Monday 21 March 2022

Since December, Canada's Express Entry waiting list has shrunk by roughly 24,000 people.

IRCC has processed more FSWP applications in the past 2.5 months than it did in all of 2021.

According to data released on February 28 by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, Canada's economic class immigration backlog stands at 231,187 applicants awaiting decisions on their applications (IRCC).

The economic class inventory stood at 230,573 people at the beginning of February 2022, an increase of 614 people. A closer look reveals that progress has been made, particularly in the inventories for the Canadian Experience Class and Federal Skilled Worker Program.

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Overall, inventory in the economic classes is decreasing, but inventory in the TR2PR program is slowing down.

As of the end of October, there were 24,400 less economic class applicants on the backlog. Increases in other economic class channels delayed these improvements. Non-Express Entry PNP streams, as well as the Temporary Residence to Permanent Residence (TR2PR) program, saw some gains. The number of candidates under the PNP grew by 4,685 according to IRCC. Because base PNPs are paper-based, processing applicants takes longer than enhanced PNP streams, which are linked with Express Entry and hence have faster processing times because applications are submitted online.

Between the middle of December 2021 and the end of February 2022, the TR2PR program, which has been closed to applicants since November, saw an increase of 14,153 people. CIC News has contacted IRCC for an explanation as to why the TR2PR program has seen such a huge surge in enrollment even after the program has ended. One option is that IRCC has just lately begun to assess TR2PR program applications, and so they have only recently been counted in the department's inventory.

The IRCC is making significant progress on the CEC and FSWP inventories.

Inventories in Express Entry-managed programs are down across the board.

Among all economic class channels, Express Entry has seen the most improvement, with a decrease of 23,748 people since December. In December, the Express Entry inventory was at 119,389 people, but by the end of February, it had dropped to 95,641 people. The Canadian Experience Class inventory fell by 3,051 people in February, while the Federal Skilled Worker Program inventory dropped by 4,314 people.

Future immigrants are keeping a close eye on these figures; as all Express Entry draws have been halted save for PNP candidates. The backlog of applications has pushed processing timeframes considerably above the six-month threshold; despite the fact that IRCC's website still claims that the standard is six months. According to internal IRCC documents, the department aims to reduce inventory to meet the processing criteria, and then resume Express Entry draws for candidates in other programs.

The number of Canadian Experience Class (CEC) candidates awaiting judgments declined by 12,587 between December 15, 2021, and February 28, 2022. The inventory of the Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) has decreased by 9,092. As a consequence, more FSWP applications were processed by IRCC in two and a half months than handled in the whole of 2021. IRCC handled roughly 600 FSWP applicants each month in the second half of 2021, but current numbers imply an almost eight-fold rise in the number of FSWP candidates processed per month presently.

Last year, IRCC slowed FSWP processing in order to convert as many in-Canada immigration applicants as possible to permanent resident status, mostly through the CEC. The rationale for this is that the department believed that using this method would help it meet its objective of landing over 400,000 immigrants by 2021, which it did, breaking Canada's annual immigration record.

If IRCC keeps processing at its current pace, the CEC backlog will be gone by the summer, and the FSWP backlog will be gone by the end of the year.

Express Entry drawings for qualified workers will resume in the "near future," according to Immigration Minister Sean Fraser. However, no specific time has been set.

In December, the total backlog of Canadian immigration, including permanent residence, temporary residence, citizenship, and visitors, stood at about 1.8 million. IRCC's application inventory has risen as it tries to administer the immigration system in a difficult operational environment during the pandemic. CIC News is waiting on a response to a data request sent to IRCC earlier this week for an update on the department's application inventory across all lines of business.

Canada expects to accept about 432,000 new immigrants this year and over 450,000 new immigrants by 2024, according to its revised Immigration Levels Plan 2022-2024. Increased immigration targets and IRCC's modernization efforts should gradually reduce the immigration backlog from the record highs seen during the pandemic.

 Some Economic class backlogs:


Immigration category

Persons as of Dec. 15, 2021

2022

Persons as of Feb. 28,

 

Atlantic Immigration Pilot Programs

2,998

2,577

Canadian Experience Class (EE)

24,675

12,088

Canadian Experience Class (No EE)

55

84

Caring For Children Program

12,539

16,316

Federal Self Employed

4,999

5,181

Federal Skilled Workers (C-50)

223

197

Federal Skilled Workers (EE)

54,529

45,437

Federal Skilled Workers (Pre C-50)

24

23

High Medical Needs Program

29

15

Live-in Caregiver Program

1,780

1,328

Provincial/Territorial Nominees (EE)

39,325

37,484

Provincial/Territorial Nominees (No EE)

27,421

32,106

Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot

992

897

Start-up Business

1,264

1,295

TR to PR

20,151

34,304

 

 

 

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Source URL: https://aptechglobalimmigration.blogspot.com/2022/03/since-december-canadas-express-entry.html

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