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Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
I agree: law is a two way street. But they never have properly conformed to the law, not since the move to Liverpool (and probably not before then, either). Brexit makes it worse, but it is not the fundamental reason.greatscott wrote:No excuse. They are the government, they should follow EU laws until Brexit, not make things up as they go along. If the government can bend and break the law to suit themselves, then surely we can all break and bend the law to suit ourselves.
Thank you for your email correspondence of July where you have raised a complaint about the delay in processing your application.
I have assessed the circumstances relating to the matter you have complained about. With this work now complete, I have based my response on my findings.
I am unable to uphold your complaint and I hope my reply helps you to understand the reasons why.
You have said that you submitted an application for Permanent Residence (PR) certificate on January 2017, 6 months has now passed and you are still waiting for a decision to be made on your application.
I am sorry for the delay in you receiving a decision on your application and that you have not received an update on your case. although we aim to make a decision on applications within six months this is not always possible if further documentation is required from the customer and/or further enquiries are needed before a decision can be made on your case. You will be notified of the outcome as soon as a decision has been reached.
If you need your passport back in order to travel urgently and unexpectedly, you will need to submit a return of documents request form at: https://www.gov.uk/visa-documents-returned.
I apologise for any inconvenience caused.
You can request a review of our response within one month of the date on this letter by writing to us at: complaintsreview@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk. Please ensure that you provide us with specific details setting out why you believe a review is required. This will enable us to provide you with a full response.
Remember that MPs do not direct or run the Home Office. They ask questions, even awkward questions, but they cannot tell the Home Office what to do. Also see this similar post.greatscott wrote: ↑Sun Sep 03, 2017 7:50 amWe have complained to our local MP who is ineffective (Greenwich Labour MP).
It is unusual for an EEA(FM) PR application to take this long. You could take the Home Office to court under EEA Regulation 19(2) and possibly win some damages.greatscott wrote: ↑Sun Sep 03, 2017 7:50 am9 months delay in spouse applying for naturalisation cannot be acceptable.
Have you considered that it is just likely that the Home Office EEA staff have been deluged with applications under the EEA route in preparation for Brexit? That coupled with budget cuts and redundancies have meant slower response times.
It is possible that the Home Office may look into whether the OP had genuinely moved the center of his life abroad or whether he was trying to frustrate the UK Immigration Rules, given that he had exercised treaty rights in another EEA member-state for only five months before moving back.
Careful there. We are not allowed to recommend lawyers or other professionals on these forums. A brazen request for PMs for such recommendations may lead the moderators to lock down your PM functionality.greatscott wrote: ↑Sun Sep 03, 2017 12:34 pmCan anyone advise good lawyers, private message ok too thanks.
Under the EEA regulations, each application is treated as a new application. So, the PR application will be treated under the current interpretation, even if your spouse got an RC under a more liberal interpretation in 2012.greatscott wrote: ↑Sun Sep 03, 2017 12:34 pm1. No issues on centre of life. RC card was issued based on exactly the same information they are looking at now!
Why then were treaty rights exercised for just five months? That does look like an attempt at circumventing UK Immigration Rules.greatscott wrote: ↑Sun Sep 03, 2017 12:34 pm2. Theres no previous family immigration history, so circumventing doesn't apply.
As CR001 has suggested above, your application may be being reviewed in light of the new EEA Regulations 2016, which considerably tightens the interpretation of the SS route.greatscott wrote: ↑Sun Sep 03, 2017 12:34 pm3. We have not been asked for any additional documents. Just 9 months of silence except for letter for biometrics which was done immediately, followed by 4-page 'standard' questionairre, which was returned within a day.
They are reinterpreting EU law.
Sue them in court. That is the only way to test the legal strength of the government's case.
No they are not, they are breaking the law. Lets not kid ourselves. And imposing it retroactively is as dishonest as it gets.They are reinterpreting EU law
I am not sure what the Baumbast case or Regulations 492/2011 (which are EU Regulations and not UK Regulations) have anything to do with your query, which is itself unrelated to the OP's query and hence should be spun off into a separate thread.greatscott wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2017 12:40 pmWhat about if you are a student who started uni studies in an EU state while parents were exercising treaty right there? Then, after joining their parents in the UK (Surinder Singh route) the student returns to the EU state every semester to complete their degree for 3 more years, in line with case law Baumbast (EJC) and Reg. 492/2011 (UK). The student continues to live with the parents in the UK.
Those absence should not count against the 5 year rule. True or false?
Done and merged and heading edited.secret.simon wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2017 1:52 pmCR001, can you move the preceding three posts (greatscott's and my own) either into a separate thread or append them to greatscott's other threads?
I would like to ask Obie for his advice since he advised me on this 5 or so years ago. Perhaps you don't understand the question. No-one moved to another state, they just went to study there to complete their studies (returning after each semester to their 'home'), which I believe in our context would be ok.secret.simon wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2017 1:12 pmI am not sure what the Baumbast case or Regulations 492/2011 (which are EU Regulations and not UK Regulations) have anything to do with your query, which is itself unrelated to the OP's query and hence should be spun off into a separate thread.greatscott wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2017 12:40 pmWhat about if you are a student who started uni studies in an EU state while parents were exercising treaty right there? Then, after joining their parents in the UK (Surinder Singh route) the student returns to the EU state every semester to complete their degree for 3 more years, in line with case law Baumbast (EJC) and Reg. 492/2011 (UK). The student continues to live with the parents in the UK.
Those absence should not count against the 5 year rule. True or false?
The Baumbast case broadly states that a student who started studies in an EU State while one of their parents was exercising treaty rights can continue the course even when the EEA Citizen parent moves away from that EEA state. That has nothing to do with Directive 2004/38/EC or the (UK) EEA Regulations, which define the acquisition of PR. An absence from the UK, even while exercising an EU right, is still an absence.
Let me give a parallel example. Let us suppose a Spanish citizen moved to the UK with a non-EEA citizen spouse and exercised treaty rights. Then the Spanish citizen moved to another EEA member-state (with freedom of movement and exercising treaty rights in that other EEA member-state) while leaving his non-EEA citizen spouse in the UK. The non-EEA spouse's right to reside in the UK would expire at the end of six months from the time the Spanish citizen ceased exercising treaty rights in the UK (which is when the Spanish citizen's continuity of residence ceased). That is the case even when the Spanish citizen spouse is exercising treaty rights elsewhere (outside the UK) in the EU, in pursuit of EU law and EU rights.
Even under EU law, residency rights are still national and it is absences from the member-state that are counted, even if the relevant person is legally resident under EU law in another EEA member-state. The PR that is acquired under EU law is PR for that specific member-state. If the PR holder moves to another member-state, s/he starts from zero.
Likewise, the Regulations listed by you merely states that children of other EEA member-states should have access to the same educational resources as children of the nationals of that state. It states nothing about absences from another EEA member-state.
by Obie » Sun Jan 29, 2012 11:50 pm
Well i believe Regulation 492/2011 might be in play, provided this dependant is your direct descendant, is going to the memberstate in which you were a migrant worker, where he studied when you were a migrant worker or self-enployed person,to complete his or her studies.
I cant see that affecting Surinder Singh. provided this dependant continues to maintainvties with UK
Obie, if you are around, would appreciate your thoughts. I don't hold you to any comments you have made, especially back in 2012! All I am interested in is to be able to make an informed decision on what our next step could be. Thanks.greatscott wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2017 2:26 pmObie, if you are around, would appreciate your thoughts. I don't hold you to any comments you have made. All I am interested in is to be able to make an informed decision on what our next step could be. Thanks.
Obie is this true? Allows only one absence so that a student can return to complete year 2, then is not allowed to finish their degree??Post by secret.simon » Fri Sep 08, 2017 6:47 pm
greatscott wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2017 5:56 pm
Can we therefore assume absence over 6 months in a year for students is therefore acceptable?
Please keep your questions in your thread, as your child's specific circumstances (being the child of a person returning under SS, but with studies in the other EEA member state) need to be taken into account.
EU law allows one absence of a year for an important reason such as study, among others.