I called in severe times. IRCC says you should wait. Officer will decide later. Ask you re-medical or accept expired medical. If you are in Canada, most probably they will accept expired one.
I called in severe times. IRCC says you should wait. Officer will decide later. Ask you re-medical or accept expired medical. If you are in Canada, most probably they will accept expired one.
Canada Post forwards any letters to new address but if there is "do not forward" on the envelop it sends back.
Address change through web form takes many days to get updated.
There is another theory, which is quite widely applied to flight control in civil aviation.
Disclaimer: I'm NOT raising a conspiracy.
The delayed flights are always getting longer waiting times when they are determined to be delayed, and for many occasions, one may observe that the flight scheduled later than the delayed ones with the same destination are taking off on time. This is because the controllers don't want to increase the rate of abnormal flights.
You may note that IRCC uses the on-time rate (80% cases should be processed within 6-month period for EE) as the criteria in the annual auditting, which is quite similar to that in civil aviation.