Thank you very much.
We've done the following. First, we allow applicants to rewrite their citizenship test if they're unsuccessful the first time. We think that's only fair, given the more demanding test.
Earlier this year I also announced—it was actually Minister Kenney who announced it, but I have also reinforced it—a move to cut wait times. If applicants miss their test or interview after receiving a final notice, their case will be considered closed.
This puts responsibility back onto the individual. We have to make sure they aren't able to just be absent, often outside of Canada, and miss appointments again and again, eating up valuable resources in a field where, after all, we have a lot of applications to process and a backlog to deal with at Citizenship Canada, partly because citizenship is now such a popular goal for so many immigrants. We've also appointed more citizenship judges.
But faster processing is also occurring as applicants who failed their first citizenship test can now rewrite it, rather than wait for an appointment with a citizenship judge. This is a common-sense move. Not everyone does their best on their first try on a test. Since June 2013 individuals who fail the test have the opportunity to take it again. Preliminary results on retesting show an average pass rate of 70%. Those who fail a second time have the opportunity to demonstrate they can meet the knowledge requirement during an oral interview with a citizenship judge.
We are also requiring applicants to provide evidence of language proficiency up front as of late 2012, so that the assessment of their official language capacity is more objective and speeds up decision-making by citizenship judges during processing.
Over the coming years we're looking at other modernizations, such as online applications and electronic knowledge testing of clients conducted by a contracted third party. The money that is received via budget 2013, combined with other modernization efforts, will reduce the processing times.
You know as well as I do, Mr. Brown, as do your constituents in Barrie, that the new study guide has been extremely popular. Applications are now processed more effectively thanks to amendments that require this language ability to be proven.
Just as another example, under the Liberal system you were allowed an unlimited number of no-shows. You could just not show up, not show up, not show up, and your application would be.... We will not stand for that pattern of individual irresponsibility. We want our citizens to be responsible, to show up for their appointments. If they can't make one, they can come to a second, but they don't have an infinite number of options.
We have a budget of $44 million over two years for these kinds of improvements. We will also be coming forward with new measures, as you know and as we've signalled in this committee, to ensure that the backlog in citizenship applications comes down sharply, smartly, in the months and years to come.