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Don't be too hard on your self.wssw wrote:Hi everyone.
I am in Europe with my family. I have an EU passport, our young son has his EU passport, but my wife does not have hers. She is a Canadian without a visa.
We are starting to run a bit low on funds, but we don't want to give up on our plans just yet, so we're exploring our best course of action. I am a musician, so there isn't much chance of me being able to sponsor my wife's visa/right of abode/residency, especially for the UK. We have attempted the Surinder Singh route a couple of times, but it seems to be too reliant on me. Being able to support my family while paying rent, taxes, bills etc on one unqualified worker's wages seems impossible. Again, I'm the strongest link (as her British citizen husband), yet weakest (unqualified). So on top of running low on funds, we are running low on ideas.
You could say that the crux of the problem is the person qualified for a more stable job, my wife, is not able to work without a lot of bureaucracy that pertains to me exercising my rights somewhere, and doing that is the most difficult aspect! It's a self fulfilling prophecy.
So, we want to be in a situation where I AND my wife are able to work (she is a school teacher) no matter what EU country it is at this point. We are currently housesitting in France and her 90 days in the Schengen area is almost up.
I'm thinking Ireland might be our only option. Who's got ideas for us? Thanks!
Thanks very much for your positive response! So much info. Excellent.noajthan wrote:Don't be too hard on your self.wssw wrote:Hi everyone.
I am in Europe with my family. I have an EU passport, our young son has his EU passport, but my wife does not have hers. She is a Canadian without a visa.
We are starting to run a bit low on funds, but we don't want to give up on our plans just yet, so we're exploring our best course of action. I am a musician, so there isn't much chance of me being able to sponsor my wife's visa/right of abode/residency, especially for the UK. We have attempted the Surinder Singh route a couple of times, but it seems to be too reliant on me. Being able to support my family while paying rent, taxes, bills etc on one unqualified worker's wages seems impossible. Again, I'm the strongest link (as her British citizen husband), yet weakest (unqualified). So on top of running low on funds, we are running low on ideas.
You could say that the crux of the problem is the person qualified for a more stable job, my wife, is not able to work without a lot of bureaucracy that pertains to me exercising my rights somewhere, and doing that is the most difficult aspect! It's a self fulfilling prophecy.
So, we want to be in a situation where I AND my wife are able to work (she is a school teacher) no matter what EU country it is at this point. We are currently housesitting in France and her 90 days in the Schengen area is almost up.
I'm thinking Ireland might be our only option. Who's got ideas for us? Thanks!
For Surinder Singh (which seems your best bet) you do need to be exercising treaty rights for this to work out.
It can be as an employee or self-employed.
There is no minimum number of hours or salary specified in the rules.
You are a musician, so how about tutoring music.
Are you a native (or good) English speaker? If you go to a non-English speaking EU country think teaching English;
(ESOL qualification preferable ofcourse but can be obtained for modest investment of time & money).
- this could work well for your wife too.
Can you drive? - think: 'man with a van' &/or taxi work.
Once you are exercising rights, in a large or small way, your wife will have the right to work (or study) too. Cha-ching!
Suggest take a look at Malta as an alternative to Eire.- think: hotel work (season will be opening in April so it's good timing);
- English-speaking.
Good climate!
Tourist sector
Also think: entertainment work, gigging, artist management & etc.
You could start here for Malta:
http://britcits.blogspot.co.uk/2014/09/ ... guide.html
& see this blog - involves a Canadian spouse too:
https://anundividedfamilyinmalta.wordpress.com
Background on free movement to fill in the gaps:
http://ec.europa.eu/justice/policies/ci ... nt_low.pdf
Best of luck.
Is it a short-stay visa (type C)? ie 90 days per 6 month period.wssw wrote:Only thing is, my wife's passport was stamped in Belgium in early November, so that means she only has until early February in the Schengen area, correct? Unless there's some kind of exception...
It wasn't any kind of special visa. We simply flew into Brussels and they stamped her passport upon entry. That was Nov 5th.noajthan wrote:Is it a short-stay visa (type C)? ie 90 days per 6 month period.wssw wrote:Only thing is, my wife's passport was stamped in Belgium in early November, so that means she only has until early February in the Schengen area, correct? Unless there's some kind of exception...
Anyway see Q7 here:
http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/home-affairs/wh ... ons_en.pdf
The thing is to be exercising treaty rights, ideally as a worker or self-employed, (in Belgium or Eire or Malta!) & then apply for a RC asap for your wife.
Then it doesn't matter about the Schengen visa expiring.
Did the border official not stamp (or annotate) the passport with an exit date as well?wssw wrote:It wasn't any kind of special visa. We simply flew into Brussels and they stamped her passport upon entry. That was Nov 5th.
The border official stamped the passport with an entry date only.noajthan wrote:Did the border official not stamp (or annotate) the passport with an exit date as well?wssw wrote:It wasn't any kind of special visa. We simply flew into Brussels and they stamped her passport upon entry. That was Nov 5th.
Suggest dig into that to be sure.
If you're not moving on it might be advisable to file a RC application.
wssw wrote: The border official stamped the passport with an entry date only.
Are you suggesting we apply for a residence card for Malta before we go (if we go there)?
So, by applying for the residence card, my wife can void the 90 day visa (Malta is in the Schengen area)?noajthan wrote:wssw wrote: The border official stamped the passport with an entry date only.
Are you suggesting we apply for a residence card for Malta before we go (if we go there)?
No, you would have to be there. But easy when you are there.
Googling 'musician work malta' brings up bunch of leads to follow.
Yes, sort of - once you are there you can apply for the RC, on 1 of various grounds; (work; self-employment; self-sufficiency & etc).wssw wrote:So, by applying for the residence card, my wife can void the 90 day visa (Malta is in the Schengen area)?
Very nice. So once we arrive in Malta, theoretically, my wife would have until Feb 5th (when her 90 days are up), which means, before that, I should probably try to land a job and get the application for her RC on the go.noajthan wrote:Yes, sort of - once you are there you can apply for the RC, on 1 of various grounds; (work; self-employment; self-sufficiency & etc).wssw wrote:So, by applying for the residence card, my wife can void the 90 day visa (Malta is in the Schengen area)?
But note that, if you plan to return to UK in the end, the UK will (controversially) only accept work/self-employment type activities as evidence of having shifted your 'centre of life'.
And yes, Malta is in the Schengen area.
What's not to like!
In all of that and before you move anywhere, you might want to research the laws of that specific country regarding foreign-qualified teachers.wssw wrote:Hi everyone.
I am in Europe with my family. I have an EU passport, our young son has his EU passport, but my wife does not have hers. She is a Canadian without a visa.
We are starting to run a bit low on funds, but we don't want to give up on our plans just yet, so we're exploring our best course of action. I am a musician, so there isn't much chance of me being able to sponsor my wife's visa/right of abode/residency, especially for the UK. We have attempted the Surinder Singh route a couple of times, but it seems to be too reliant on me. Being able to support my family while paying rent, taxes, bills etc on one unqualified worker's wages seems impossible. Again, I'm the strongest link (as her British citizen husband), yet weakest (unqualified). So on top of running low on funds, we are running low on ideas.
You could say that the crux of the problem is the person qualified for a more stable job, my wife, is not able to work without a lot of bureaucracy that pertains to me exercising my rights somewhere, and doing that is the most difficult aspect! It's a self fulfilling prophecy.
So, we want to be in a situation where I AND my wife are able to work (she is a school teacher) no matter what EU country it is at this point. We are currently housesitting in France and her 90 days in the Schengen area is almost up.
I'm thinking Ireland might be our only option. Who's got ideas for us? Thanks!
You are right. Thanks for the reminder.ALKB wrote:In all of that and before you move anywhere, you might want to research the laws of that specific country regarding foreign-qualified teachers.wssw wrote:Hi everyone.
I am in Europe with my family. I have an EU passport, our young son has his EU passport, but my wife does not have hers. She is a Canadian without a visa.
We are starting to run a bit low on funds, but we don't want to give up on our plans just yet, so we're exploring our best course of action. I am a musician, so there isn't much chance of me being able to sponsor my wife's visa/right of abode/residency, especially for the UK. We have attempted the Surinder Singh route a couple of times, but it seems to be too reliant on me. Being able to support my family while paying rent, taxes, bills etc on one unqualified worker's wages seems impossible. Again, I'm the strongest link (as her British citizen husband), yet weakest (unqualified). So on top of running low on funds, we are running low on ideas.
You could say that the crux of the problem is the person qualified for a more stable job, my wife, is not able to work without a lot of bureaucracy that pertains to me exercising my rights somewhere, and doing that is the most difficult aspect! It's a self fulfilling prophecy.
So, we want to be in a situation where I AND my wife are able to work (she is a school teacher) no matter what EU country it is at this point. We are currently housesitting in France and her 90 days in the Schengen area is almost up.
I'm thinking Ireland might be our only option. Who's got ideas for us? Thanks!
Otherwise you might end up with her unable to work in her profession, not due to lack of permission to work in general but because she might need to pass tests or retrain to a certain extent.
Just to give yourself a bit more time and security, you could put in an application for RC as jobseeker. While it's not very likely to be granted, the authorities may take up to 6 months to decide (don't know about average processing times in Malta, Ireland takes quite long, I hear) and while they are processing the application you and your wife are absolutely fine to stay. Once you find a job you can add a copy of your contract and your pay slip(s) to the RC application. A negative decision, should she receive one, will not impact her immigration history negatively, just apply again with proof of exercising treaty rights.wssw wrote:Very nice. So once we arrive in Malta, theoretically, my wife would have until Feb 5th (when her 90 days are up), which means, before that, I should probably try to land a job and get the application for her RC on the go.noajthan wrote:Yes, sort of - once you are there you can apply for the RC, on 1 of various grounds; (work; self-employment; self-sufficiency & etc).wssw wrote:So, by applying for the residence card, my wife can void the 90 day visa (Malta is in the Schengen area)?
But note that, if you plan to return to UK in the end, the UK will (controversially) only accept work/self-employment type activities as evidence of having shifted your 'centre of life'.
And yes, Malta is in the Schengen area.
What's not to like!
We probably would return to the UK afterward, unless of course we like Malta too much. Actually, I shouldn't say "return" to the UK, as we have lived mostly in Canada (I was born in Glasgow, hence the UK citizenship).
My wife's passport still got stamped though, and from what I understand, as a Canadian she can only be in the Schengen area for 90 days from the date of said stamp.noajthan wrote:Just noticed that Malta (& most of rest of Europe, including Belgium) has visa-free entry for Canadian passport holders, so not even a Schengen visa is required to enter the country.
As a Canadian on a (Schengen) visa waiver entry - which she seems to have received - she can stay in the Schengen area 90 days out of 180, on her own or with you.wssw wrote:It wasn't any kind of special visa. We simply flew into Brussels and they stamped her passport upon entry. That was Nov 5th.noajthan wrote:Is it a short-stay visa (type C)? ie 90 days per 6 month period.wssw wrote:Only thing is, my wife's passport was stamped in Belgium in early November, so that means she only has until early February in the Schengen area, correct? Unless there's some kind of exception...
Anyway see Q7 here:
http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/home-affairs/wh ... ons_en.pdf
The thing is to be exercising treaty rights, ideally as a worker or self-employed, (in Belgium or Eire or Malta!) & then apply for a RC asap for your wife.
Then it doesn't matter about the Schengen visa expiring.
It's 90 days in Schengen, not 90 days per Schengen country.wssw wrote:Does anyone know about Canadians with EU spouses being able to stay in the Schengen area for more than 90 days? (90 days per country VS 90 days in area as a whole). Is this link valid? Someone on another thread has been insisting that my wife would have 90 days per country.
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... 3Aen%3APDF
Maybe I should start a new thread....
Thanks for the suggestion! We're looking into that currently, albeit I'd be surprised if she qualified while she has a dependent.ALKB wrote:It's 90 days in Schengen, not 90 days per Schengen country.wssw wrote:Does anyone know about Canadians with EU spouses being able to stay in the Schengen area for more than 90 days? (90 days per country VS 90 days in area as a whole). Is this link valid? Someone on another thread has been insisting that my wife would have 90 days per country.
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... 3Aen%3APDF
Maybe I should start a new thread....
Is your wife under 30?
If so, she might be able to apply for a working holiday visa in the Netherlands, which would give her the opportunity to work (in the Netherlands) and you time to sort things out regarding becoming a qualified person and switching her to RC.
http://www.workpermit.com/netherlands/e ... oliday.htm
Would an EU spouse and child even count as dependents? Neither of your would need a residence permit to stay... Clearly a question to ask the Dutch authorities.wssw wrote:Thanks for the suggestion! We're looking into that currently, albeit I'd be surprised if she qualified while she has a dependent.ALKB wrote:It's 90 days in Schengen, not 90 days per Schengen country.wssw wrote:Does anyone know about Canadians with EU spouses being able to stay in the Schengen area for more than 90 days? (90 days per country VS 90 days in area as a whole). Is this link valid? Someone on another thread has been insisting that my wife would have 90 days per country.
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... 3Aen%3APDF
Maybe I should start a new thread....
Is your wife under 30?
If so, she might be able to apply for a working holiday visa in the Netherlands, which would give her the opportunity to work (in the Netherlands) and you time to sort things out regarding becoming a qualified person and switching her to RC.
http://www.workpermit.com/netherlands/e ... oliday.htm