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Welcome.LeezP wrote:Hi everyone,
...
25th November 2016 received the letter that British Citzenship has been refused. Reason for decision: We wrote to you on the 29th October requesting documents in support of your application for British Citizenship. We have received your reply to our request but we cannot be satisfied from the comments available that you meet the residence requirement and your application is refused. Of course - application fee non refundable!
the same day rang up the general advice line as I gave all the documents they asked for and I suspected that because I am a homemaker somehow that doesn't qualify the "self sufficient" category?¬! Spoke to a very nice man and he said that it was "obvious" to him because he worked there that they were after Utility Bills! I explained that nowhere in either the Guide AN page 15: nor in the letter they sent me asking for additional documents was that said!
APPLICATIONS MADE ON THE BASIS OF RESIDENCE IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
Evidence of lawful residence during the 5 (or, if the applicant is married to or in civil partnership to a British citizen, 3) years before the date of the application
• Your passports OR say why you are unable to provide one on page 24 and supply
• Letters from employers, educational establishments or other Government Departments indicating the applicant’s presence in the United Kingdom during the relevant period
I have utility bills in my name covering that period but did not submit them because they weren't asked for and now feel very cheated because you think you can go on the information provided to you by filling out the form carefully and reading the guidelines etc. He said he can understand my frustration but that bank statements don't prove you live at an address, nor do council tax nor a title deed in your name!!!
PLEASE! Has anyone experienced this before and can advise me what any options are?
Thank you.
If you submitted a current passport from 2010 and caseworker is still not satisfied I suppose its in their power to request more information.LeezP wrote:Thank you so much for such a quick reply.
I did submit passport and UK licence and the AN form listing for absences was accurate. However, I don't have stamps in and out of every visit. Most visits were to my home country (Taiwan) or to my husband's home country (Poland) and a few other holiday visits to spain, malta etc. There are not stamps for the European country and when we visit Poland sometimes they stamp and sometimes they do not! (Don't know why!). I didn't submit my expired passport though. And my current passport is date of issue is 2010. Yes, the council tax bills are in joint name. I'm not unfortunately on the electoral role as I don't believe I'm allowed to vote. I do not have child benefit in my name either. (For some random reason I filed for it under my husband's name when my son was born) and am currently waiting on CF411A form to have the credits back dated to me - but that is another story.
I was thinking of writing the Home Office back and asking for more specific details on why it was refused. ie asking what paperwork do you actually require? that way, should they respond with a more specified list I can submit that letter back to them next time. Not sure if they would respond to this or not. ??
Having been suggested this website, I have been reading various posts and realise in hindsight I should have thrown every piece of paper with my name on it at them but I didn't know this at the time. I thought that by reading the guidelines and submitting paperwork they asked for that would be enough! Clearly not the case!
Also, I was looking this morning over what further paperwork I could submit and have a question: I do not have letters from my last 2 GPs stating I was registered with them - worth getting?
Question 2: over the last 2 utility companies I had online billing so any bills will be printed and no "so called originals" Would this make a difference?
Ref http://www.electoralcommission.org.uk/_ ... h-2010.pdfAny previous resident of Hong Kong who holds a British Dependent Territories, British Nationals (Overseas) or British Overseas passport meets
the nationality criteria for all elections in the UK.
Doctors/dentists probably have better things to do with valuable time hence the charges to modulate the requests made of them.LeezP wrote:Thanks for the replies.
I am very surprised I am allowed to register to vote. Hadn't realized this! Registered to vote on Sunday, got onto utility companies to request paper trail and they were very obliging. Requested change CB to my name today. Surprised to find confirmation letters that I am their patient from doctors and dentists charging £20-£30!! I haven't been to the doctor or dentist much so there isn't much of a paper trail and I only started driving this year so have no car insurance until now.
I am seriously considering writing the case worker to query her refusal. I feel that following AN guidance notes and their list of requested documents in good faith has cost me the loss of the handling fee and surely they should specify what they require more clearly so that other every day citizens like myself don't follow the same unfortunate fate. I know you said there is no requirement for them to reply. Do you think this is worth trying and will this influence if I apply again?
Also, when I apply again would I include their initial refusal letter?
Thanks again for all advice.
No, those items do not prove residence in the context of naturalisation.Angie77 wrote:I got a bit worried because and also a Non-EU immigrant PRC holder, as my partner is European, who are about to apply for BC.
I never had my passaports stamped when going on holidays I only have a entry cleareance stamp which was valid for 6 months when I first came to the UK, a 5 years Residence permit and now a 10 years Permanent residence card. I thought that would suffice to prove residence
Was this your case?
I don't understand why that was not enough It is enough for PR why it is not enough for BC! I am really puzzled.LeezP wrote:Hi Angie,
Yes, you are right. I have had the 5 year family permit, followed by the 10 year permanent residence card. I didn't get stamps in and out of every EU country visited. It seems the moderators suggest I should have looked more into the guidance for EEA routes than the standard British citizenship guidance.
If you are planning to apply for citizenship and have gone the EEA route like me I would advise you that your passport is definitely not enough. I submitted, P45s, P60s (for 2 of the 5 years), council tax bills and bank statements for the entire 5 year period and that was deemed to be "inadequate!!"
It looks like I have no choice but to re-apply and the fee again...
I feel particularly cheated because I submitted the paperwork I did based on the information and guidance and it was not what they were after. Am working on getting as much additional "proof of residence" paperwork together for this now.
There's two aspects to this: settled status (freedom from immigration time restrictions) and residence.LeezP wrote:Hi Angie,
I sent evidence for the 5 years required for naturalisation. It seems they were happy with the 2 years I was employed but not with the bank statements and council tax for the last 3 years.