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Using NHS (or not) is immaterial.TheresaMaySheStay wrote:Hi all,
Following Brexit, I've been looking to help my wife get citizenship, but most of the 5 year period that we'd like to count towards her EEA(PR) application - which I understand is a necessary precondition to citizenship - was spent as (what is likely to be considered) a student, without comprehensive sickness insurance (CSI) for a large part of her PhD.
Is there anything we can do to rescue the situation?
...
Since I'm a British citizen (not just French), we don't have any argument she was dependent on a UK-resident QP (QPs must be "EEA nationals" under the EEA Regs, which is defined as excluding British citizens).
Does anybody have a view as to whether there is anything we can/ought to do in order to get her naturalised?
Is there any residual value in getting an EEA(QP) even if EEA(PR) is out of reach for now?
Sincere thanks in advance for your views!
A worker is an EEA national who is exercising their free movement rights in the UK by
working in paid employment on a full-time or part-time basis.
Evidence of this may include:
payslips dated no more than six weeks before the application was made
a letter from the employer confirming employment, or
a contract of employment.
Assessing whether the EEA national is a ‘worker’
While there is no minimum amount of hours which an EEA national must be employed for in
order to qualify as a worker, the employment must be genuine and effective and not
marginal or supplementary.
Effective work may have no formal contract but should have:
something that is recognisably a labour contract
an employer
agreement between employer and employee that the worker will perform certain tasks
the employer will pay or offer services (such as free accommodation) or goods for the
tasks performed.
Marginal means the work involves so little time and money that it is unrelated to the lifestyle
of the worker. It is supplementary because the worker is clearly spending most of their time
on something else, not work.
RCs are optional EEA-related confirmatory documents that (surprise, surprise) merely confirm (but do not confer) status.TheresaMaySheStay wrote:Hi noajthan - thanks very much for the suggestions.
1) No RC in place at any time - I'll need to read into what they're even for!
2) I'm not aware of any alternative cover to EHIC.
a) no RC (how would that be an alternative to EHIC?)
b) no cover from overseas family members, that we know of
c) ... unclear. Does the sponsor have to be residing in the UK? By "sponsor", do you mean financially dependent on
3) I've wondered about this too. I've never heard of a PhD as "vocational training" but maybe an argument along those lines could be made. A PhD is such a long, open-ended affair, though, and seemingly unrelated to the job she had immediately before the PhD started (even if it was a precondition for the job she took on after the PhD, and was related to previous jobs and education that she'd had)
I'll read into McCarthy and RCs - thanks for the suggestion!
I'm sure this has been discussed at length elsewhere on these boards, but it's hard to see a solid legal reasoning for basing TA entitle to RC possession - the relevant act in reliance on prior law was (arguably) exercising Treaty rights, coming to the UK, etc. - not obtaining (or not) an RC, since that was not required.noajthan wrote:RCs are optional EEA-related confirmatory documents that (surprise, surprise) merely confirm (but do not confer) status.
Useful to show to employers, landlords, border guards and similar.
But they are often used as a prerequisite to invoke a certain transitional arrangement (in context of EEA migration).
2a) Because there is a transitional arrangement for students without CSI based on having a RC:
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... issued.pdf
The ta dates from when the ever-present CSI requirement started to be enforced in UK; traditional British fair play in action, if you will.
Seems unlikely. Her only UK connection at the time was myself. And I was only an "EEA national" if I benefit from the McCarthy-related TA (again, the lack of RC seems fatal). Besides, she was earning decent money at the time (21k p.a.)noajthan wrote: 2c) Yes, sponsor would be an EEA national in UK (eg parent) who is/was a settled or qualified person.
Yes, if over 21 a 'child' has to show dependence on parent/sponsor. Not necessarily 100% dependence.
(Different requirements to be met if an EFM instead of FM relationship).
1 - the insurance cover itself had lapsed, sadly.johnkk wrote:Some other long-shots:
1. EHIC card and when it expires does not really matter, as long as you can prove that your wife had health insurance in another EEA country for a specific period. I have used this myself: My EHIC card was expired midway the period that I wanted CSI for, but I could fetch a letter from my EEA health provider saying that I was insured (thus I could have had a non-expired EHIC if I wanted to, but didn't).
2. How was the Phd work contract structured? Would it be possible to make it count as 'working' time instead of 'studying' ?
Don't expect logic or commonsense to apply. You misunderstand how tas work.TheresaMaySheStay wrote:I'm sure this has been discussed at length elsewhere on these boards, but it's hard to see a solid legal reasoning for basing TA entitle to RC possession - the relevant act in reliance on prior law was (arguably) exercising Treaty rights, coming to the UK, etc. - not obtaining (or not) an RC, since that was not required.noajthan wrote:RCs are optional EEA-related confirmatory documents that (surprise, surprise) merely confirm (but do not confer) status.
Useful to show to employers, landlords, border guards and similar.
But they are often used as a prerequisite to invoke a certain transitional arrangement (in context of EEA migration).
2a) Because there is a transitional arrangement for students without CSI based on having a RC:
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... issued.pdf
The ta dates from when the ever-present CSI requirement started to be enforced in UK; traditional British fair play in action, if you will.