TR2PR is not EE yet, the mandate letter commands IRCC to make it a part of EE. Why should it be massive work? Take your good old CEC, remove the 1 year Canadian work exp requirement and bam, there's your EE TR2PR.
You can't just take a system, remove smth and bam. It doesn't work like this. EE doesn't include CEC only; it includes several streams and it's huge amount of work removing smth. from one stream without affecting another ones. Take a look at NOC -> TEER. That change is not that massive; most codes are the same with new digit somewhere in the middle. Rollout got changed 3 times already and it's easier to implement that what you are suggesting; it affects every stream equally.
JT wants it to be a massive boost dude That's the whole point. Come on now, you should be able to see outland immigration is not the flagship anymore. I mean it's been two years it should be clear by now.
That's the thing. I cannot see anything because looking at 2021 as a sample (the only one) introduces a major bias. Variables change and they change a lot. 2021 they would have invited tourists if that meant they could meet their target.
So, no. I don't know what is the flagship and what is not. I don't know that because I don't have enough data to see the pattern.
I see your point. Me ordering ATIP is not the same as high level politician ordering them. For example, if the next candidate wants to know what exactly is happening with the money, I am sure he will be able to do so.
I see your point. Me ordering ATIP is not the same as high level politician ordering them. For example, if the next candidate wants to know what exactly is happening with the money, I am sure he will be able to do so.
I am actively checking MyImmiTracker for statistical purposes and I noticed the following :
On January 14th, there were 754 active cases for FSW Inland and Outland with AOR date and Medical Passed.
Today there are still 754 cases active, but 19 of them were created on the 14th and after. So, if we were to guess the number of processed applicants for this past week we would divide 54,000 / 754 = 71.
That would give us 19 x 71 = 1349 applicants per week or 5396 per month.
Totally hypothetical numbers, but maybe a rough idea at what speed they are working.
I am actively checking MyImmiTracker for statistical purposes and I noticed the following :
On January 14th, there were 754 active cases for FSW Inland and Outland with AOR date and Medical Passed.
Today there are still 754 cases active, but 19 of them were created on the 14th and after. So, if we were to guess the number of processed applicants for this past week we would divide 54,000 / 754 = 71.
That would give us 19 x 71 = 1349 applicants per week or 5396 per month.
Totally hypothetical numbers, but maybe a rough idea at what speed they are working.
It's not linear, mate There is a batch and when it gets released, we see PPRs. Will it happen today or tomorrow or Saturday? No idea. It might happen next week with 2x of PPRs.
It's not linear, mate There is a batch and when it gets released, we see PPRs. Will it happen today or tomorrow or Saturday? No idea. It might happen next week with 2x of PPRs.
But, I don't think they will wait two weeks to release batches of PPRs and Thursday is almost the best day for everything in the public administration.
if they keep processing the backlog (starting with 2018/2019 applications), the average processing time will rise to 3yrs. Because the average processing time is based on the duration of the applications completed(processed). if they send out PPRs to all 2019 applications next month, the average processing time for next month would be 36months. Just a mathematical reality..
In the note, they haven't hinted to anything like deliberately reducing resources for FSW applications to extend the processing times.
if they keep processing the backlog (starting with 2018/2019 applications), the average processing time will rise to 3yrs. Because the average processing time is based on the duration of the applications completed(processed). if they send out PPRs to all 2019 applications next month, the average processing time for next month would be 36months. Just a mathematical reality..
In the note, they haven't hinted to anything like deliberately reducing resources for FSW applications to extend the processing times.