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Minister Hussen announces the appointment of 10 citizenship judges - 17 May

musicengg

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Nov 14, 2017
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https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/news/2018/05/minister-hussen-announces-the-appointment-of-10-citizenship-judges.html

News release
May 17, 2018 – Ottawa, ON – Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, Ahmed Hussen, today announced the appointment of 10 citizenship judges.

  • Joan Mahoney, full-time judge in Halifax (NS)
  • Marie Senécal-Tremblay, full-time judge in Montréal (QC)
  • Rania Sfeir, part-time judge in Montréal (QC)
  • Hardish Dhaliwal, full-time judge in the Greater Toronto Area (ON)
  • Rodney Simmons, full-time judge in the Greater Toronto Area (ON)
  • Albert Wong, part-time judge in the Greater Toronto Area (ON)
  • Rochelle Ivri, part-time judge in the Greater Toronto Area (ON)
  • Suzanne Carrière, full-time judge in Winnipeg (MB)
  • Claude Villeneuve, full-time judge in Edmonton (AB)
  • Carol-Ann Hart, full-time judge in Vancouver (BC)
All these citizenship judges and their profiles are listed in the backgrounder. Each judge was appointed to a 3-year term from an open, transparent and merit-based selection process.

These 10 highly qualified individuals were selected for their embodiment of civic values and their inspirational contributions to their communities and to Canada. Supporting the Government of Canada’s commitment to diversity and inclusion, these individuals will play the important role of fostering a sense of belonging and attachment to Canada for aspiring and new Canadians. Among the appointments is Canada’s first Métis citizenship judge.

Citizenship judges are responsible for making decisions on some citizenship applications, presiding over citizenship ceremonies and administering the oath of citizenship to new citizens. They also play an important role in promoting Canadian citizenship and civic values in their communities.

Citizenship judges are appointed by the Governor in Council on the recommendation of the Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship. New appointees are chosen from a list of qualified candidates who have gone through an open, transparent and merit-based selection process. Candidates for citizenship judge appointments are evaluated against the skills required by the position: judgment/analytical thinking; decision-making; effective communication; cross-cultural sensitivity; and community standing.
 

Quink

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Further down the page it says "There are now 14 citizenship judges across the country, located in Halifax, Montreal, the Greater Toronto Area, Winnipeg, Edmonton, and Vancouver and Surrey, British Columbia"

They just appointed 10 judges, and the total is now 14. Does this mean that there was previously only 4 judges?!?!

No wonder this process takes so long!
 

itsmyid

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Jul 26, 2012
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Further down the page it says "There are now 14 citizenship judges across the country, located in Halifax, Montreal, the Greater Toronto Area, Winnipeg, Edmonton, and Vancouver and Surrey, British Columbia"

They just appointed 10 judges, and the total is now 14. Does this mean that there was previously only 4 judges?!?!

No wonder this process takes so long!
I don’t think there are “only 4 judges “ , my understanding is there are currently 14, and then 10 more are just appointed today - but they haven’t started yet
 

canuck78

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Further down the page it says "There are now 14 citizenship judges across the country, located in Halifax, Montreal, the Greater Toronto Area, Winnipeg, Edmonton, and Vancouver and Surrey, British Columbia"

They just appointed 10 judges, and the total is now 14. Does this mean that there was previously only 4 judges?!?!

No wonder this process takes so long!
People become judges towards the end of their careers so some may have recently retired or their term limit may have just finished and wasn't renewed for various reasons.
 

hime

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I don’t think there are “only 4 judges “ , my understanding is there are currently 14, and then 10 more are just appointed today - but they haven’t started yet
There is currently 14 judges (including new ones). see below link for their profile.

https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/mandate/citizenship-commission/profiles-citizenship-judges.html

The older list for citizenship judges can be seen on the below list:
https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:JGpa8tUHFTIJ:https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/mandate/citizenship-commission/profiles-citizenship-judges.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca
 

PMM

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Jun 30, 2005
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Hi

does this is meanings theres is goings to be more ceremonys?
1. Not really, unless they increase the number of Citizenship officers who process the applications and the test and make arrangements and attend all ceremonies.
2. Its called "jobs for the boys"
 

ZingyDNA

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Well it depends on where the bottleneck is. If there are not enough judges and oath ceremonies are slowed down because of that, more judges will speed up the citizenship grant. If it's other stages that are the bottleneck, like test/interview, security or other assessments, then more judges won't help much. So it depends on your local office.
 

Joshua1

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Nov 18, 2013
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In Scarborough, which gets the bulk of applicants, the bottleneck is probably between DM and oath ceremonies. Therefore, logically if they get 1-2 more judges, this should provide some relief in respect to ceremonies. Note: in the GTA they add 2 full-time and 2 part-time judges.
 

sns204

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Dec 12, 2012
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In Scarborough, which gets the bulk of applicants, the bottleneck is probably between DM and oath ceremonies. Therefore, logically if they get 1-2 more judges, this should provide some relief in respect to ceremonies. Note: in the GTA they add 2 full-time and 2 part-time judges.
Hopefully they have the staff to support more ceremonies.