Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada's immigration backlog drops to 2.4 mn people

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Nov, 2022 11:33 AM
  • Canada's immigration backlog drops to 2.4 mn people

Toronto, Nov 10 (IANS) Canada's immigration backlog has come down to just over 2.4 million from 2.6 last month, new data by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) said.

The data showed a large reduction in the backlog of temporary residence applications while the permanent residence backlog registered a slight increase.

The permanent residence inventory stood at 506,421 people as of November 3, compared to 505,562 as of October 3, and the the temporary residence inventory stood at 1,537,566 people in November, compared to 1,651,649 persons last month, the CIC News reported.

The visa processing backlog has grown since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic. According to the recent immigration plan, Canada has set a target of welcoming over 400,000 new immigrants each year, between 2022-2024.

As of November 3, there are 39,589 Express Entry applications waiting in the queue. Express Entry is Canada's main way of managing skilled worker applications.

The second main way is through the Provincial Nominee Programme (PNP) -- which has an inventory of 62,073 total applications -- followed by Quebec's skilled worker programmes. According to the IRCC, there were 2.6 million applications in IRCC's inventory on September 30, out of which 1.1 million were within service standards and 1.5 million were considered backlog. This means that over the past month, IRCC has made some progress towards reducing the backlog.

Acknowledging the backlog, IRCC has said that it is taking steps to improve the speed at which applications are processed.It aims to have a less than 50 per cent backlog across all lines of business by the end of March 2023, CIC News reported.

In June, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau created a taskforce to evaluate the current backlog in services and make suggestions on short-term and long-term improvements. IRCC started the transition towards 100 per cent digital applications for most permanent resident programmes on September 23, with accommodations made for those who are unable to apply online to clear the backlog on time. It also aims to make all citizenship applications digital by the end of this year, apart from investing $85 million to hire 1,250 new staff by the end of the year to increase processing capacity.

MORE National ARTICLES

Hootsuite to lay off five per cent of staff

Hootsuite to lay off five per cent of staff
When restructuring at the Vancouver-based company was announced in August, CEO Tom Keiser said Hootsuite needed to refocus its business so it could drive efficiency, growth, and financial sustainability.  

Hootsuite to lay off five per cent of staff

Trudeau skips COP27 for Tunisia, Asia visits

Trudeau skips COP27 for Tunisia, Asia visits
The Prime Minister's Office says Trudeau will attend the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit on Nov. 12 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, before heading to the the G20 Summit in Bali, Indonesia.

Trudeau skips COP27 for Tunisia, Asia visits

Foot injury may not result in fractures: witness

Foot injury may not result in fractures: witness
Dennis Chimich, an expert in the biomechanics of bone fractures, testified for Doug McCallum's defence team, which is presenting evidence to suggest their client was not lying when he told police a woman ran over his foot in a grocery store parking lot. 

Foot injury may not result in fractures: witness

Housing prices remain soft, sales flat, throughout the Fraser Valley

Housing prices remain soft, sales flat, throughout the Fraser Valley
Prices continued to soften, with month-over-month Benchmark prices down slightly across all property categories. For detached homes, prices are on par with October 2021 levels, while townhomes and apartments are up 7.7 per cent and 11.5 per cent, respectively, over 2021.

Housing prices remain soft, sales flat, throughout the Fraser Valley

Funeral honours RCMP officer in Richmond, B.C.

Funeral honours RCMP officer in Richmond, B.C.
The 31-year-old mental health and homeless outreach officer was stabbed to death two weeks ago while she and a City of Burnaby employee attempted to issue an eviction notice to a man who had been living in a tent at a local park. Jongwon Ham is accused of first-degree murder in Yang's death and is expected to return to a Vancouver court again today for remand.

Funeral honours RCMP officer in Richmond, B.C.

Hundreds attend Halloween melee in Delta, B.C.

Hundreds attend Halloween melee in Delta, B.C.
The injured teen suffered burns to her arm and shoulder when her jacket was set ablaze, the two officers received minor injuries and firefighters had to douse several bush and dumpster fires.  

Hundreds attend Halloween melee in Delta, B.C.