Does it do any good for us,I know I sound like an idiot but they were able to fill the target without anyone from outland fsw ,what will be different next year.
Well, backlogs have finally become an issue in news, and he has been talking about worldwide workers to meet shortages, so I’m guessing increasing that cap can help with the backlogs next year. Specially since they have a refugee backlog 3x their quota for next year, so raising total quota would allow them to process those without harming economic immigration.
Interesting. A few people here were shitting on me for suggesting the FSW backlogs wont be cleared soon, and we shouldn't expect all program draws as early as January. How quickly the tables turn.
Hardly. They’ll simply adjust draws to match their processing speed for the different classes at various points in time. Probably on a quarterly basis. For as long as they can process at a certain rate to maintain their landing quota, while keeping application intake at a level where they can hit ~6 months of processing. Barring external factors, like another pandemic. Or acts of God. Or war, etc.
Interesting. A few people here were shitting on me for suggesting the FSW backlogs wont be cleared soon, and we shouldn't expect all program draws as early as January. How quickly the tables turn.
Current PR backlog is large enough to accommodate next year's target and even have some leftover applications. Spouse applications seems have the biggest share so if large draws are resumed, maybe all spouse applicants should sue IRCC for piling on the backlog.
Hardly. They’ll simply adjust draws to match their processing speed for the different classes at various points in time. Probably on a quarterly basis. For as long as they can process at a certain rate to maintain their landing quota, while keeping application intake at a level where they can hit ~6 months of processing. Barring external factors, like another pandemic. Or acts of God. Or war, etc.
Current PR backlog is large enough to accommodate next year's target and even have some leftover applications. Spouse applications seems have the biggest share so if large draws are resumed, maybe all spouse applicants should sue IRCC for piling on the backlog.
Unless you're in IT/compsci/software, you'll be dreaming of your current job when you realize it's taking you 6-12 months to find a non-survival job in Canada.
Job searches can last anywhere from two days to over a year, but for most people it is roughly four months.
The article doesn't mention "immigrants" so we can understand Canadian citizens were included in the poll too. For immigrants it takes longer than that so go figure.