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Today in Canada > News > Ottawa reverses order to surrender some ‘lost Canadian’ citizenship certificates
News

Ottawa reverses order to surrender some ‘lost Canadian’ citizenship certificates

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Last updated: 2026/06/22 at 3:08 PM
Press Room Published June 22, 2026
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Ottawa reverses order to surrender some ‘lost Canadian’ citizenship certificates
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Just one week after some “lost Canadians” were told to surrender their new citizenship certificates, a few received letters over the weekend confirming their citizenship claims are valid once again.

The Immigration Department has said it sent letters earlier this month to “a few dozen” people who received citizenship under Canada’s citizenship-by-descent law demanding they surrender their proof of citizenship pending further review.

Bridget Burnett received one of those letters, along with her mother and son. She said all three received emails from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada on Saturday saying their citizenship is valid again.

“It was just so much joy and relief. My mom literally cried off and on for like eight hours. She was just so overcome with relief and joy again, the same as when she received her certificate initially,” Burnett said from her current home in Colorado.

Canada’s citizenship by descent law changed on Dec. 15, 2025, allowing people born before that date to claim Canadian citizenship if they can prove direct lineage to a Canadian ancestor generation by generation.

A spokesperson for the minister’s office said last week that about 4,100 people have been confirmed as Canadian citizens under this amendment to the law since it took effect.

Many of those making citizenship claims under this new rule are Americans.

Burnett received a new email from the Immigration Department on Saturday morning which said her citizenship had been reconfirmed after a “thorough review” of her case.

The email also says the order to surrender Burnett’s citizenship certificate on June 13 was made after the department reviewed the documents she submitted as part of her application.

Three women standing in front of a waterfall.
Bridget Burnett, centre, poses for a photo with her mother and sister in this undated photo from a trip to Quebec. (Handout/The Canadian Press)

Burnett said a department agent she spoke to on Friday was unable to shed any light on why her file and those of her family members were placed under review.

“They never asked me for additional documentation or clarification. I did call them again on Friday and spoke to another worker on the phone, and he was so compassionate again, and really tried to help get some sort of answers for me or clarification, but was really in the dark and not able provide any guidance,” she said.

“Even though it wasn’t fruitful, it was nice to talk to a person at IRCC and have them be responsive and supportive, but also hard that he seemed just as confused.”

Immigration Minister Lena Diab and her department have not said exactly what led to the citizenship reviews in the first place. The minister has said that evidence pulled from websites like Ancestry.ca is not sufficient to prove citizenship by descent and applicants must submit “verified, authenticated documents.”

Burnett shared a copy of a certified census record that showed her great-grandfather was Canadian as part of her citizenship claim.

WATCH | More about the suspended certificates:

Some ‘Lost Canadians’ have citizenship certificates abruptly suspended

The federal government has abruptly suspended an undisclosed number of citizenship certificates issued under its new ‘Lost Canadians’ law due to documentation concerns. Thousands of people, most of them American, were granted citizenship late last year.

The Immigration Department has been notifying individuals whose citizenship is under review that their certificates are no longer valid and must be returned.

Recipients of these letters are being told they have 15 days to do so. They’re also being told that their eligibility for a Canadian passport can be reassessed if their citizenship claim is validated.

Burnett had not yet applied for a Canadian passport when she received the initial citizenship surrender letter.

Now, she and her family are feeling more at ease as they prepare to move from Colorado to Vancouver Island this week, where she plans to relaunch her psychology practice.

She told The Canadian Press the U.S. health-care system is “going through a lot of changes,” especially regarding care for women, and Canada feels more stable.

Burnett said even as she gets ready to start a new life in British Columbia, she worries about her citizenship being placed under review again.

“I’m very excited and I feel very welcomed by the community I’m moving to on Vancouver Island, but there’s still going to be this part of me I think that will always wonder if this is real or if they’re going to revoke again or suspend again,” she said.

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