laomiao said:
I missed my first test appointment (scheduled for Aug 5) because gmail put the email in spam. I wrote to local office (Montreal) as soon as I found out (mid of August) explaining the reason and I'm now waiting for the reschedule which hasn't happened after one month. I just called HOTLINE and the agent told me that my file status is now "non-routine" which means the processing time will be 36 months #$%^ and he told me to wait PATIENTLY.
I thought everyone at least have two chance for test appointment and if I have a good reason for missing first one I should still have another two chances. But what this "non-routine" really mean. Seriously I need to wait up to 36 months?
Very frustrated and what I should do now?
No cause for panic.
Not all "non-routine" cases are created equal.
A fingerprint request, for example, means the application is no longer routine, but is non-routine. But scores of applicants have seen only a minimal delay result from having to submit fingerprints.
Similarly, among reports from applicants who had to have the test rescheduled, the impact varies considerably, from minimal delay to long delays. The difference is most likely due to other factors; some cases simply take a lot longer than others.
In the meantime, CIC's reported timelines say little more than how long it might be. Even for an entirely routine application, the actual timeline varies considerably, ranging from just five or six months (mine was eight for app made in 2013, oath early 2014) to well over a year. For so-called non-routine applications, they too range from well less than a year to . . . well four or even five years.
How long depends on why it is non-routine far more than the fact it is non-routine.
Otherwise, from almost all accounts, missing the first scheduled test date is no big deal. While CIC's approach to missed test dates has changed, vacillating back and forth some over the last several years, my understanding is that currenly CIC will automatically re-schedule applicants for a second test. Missing a scheduled second test is a much bigger deal.