Backlog Of Canada Immigrations Applications At 2.5m In Early October
Backlog Of Canada Immigrations Applications At 2.5m In Early October
Immigration Minister Sean Fraser’s hiring blitz at Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) is barely making a dent in the department’s inventory of applications for permanent and temporary residency and citizenship.
At the end of the first week of June this year, there was a backlog of roughly 2.39 million applications at at the IRCC.
Fast forward four months and the IRCC’s backlog of applications is even higher at more than 2.5 million.
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That’s despite a hiring blitz announced about a month ago to bring on 1,250 more employees at the immigration department this fall and several measures announced in late April to help Canadian employers deal with the challenge of finding employees amid a severe labour shortage.
In late April, the IRCC announced:
the resumption of Express Entry draws starting in July of this year;
a temporary policy to give recent international graduates with expiring temporary status the opportunity to stay in Canada longer;
the extension of a temporary public policy to allow foreign nationals in Canada as visitors to apply for an employer-specific work permit without having to leave Canada until the end of February 2023, and;
policy changes benefiting those who applied for permanent residence via the Temporary Resident to Permanent Resident (TR-to-PR) pathway last year.
Despite those changes, the backlog at the IRCC initially only grew over the summer as the immigration department was flooded with a record level of applications.
By mid-July, the IRCC was staring down more than 2.6 million applications.
Since then, the department has made some headway. Applications at the IRCC have since fallen by almost 4.3 per cent, or 112,432 applications.
In an emailed response to Immigration.ca, IRCC spokesperson Isabelle Dubois said the department’s performance in August and September “largely matched projections.”
The latest drop in the IRCC’s inventory of applications comes as immigration to Canada shows every sign of setting a new record again this year.
Based on the trend in the first eight months of this year, Canada is poised to welcome 463,860 new permanent residents by the end of this year, or almost 7.5 per cent more than the 431,645 target in the Immigration Levels Plan for 2022.
Applications Are Being Processed Faster But There Record Numbers Of Them
Under pressure to deal with the backlog, the IRCC made a distinction between the number of applications it has in its inventories and applications which have taken longer to process than allowed under service standards.
In her response to Immigration.ca, Dubois pointed out that although the total number of applications in the department’s inventory was nudging back up again in the first few weeks of October, applications are being processed faster.
The number of applications the IRCC defines as backlog is going down.
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“The percentage of applications in backlog has remained consistent for permanent residence at 53 per cent, and decreased for temporary residence from 59 to 54 per cent and citizenship grants from 35 to 31 per cent,” wrote Dubois.
“This means that we are well on our way to meeting our goals to reduce overall backlogs and process 80 per cent of new applications within service standards – and we will continue to do what it takes to get there.”
The latest IRCC data reveals citizenship applications in the department’s inventory fell by more than 9.1 per cent, from 387,368 in mid-July to 351,964 by Oct. 3.