all the addresses, including the vacation ones in a month by month order (it was super long....) in the address question. The reason is I did the same when I reapplied for new PR cards like 2 years ago and my application was processed super quickly. But I don't even know if it is a good idea now...

And in q11, I also listed all my vacation addresses, and some seasonal part-time workplaces plus unemployment periods I seriously didn't have any contact number available so I left them blank... I also wrote the physical address as my home address at the time on all the employment, although I did wrote the workplace addresses next to their names. (which is kinda stupid now that I think about it...)

I know the best option is to wait for the AOR but AOR is just to confirm they received all the documents right? Should I wait until they said I have to redo it or just do it again and sent with a cover letter? Is there a way to know sooner?

Thanks all~
 
Last edited:

Nina2017

Newbie
Oct 14, 2017
5
0
Hi Spyfy,
I have a question.
If 1 parent is applying for kids, does the other parent's consent letter is required or not.?
 

robw

Hero Member
Mar 10, 2014
286
91
I see a lot of people fretting over not putting contact information for periods they were unemployed.

Think about this for a second: Why would CIC call anyone to verify that you were unemployed? What value could that possibly bring them? With contacts at companies, they can verify that your contract ran from date X to date Y and can surmise that you were tied to Canada in some way for that period. If you're unemployed, there's no contract binding you to stay in Canada, so why would they contact anyone to verify your unemployment status...in that sense, yes, long periods of unemployment on your application are not desirable because it leaves a big gap which makes the officer wonder if you weren't in the country at the time (doesn't mean you will get rejected or delayed, but the concern MIGHT come up).

Leave it blank, put N/A or - if you like - put down a friend or family member, but the odds that they would contact that person are so slim because that person probably has no official credibility like a supervisor or HR person at a company does (unless perhaps it was a career counselor, but even then, there's no way to prove how long you were unemployed for, which is what they care about).

Just something to perhaps ease one of the many, many needless worries people are expressing here. Honestly, it seems to me that 99% of the nitpicky questions people are asking about here are probably not grounds for return of application; rather, it's the things people aren't thinking about that might results in exactly that...things like forgetting to double check the documents against the document checklist, forgetting to sign, forgetting to put the same date on the application and the calculator printout, forgetting to sign the calculator printout, and so on. These are the egregious mistakes that result in delays and application returns, not wondering if you should put "N/A" or "Not applicable" in the form...
 
Last edited:

guddylover

Hero Member
Dec 31, 2016
222
41
I see a lot of people fretting over not putting contact information for periods they were unemployed.

Think about this for a second: Why would CIC call anyone to verify that you were unemployed? What value could that possibly bring them? With contacts at companies, they can verify that your contract ran from date X to date Y and can surmise that you were tied to Canada in some way for that period. If you're unemployed, there's no contract binding you to stay in Canada, so why would they contact anyone to verify your unemployment status...in that sense, yes, long periods of unemployment on your application are not desirable because it leaves a big gap which makes the officer wonder if you weren't in the country at the time (doesn't mean you will get rejected or delayed, but the concern MIGHT come up).

Leave it blank, put N/A or - if you like - put down a friend or family member, but the odds that they would contact that person are so slim because that person probably has no official credibility like a supervisor or HR person at a company does (unless perhaps it was a career counselor, but even then, there's no way to prove how long you were unemployed for, which is what they care about).

Just something to perhaps ease one of the many, many needless worries people are expressing here. Honestly, it seems to me that 99% of the nitpicky questions people are asking about here are probably not grounds for return of application; rather, it's the things people aren't thinking about that might results in exactly that...things like forgetting to double check the documents against the document checklist, forgetting to sign, forgetting to put the same date on the application and the calculator printout, forgetting to sign the calculator printout, and so on. These are the egregious mistakes that result in delays and application returns, not wondering if you should put "N/A" or "Not applicable" in the form...
Do you think they check CBSA report first before they start checking if you were employed or not. I was unemployed for some months and I have never step a foot outside Canada since I came here, but still I still get worried because logic seem to be far from CIC's reasoning.