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What he has is sufficient to show he is making an effort to be economically effort.docitduo wrote:My cousin had received his HSMP approval under the arrangements in place until Nov. 2006, hence he benefits from the HSMP JR judgment. Following his arrival in UK he worked for about 6 months but was then laid off as a result of organizational restructuring following a M&A. Unfortunately, he has been out of work since then inspite of all the efforts he has made to find suitable work.
Apart from letters and emails for job applications to recruitment agencies and potential employers (companies) directly, is there anything else he needs to submit as evidence of efforts to become economically active (again) to support his HSMP extension application under the JR provisions?
He will be submitting evidence of earnings for the time he was employed (P45, salary slips, bank credits) along with evidence that he can sustain and accommodate himself without recourse to public funds (savings, rent agreement) but is sceptical of success of his HSMP extension application, given the circumstances with respect to his employment status.
He is planning to sumbit copies of about 50 job applications (letters / emails) he made as evidence of efforts to become economically active but is unsure if the number would be enough (to satisfy the CW)?
Also, is it ok for him to apply for extension 2-3 months in advance? Personally, don't think this should be an issue but wanted to double-check with other HSMPians on the forum.
Would appreciate some serious advice from board members, and would be great to hear from those who applied for extension under similar circumstances and were successful.
Thanks in advance for any comments, suggestions, feedback and advice.
regards
It sounds like you want to hear support for what you want to do or what you already convinced yourself to do so do whatever you want.docitduo wrote:He tells me that he can provide evidence of 12K in available funds, which I guess should be sufficient.
The period he was gainfully employed doesn't fall within the 12 months prior to extension but I (and he too) believe including evidence that he was economically active for (at least) some months during his stay in UK and earned decent money (>40K) might help his extension application, given his present precarious situation.
His current leave expires in Feb '09 and he is thinking of applying for extension in last week of November / first week of December. A couple of reasons for wishing to do so:-
1. One of the main reasons he wishes to apply a bit early is that since last couple of months recruitment agencies have been unwillingly to forward his CV to potential employers because of the short remaining validity of his current leave.
2. With Xmas round the corner (recession notwithstanding) the recruitment scene is slugggish anyway so he thinks it might help him if he can (hopefully) get a decision on his extension in January so he would be ready to search the job market aggresssively when (and if) it reopens in new year. If he waits to apply for extension until the end (5 weeks prior to leave expiry), he will probably remain an untouchable for recruitment agencies until he gets a decision on his extension application - which, if he applies in Jan end, will be no sooner than March! 2-3 months go waste and the unemployment gap grows bigger!
Appreciate feedback.
regards
If I am not mistaken, people usually seek advice based on some plan of action they have in mind. Don't they? One of the objective for which this forum exists is for people to seek feedback / suggestions and share information. So don't understand the tone of your response above! I appreciate your responses to the queries but I don't believe there is any need to be rude. People ask of advice but that shouldn't be used as an excuse to ridicule them - just because they happen to be in a difficult situation!republique wrote:It sounds like you want to hear support for what you want to do or what you already convinced yourself to do so do whatever you want.
That wasn't rude.docitduo wrote:If I am not mistaken, people usually seek advice based on some plan of action they have in mind. Don't they? One of the objective for which this forum exists is for people to seek feedback / suggestions and share information. So don't understand the tone of your response above! I appreciate your responses to the queries but I don't believe there is any need to be rude. People ask of advice but that shouldn't be used as an excuse to ridicule them - just because they happen to be in a difficult situation!republique wrote:It sounds like you want to hear support for what you want to do or what you already convinced yourself to do so do whatever you want.
Thanks for your response and advice.
regards
This may pose a problem, that he has been here almost 2 years and only worked for a few months, and not within the last year. Has he been applying to jobs throughout the past year at least? And it's not just a last minute effort to get extension? Good luck.docitduo wrote:The period he was gainfully employed doesn't fall within the 12 months prior to extension but I (and he too) believe including evidence that he was economically active for (at least) some months during his stay in UK and earned decent money (>40K) might help his extension application, given his present precarious situation.
/theydo hold on to it if he is not working so I suggest you reread his postbani wrote:I think he should apply as soon as possible. It is OK to apply for FLR 2-3 months early. Mine was 2 months early because of travel reasons. I got my passport back after 3 weeks, they don't hold on to it - complete misinformation. If you go to the successful Extension applications thread (it's a sticky thread) there are many examples of early applicatons.
I think job applications and having to show a longer visa validity to employers is a valid reason.
I know he isn't working. This is the first I've heard of such a rule for HSMP extension (hanging on to an application until the applicant gets a job). If this is true, it makes no sense. No employer will hire without proof of work eligibility and that's the passport with the visa.republique wrote: /theydo hold on to it if he is not working so I suggest you reread his post
you are confusing the issuebani wrote:I know he isn't working. This is the first I've heard of such a rule for HSMP extension (hanging on to an application until the applicant gets a job). If this is true, it makes no sense. No employer will hire without proof of work eligibility and that's the passport with the visa.republique wrote: /theydo hold on to it if he is not working so I suggest you reread his post
He has been searching for suitable job opportunities quite regularly (as he tells me), so should be able to provide evidence of job applications made in the last 12-15 months. Unfortunately, I don't think he's kept hold of interview letters (or rejection letters, if he received any), so all he can provide as evidence are the application letters he sent for jobs posted on the recruitment / company websites. Not sure if absence of interview letters or rejection letters will weaken his application?bani wrote:This may pose a problem, that he has been here almost 2 years and only worked for a few months, and not within the last year. Has he been applying to jobs throughout the past year at least? And it's not just a last minute effort to get extension? Good luck.docitduo wrote:The period he was gainfully employed doesn't fall within the 12 months prior to extension ....
As mentioned earlier, he has approx. 12K-13K GBP in savings (his own) which plans to show as evidence. In this case, there are no dependents - his partner is also an HSMPian.PaperPusher wrote:docitduo
How are you going to show that you can maintain and accomodate yourself, and any dependants, without access to public funds?
who are you? you have no basis to provide a letter, they might consider his spouse due to their connection but as he is supposed to be here on his on merit, not sure the spouse's finances can be applied and is the spouse on a separate or hsmp dependent, if it is dependent you can absolutely forget using the spouse's stuffdocitduo wrote:As mentioned earlier, he has approx. 12K-13K GBP in savings (his own) which plans to show as evidence. In this case, there are no dependents - his partner is also an HSMPian.PaperPusher wrote:docitduo
How are you going to show that you can maintain and accomodate yourself, and any dependants, without access to public funds?
Not sure if this'll be needed (or appropriate to include in the application) but if required, his partner can provide a letter of support (along with evidence of financial standing) and I can also do so.
regards
My response (above) answers this adequately.republique wrote:is the spouse on a separate or hsmp dependent, if it is dependent you can absolutely forget using the spouse's stuff
Not that he is being supported (financially) by anyone right now, but a letter to confirm financial support - if and when required later - can be provided, if such a letter can help.FLR Tier 1 (HSMP) Guidance wrote:Evidence that you have the funds to maintain and accommodate yourself and any dependants without recourse to public funds. The evidence must be formal documents such as bank statements, a building society passbook, or wage slips (but do not send us cheques, travellers cheques or credit cards). If a relative or friend is supporting you, the evidence should be a letter from him/her confirming this, together with formal documents showing their financial situation. (The documents provided should cover at least the last three months.)
Hey smartie pants, figure it out yourself if you know it all. You are heading for a fall.docitduo wrote:My response (above) answers this adequately.republique wrote:is the spouse on a separate or hsmp dependent, if it is dependent you can absolutely forget using the spouse's stuff
Not that he is being supported (financially) by anyone right now, but a letter to confirm financial support - if and when required later - can be provided, if such a letter can help.FLR Tier 1 (HSMP) Guidance wrote:Evidence that you have the funds to maintain and accommodate yourself and any dependants without recourse to public funds. The evidence must be formal documents such as bank statements, a building society passbook, or wage slips (but do not send us cheques, travellers cheques or credit cards). If a relative or friend is supporting you, the evidence should be a letter from him/her confirming this, together with formal documents showing their financial situation. (The documents provided should cover at least the last three months.)
regards
Did he get any acknowledgement of these applications? Because it's very easy to print a hundred letters applying to jobs and just backdate them so the letters he himself sent out are not really proof.docitduo wrote:He has been searching for suitable job opportunities quite regularly (as he tells me), so should be able to provide evidence of job applications made in the last 12-15 months. Unfortunately, I don't think he's kept hold of interview letters (or rejection letters, if he received any), so all he can provide as evidence are the application letters he sent for jobs posted on the recruitment / company websites. Not sure if absence of interview letters or rejection letters will weaken his application?bani wrote:This may pose a problem, that he has been here almost 2 years and only worked for a few months, and not within the last year. Has he been applying to jobs throughout the past year at least? And it's not just a last minute effort to get extension? Good luck.docitduo wrote:The period he was gainfully employed doesn't fall within the 12 months prior to extension ....
regards
Normally it is 5 weeks = 35 days in advance. This is in the guidance notes.republique wrote:you are confusing the issuebani wrote:I know he isn't working. This is the first I've heard of such a rule for HSMP extension (hanging on to an application until the applicant gets a job). If this is true, it makes no sense. No employer will hire without proof of work eligibility and that's the passport with the visa.republique wrote: /theydo hold on to it if he is not working so I suggest you reread his post
normally you apply 28 days in advance, no earlier
so that is not an issue with an employer if you do it like that
he wants to apply early and he is not working, it is not in the ho best interest to renew him without a job and will not make a decision until the time he would have normally applied in the hopes he finds a job.
that is his problem if he doesnt want his passport for 3 months by trying to apply early
Normally it is 5 weeks = 35 days in advance. This is in the guidance notes.bani wrote:republique wrote:you are confusing the issuebani wrote:I know he isn't working. This is the first I've heard of such a rule for HSMP extension (hanging on to an application until the applicant gets a job). If this is true, it makes no sense. No employer will hire without proof of work eligibility and that's the passport with the visa.republique wrote: /theydo hold on to it if he is not working so I suggest you reread his post
normally you apply 28 days in advance, no earlier
so that is not an issue with an employer if you do it like that
he wants to apply early and he is not working, it is not in the ho best interest to renew him without a job and will not make a decision until the time he would have normally applied in the hopes he finds a job.
that is his problem if he doesnt want his passport for 3 months by trying to apply early
The question is were you not working when you applied for an extension?bani wrote:Where do you get the info about when someone not working should apply? Like the bogus 28 days? Where is the proof?republique wrote: Were you not working when you submitted your application?
Full Stop
/quote]
Jeez, this is like trying to get an interview answer out of Sarah Palin.
The question was answered in three of my posts in this thread.republique wrote:The question is were you not working when you applied for an extension?bani wrote:Where do you get the info about when someone not working should apply? Like the bogus 28 days? Where is the proof?republique wrote: Were you not working when you submitted your application?
Full Stop
/quote]
Jeez, this is like trying to get an interview answer out of Sarah Palin.
Indeed, what i said.1971 wrote:Hi docitduo,
Everyone's advice is correct. If you are economically active in the UK, its easier for you to make a case and apply earlier.But the issue with this OP is that he only worked in the UK for 5 or 6 months and he wants to extend his stay based on JR.In my thought, I think CW will think why is he still staying here if he cant maintain himself and his dependants giving the fact that it's not easy to stay in this country without being economically active except you are or being supported by a Multi Millionaire relative for that period of time. Even at that, evidences will be required by the CW. Either way, it's a risk if the OP submits earlier given the fact that he's not economically active for a longer time. To play safe and not give the CW any reason for rejection, in my opinion, submit 5 weeks before the expiry on your visa with all necessary documentations. In my honest opinion, I cant afford to waste my hard earned £750 for nothing. If the OP applies earlier and the CW decides to delay the application based on the OP not following the guidance rules of 5 weeks to expiry, who will he blame for this - Himself of course.So, I will advice that OP should wait for 5 weeks to the expiry of his current stay and properly apply for his extension.At least, gives him ample time to prepare his application and a Rest of mind that all is well given his circumstance.
All said, I wish you well and be careful with your claims and documentations because the CW may likely challenge your inactivity and how you have survived in this hard economy where the Mighty and 'extra economically active' men like me are complaining and struggling. Big food for thoughts.
All the best.
~1971.