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Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act Now In Force

Travel Dream

Hero Member
Sep 20, 2010
331
13
http://news.gc.ca/web/article-en.do?nid=872659

Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act
Citizenship Improvements Now In Force

Important changes to strengthen Canadian citizenship and speed up application processing come into force August 1, 2014. The provisions were included in Bill C-24, the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act, which became Canadian law on June 19, 2014.

It is expected that in 2015/16, these changes will bring the processing time for citizenship applications down to less than a year and that the current backlog will be reduced by more than 80 percent.

The various amendments to the Citizenship Act resulting from the passage of Bill C-24 are coming into force in a staggered timeline. Some provisions came into force immediately upon Bill C-24 receiving Royal Assent; others will come into force at a date to be determined by Governor in Council (GIC).

The reforms that took effect on August 1, 2014 include:

New decision-making model

Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) has significantly improved its ability to process applications by increasing its decision making capacity from approximately 30 citizenship judges to more than 450 decision makers.

Under the new decision-making model - a one-step process as opposed to the former three-step one - citizenship officers now decide all aspects of most citizenship applications. Under the old model, obtaining citizenship involved too much duplication of work. Citizenship officers reviewed the files and prepared them for a citizenship judge, who approved or rejected the application, returned it to the officer, who then granted citizenship on behalf of the Minister or recommended an appeal of the judge's decision.

On a transitional basis, cases where the officer believes the applicant does not meet the residence requirement will be referred to citizenship judges for decision. Citizenship judges will also remain responsible for the important role of presiding over citizenship ceremonies and administering the oath of citizenship, which is the final step before citizenship is granted.

Complete applications

Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) now also has stronger authority to define what constitutes a complete application and what evidence applicants must provide. The strengthened ability to require up-front proof that certain requirements are met and to return incomplete applications will significantly improve efficiency and ensure resources are focused on complete applications.

The ability to put a file on hold if there is an ongoing immigration investigation and to declare a file abandoned if an applicant fails to comply with a request for information or attend an interview will result in further efficiency improvements.

Judicial review and appeal process

The amendments introduce a uniform system for judicial review of decisions made under the Citizenship Act. Until now, an appeal of a citizenship judge's decision would go to the Federal Court but no higher. Now, decisions by citizenship officers, who have new authority to decide certain cases under the Act, can be judicially reviewed and challenged in a higher court.

Under the Citizenship Act, judicial review of citizenship decisions is subject to leave of the Federal Court. The Federal Court decision can then be appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal, where the Federal Court certifies a serious question of general importance. Further appeals are available to the Supreme Court of Canada with leave.

Authority to abandon a citizenship application

The changes provide clear authority to determine that an application has been abandoned if the applicant fails to comply with a request for information or to attend an interview. The abandonment power applies to all applications, at any stage after processing has begun, up until the oath is taken. Under the old system, the Actdid not provide the explicit authority to declare an application abandoned in situations where an applicant failed to appear for the citizenship test or an appointment with an officer. These changes increase processing efficiency and support ongoing efforts to modernize citizenship processing. Previously, keeping abandoned applications open created unnecessary processing delays for active applications.

Other provisions already in force

Provisions from Bill C-24 that came into force on June 19, 2014 (immediately upon Royal Assent) include: fast tracking citizenship applications for members of the Canadian Armed Forces; improving clarity on the First Generation Limit on citizenship for those born abroad; enabling children born abroad to serving Crown servants to pass on citizenship to their children born or adopted abroad; and streamlined decision making for issuing Discretionary Grants under section (5)(4).

Date Modified: 2014-08-01
 

vinaypuri

Hero Member
Jan 1, 2014
556
6
Toronto, ON
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
on Citizenship eligibility it still says 1095 days.

http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/citizenship/become-eligibility.asp

May be it is a phaswd implementation.
 

Bargeld

Hero Member
Sep 17, 2011
338
53
Category........
Visa Office......
Buffalo
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
30-05-2011
AOR Received.
14-07-2011
File Transfer...
05-07-2011
Passport Req..
06-10-2011
VISA ISSUED...
20-10-2011
LANDED..........
20-10-2011
It is expected that in 2015/16, these changes will bring the processing time for citizenship applications down to less than a year and that the current backlog will be reduced by more than 80 percent.
LOL

I'll believe it when I see it and not a minute sooner.
 

zwho

Full Member
Jul 31, 2014
26
2
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
Residency requirements (applying 4 out of 6 years, eliminating time spent before PR) are not in effect. They will come into force by June or July 2015.

Travel Dream said:
news.gc.ca/web/article-en.do?nid=872659

Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act
Citizenship Improvements Now In Force

Important changes to strengthen Canadian citizenship and speed up application processing come into force August 1, 2014. The provisions were included in Bill C-24, the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act, which became Canadian law on June 19, 2014.

It is expected that in 2015/16, these changes will bring the processing time for citizenship applications down to less than a year and that the current backlog will be reduced by more than 80 percent.

The various amendments to the Citizenship Act resulting from the passage of Bill C-24 are coming into force in a staggered timeline. Some provisions came into force immediately upon Bill C-24 receiving Royal Assent; others will come into force at a date to be determined by Governor in Council (GIC).

The reforms that took effect on August 1, 2014 include:

New decision-making model

Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) has significantly improved its ability to process applications by increasing its decision making capacity from approximately 30 citizenship judges to more than 450 decision makers.

Under the new decision-making model - a one-step process as opposed to the former three-step one - citizenship officers now decide all aspects of most citizenship applications. Under the old model, obtaining citizenship involved too much duplication of work. Citizenship officers reviewed the files and prepared them for a citizenship judge, who approved or rejected the application, returned it to the officer, who then granted citizenship on behalf of the Minister or recommended an appeal of the judge's decision.

On a transitional basis, cases where the officer believes the applicant does not meet the residence requirement will be referred to citizenship judges for decision. Citizenship judges will also remain responsible for the important role of presiding over citizenship ceremonies and administering the oath of citizenship, which is the final step before citizenship is granted.

Complete applications

Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) now also has stronger authority to define what constitutes a complete application and what evidence applicants must provide. The strengthened ability to require up-front proof that certain requirements are met and to return incomplete applications will significantly improve efficiency and ensure resources are focused on complete applications.

The ability to put a file on hold if there is an ongoing immigration investigation and to declare a file abandoned if an applicant fails to comply with a request for information or attend an interview will result in further efficiency improvements.

Judicial review and appeal process

The amendments introduce a uniform system for judicial review of decisions made under the Citizenship Act. Until now, an appeal of a citizenship judge's decision would go to the Federal Court but no higher. Now, decisions by citizenship officers, who have new authority to decide certain cases under the Act, can be judicially reviewed and challenged in a higher court.

Under the Citizenship Act, judicial review of citizenship decisions is subject to leave of the Federal Court. The Federal Court decision can then be appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal, where the Federal Court certifies a serious question of general importance. Further appeals are available to the Supreme Court of Canada with leave.

Authority to abandon a citizenship application

The changes provide clear authority to determine that an application has been abandoned if the applicant fails to comply with a request for information or to attend an interview. The abandonment power applies to all applications, at any stage after processing has begun, up until the oath is taken. Under the old system, the Actdid not provide the explicit authority to declare an application abandoned in situations where an applicant failed to appear for the citizenship test or an appointment with an officer. These changes increase processing efficiency and support ongoing efforts to modernize citizenship processing. Previously, keeping abandoned applications open created unnecessary processing delays for active applications.

Other provisions already in force

Provisions from Bill C-24 that came into force on June 19, 2014 (immediately upon Royal Assent) include: fast tracking citizenship applications for members of the Canadian Armed Forces; improving clarity on the First Generation Limit on citizenship for those born abroad; enabling children born abroad to serving Crown servants to pass on citizenship to their children born or adopted abroad; and streamlined decision making for issuing Discretionary Grants under section (5)(4).

Date Modified: 2014-08-01
 

informatics

Hero Member
Aug 3, 2009
562
10
zwho said:
Residency requirements (applying 4 out of 6 years, eliminating time spent before PR) are not in effect. They will come into force by June or July 2015.

Travel Dream said:
news.gc.ca/web/article-en.do?nid=872659

Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act
Citizenship Improvements Now In Force

Important changes to strengthen Canadian citizenship and speed up application processing come into force August 1, 2014. The provisions were included in Bill C-24, the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act, which became Canadian law on June 19, 2014.

It is expected that in 2015/16, these changes will bring the processing time for citizenship applications down to less than a year and that the current backlog will be reduced by more than 80 percent.

The various amendments to the Citizenship Act resulting from the passage of Bill C-24 are coming into force in a staggered timeline. Some provisions came into force immediately upon Bill C-24 receiving Royal Assent; others will come into force at a date to be determined by Governor in Council (GIC).

The reforms that took effect on August 1, 2014 include:

New decision-making model

Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) has significantly improved its ability to process applications by increasing its decision making capacity from approximately 30 citizenship judges to more than 450 decision makers.

Under the new decision-making model - a one-step process as opposed to the former three-step one - citizenship officers now decide all aspects of most citizenship applications. Under the old model, obtaining citizenship involved too much duplication of work. Citizenship officers reviewed the files and prepared them for a citizenship judge, who approved or rejected the application, returned it to the officer, who then granted citizenship on behalf of the Minister or recommended an appeal of the judge's decision.

On a transitional basis, cases where the officer believes the applicant does not meet the residence requirement will be referred to citizenship judges for decision. Citizenship judges will also remain responsible for the important role of presiding over citizenship ceremonies and administering the oath of citizenship, which is the final step before citizenship is granted.

Complete applications

Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) now also has stronger authority to define what constitutes a complete application and what evidence applicants must provide. The strengthened ability to require up-front proof that certain requirements are met and to return incomplete applications will significantly improve efficiency and ensure resources are focused on complete applications.

The ability to put a file on hold if there is an ongoing immigration investigation and to declare a file abandoned if an applicant fails to comply with a request for information or attend an interview will result in further efficiency improvements.

Judicial review and appeal process

The amendments introduce a uniform system for judicial review of decisions made under the Citizenship Act. Until now, an appeal of a citizenship judge's decision would go to the Federal Court but no higher. Now, decisions by citizenship officers, who have new authority to decide certain cases under the Act, can be judicially reviewed and challenged in a higher court.

Under the Citizenship Act, judicial review of citizenship decisions is subject to leave of the Federal Court. The Federal Court decision can then be appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal, where the Federal Court certifies a serious question of general importance. Further appeals are available to the Supreme Court of Canada with leave.

Authority to abandon a citizenship application

The changes provide clear authority to determine that an application has been abandoned if the applicant fails to comply with a request for information or to attend an interview. The abandonment power applies to all applications, at any stage after processing has begun, up until the oath is taken. Under the old system, the Actdid not provide the explicit authority to declare an application abandoned in situations where an applicant failed to appear for the citizenship test or an appointment with an officer. These changes increase processing efficiency and support ongoing efforts to modernize citizenship processing. Previously, keeping abandoned applications open created unnecessary processing delays for active applications.

Other provisions already in force

Provisions from Bill C-24 that came into force on June 19, 2014 (immediately upon Royal Assent) include: fast tracking citizenship applications for members of the Canadian Armed Forces; improving clarity on the First Generation Limit on citizenship for those born abroad; enabling children born abroad to serving Crown servants to pass on citizenship to their children born or adopted abroad; and streamlined decision making for issuing Discretionary Grants under section (5)(4).

Date Modified: 2014-08-01
Yup ! Only the provisions mentioned in the above article came into force on August 1st.
 

Donizinho

Star Member
Apr 3, 2013
54
1
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
Will it affect those who already did citizenship test but haven't received oath letter yet?

Thanks!
 

hoping_canadian

Hero Member
Jun 20, 2014
525
12
Montreal
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
Donizinho said:
Will it affect those who already did citizenship test but haven't received oath letter yet?

Thanks!

absolutely not! this is for the new applicants,
dont worry were in the same boat and i dont feel anxious about the new rules
 

AmandaK

Newbie
Jan 14, 2013
9
0
Hoping_canadian: your information is wrong and might significantly mislead people on this forum.
The new immigration laws will apply for everyone: old and new applicants. It does not matter when you became a PR, what matters is when you apply for citizenship. If you apply for citizenship before the date the new rules come into force, then they won't apply to you. The date of when the new rules will come into effect is still unclear, but expected to be around June 2015.
 

sept15

Champion Member
Sep 26, 2010
1,043
18
Canada
Category........
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
AmandaK said:
Hoping_canadian: your information is wrong and might significantly mislead people on this forum.
The new immigration laws will apply for everyone: old and new applicants. It does not matter when you became a PR, what matters is when you apply for citizenship. If you apply for citizenship before the date the new rules come into force, then they won't apply to you. The date of when the new rules will come into effect is still unclear, but expected to be around June 2015.
Amandak - Read the 'question' that hoping_canadian responded to.