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No it probably says or means 2 year is the term of the first leave, it is not the number of years for settlementhsmp2010 wrote:ex123
As u have mentioned that u also read in BBC statement of intent that settlement can be after 2 years. can u plz tell us page no of this pdf document where u read this sentence.
VictoriaS wrote:I'm reading it as you can't switch from Tier 1 to Tier 2 (WP), but the table seems contradictory.
Victoria
That's my main problem...assessments will be made by ECO's in the country of application.suresh-hsmp wrote:Intresting point --- only single application --does that mean no EC for out of country ?????
14. There will be a single application process,
whether in or outside the UK. There will also be
a single application fee for principal applicants.
We will set fees for the points system by
balancing the need to recover the full cost of
providing our services while maintaining the
global competitiveness of the UK.
suresh-hsmp wrote:Intresting point --- only single application --does that mean no EC for out of country ?????
14. There will be a single application process,
whether in or outside the UK. There will also be
a single application fee for principal applicants.
We will set fees for the points system by
balancing the need to recover the full cost of
providing our services while maintaining the
global competitiveness of the UK.
I think that is important that they give a figure they are looking for, I know I came up with half that amount as my estimate for London. i wasnt wrong because I had friends for accommodtions which is where the bulk of the cost will go anyway. However I think the figure they have come up with is correct to live on for LONDON if it was for the Dorset region, you would need lessVictoriaS wrote:The have also clarified the funds needed. Clarification is a good thing, but funds needed for someone coming on their own will be:
£400 start up costs plus £800 per months subsistance, available for at least 3 months at the time of application = £2800
Plus more for dependents - £534 per month for the first dependent, £267 per month for each following dependent.
(this is different for those switching in country from another category)
Victoria
VictoriaS wrote:Okay, it is not a case of NO entry clearance, it is a case that the whole points+ EC requirements are assesed in one, so only one application, only one payment, only one person deciding on it all.
With regard to finances, I agree that it is good it is clarified, but it is a lot of money, especially for people from developing countries.
With regard to appeal rights, there are none from overseas, but there is still administrative review, which in-country applicants won't have, as they will still have the right of appeal, but as is now, with no further documents sent.
WRT language, GCSE grade C english seems to be grade 6.0 IELTS, so not bad at all.
Victoria
raviktiwari wrote:Hi All,
I think we should avoid these legal jargons and get to the crux of this new change. So I am repeating the question that HSMP-Pune asked:
If I got my approval in November and I apply for my EC in December end., will this change mean I will be granted an initial visa for 3 years and then I will have to apply 2 years extension and then the ILR?
Looking forward for a quick response.
Regards
Ravi
I've gotten tripped up on the annex A table, which suggests that one can't go from highly skilled to PSW in the top row (receiving categories), and then says that highly skilled categories can be source categories for PSW in the bottom row.VictoriaS wrote:Question - can you switch to PSW, as in one box it says you can, but in another it says you can't? That's the inconsistency.