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Thanks for sharing your time line.bm42 wrote: ↑Sat Jun 10, 2023 6:51 pmI'm getting a bit worried about my wait times at the moment
Application submitted: 16/12/2020
Documents received: 04/02/2022 (COVID related problems with getting a solicitor to look at the documents, sent them a week before this date)
Clarification Email: 20/02/2023 (Missing document, replacement sent a week later)
Address confirmation: 08/05/2023
Email from Embassy: 10/05/2023 (I emailed 2 weeks prior enquiring if my documents arrived as I couldn't send them tracked, Email mentioned the address confirmation)
Email Congratulations: [Not yet]
Should I just keep waiting or should I get in touch again?
On 25/11/2022 sent reply email to j***.m****@dfa.ie explaining that the witness I used was a valid notary public with the state of California - USA. During the almost 2 year gap between my application and receiving this first response the notary's commission number had changed. I explained a method for how to verify the notary via our state's government website. I also explained that I would not be able to obtain new documentation for my mother as I had gone 'no contact'.Dear [my name],
I have received your application to obtain Irish Citizenship through entry on the Foreign Births Register. Unfortunately I cannot proceed with your application without the following documents:
We require a new witness form as we were unable to verify the witness who signed this form. Please ensure you are only signing your application with a supported witness in the provided list of your FBR application and ensure we will be able to verify the witness.
Please also submit photographic identification of yourself and of your mother as both have been certified by the same invalid witness therefore we cannot verify as a true copy of the document.
We can accept a certified copy of a drivers license or passport once it has been certified by your new witness as we cannot proceed with the others as they've also been certified by an invalid witness.
While submitting these documents, please also submit additional proof of address to reconfirm the current address you are living in and in which you wish for your documents to be dispatched to.
Kind Regards
J***
Update:dogdayafternoon89 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 26, 2023 9:58 amI've also been lurking this board since I submitted a joint application with my sister last summer (2022).
Timeline so far:
Application submitted: July 10th 2022
Application received: August 4th 2022
Based on recent posts, I'm hoping to receive the address confirmation email soon—I'll post an update when I do. Good luck all!
The Letter of No Trace info is really helpful- I didn’t know that was an option, many thanks. May I ask how long it took them to respond and what information you had to provide them - eg copy of baptism certificate and/or something else?dogdayafternoon89 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2023 12:00 pmUpdate:dogdayafternoon89 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 26, 2023 9:58 amI've also been lurking this board since I submitted a joint application with my sister last summer (2022).
Timeline so far:
Application submitted: July 10th 2022
Application received: August 4th 2022
Based on recent posts, I'm hoping to receive the address confirmation email soon—I'll post an update when I do. Good luck all!
My sister and I are doing a joint application through our paternal grandmother. On Wednesday 26th April, I received an email from the FBR requesting our long-form birth certificates (we'd sent them short-form versions) and a copy of my grandmother's birth certificate.
There's the rub: our grandmother never had a birth certificate. However, she was baptised and there is a record of this in the parish where she lived.
Several years ago, our half-sister successfully applied for and received citizenship using our grandmother's baptism certificate as evidence. My sister and I submitted the same baptism certificate that she used to the FBR to support our current application, but the FBR said that this is no longer sufficient evidence. Instead, the FBR told me to get a "Letter of No Trace" from the Government Records Office (GRO)—effectively, a letter to say that the GRO has searched for a birth certificate but was unable to find one.
We have now received and submitted the Letter of No Trace to the FBR, and hopefully they now have all the documents they need to move forward with our application.
So, a summary of learnings that may be of use to others:
- You need to use long-form birth certificates for your application (i.e., ones that show your parents' names and occupations); you can order these for a tenner from gro [dot] gov [dot] uk if you were born in the UK.
- If you need to request a Letter of No Trace for a birth certificate, the address to write to is gro@welfare [dot] ie.
Sure thing—the GRO was really quick and efficient. I sent the request to their email address, they immediately sent me a link to pay the €20 fee, and then they posted the Letter of No Trace to me three or four days later.Vadrar91 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2023 12:27 pmThe Letter of No Trace info is really helpful- I didn’t know that was an option, many thanks. May I ask how long it took them to respond and what information you had to provide them - eg copy of baptism certificate and/or something else?dogdayafternoon89 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2023 12:00 pmUpdate:dogdayafternoon89 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 26, 2023 9:58 amI've also been lurking this board since I submitted a joint application with my sister last summer (2022).
Timeline so far:
Application submitted: July 10th 2022
Application received: August 4th 2022
Based on recent posts, I'm hoping to receive the address confirmation email soon—I'll post an update when I do. Good luck all!
My sister and I are doing a joint application through our paternal grandmother. On Wednesday 26th April, I received an email from the FBR requesting our long-form birth certificates (we'd sent them short-form versions) and a copy of my grandmother's birth certificate.
There's the rub: our grandmother never had a birth certificate. However, she was baptised and there is a record of this in the parish where she lived.
Several years ago, our half-sister successfully applied for and received citizenship using our grandmother's baptism certificate as evidence. My sister and I submitted the same baptism certificate that she used to the FBR to support our current application, but the FBR said that this is no longer sufficient evidence. Instead, the FBR told me to get a "Letter of No Trace" from the Government Records Office (GRO)—effectively, a letter to say that the GRO has searched for a birth certificate but was unable to find one.
We have now received and submitted the Letter of No Trace to the FBR, and hopefully they now have all the documents they need to move forward with our application.
So, a summary of learnings that may be of use to others:
- You need to use long-form birth certificates for your application (i.e., ones that show your parents' names and occupations); you can order these for a tenner from gro [dot] gov [dot] uk if you were born in the UK.
- If you need to request a Letter of No Trace for a birth certificate, the address to write to is gro@welfare [dot] ie.
dogdayafternoon89 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2023 12:35 pmSure thing—the GRO was really quick and efficient. I sent the request to their email address, they immediately sent me a link to pay the €20 fee, and then they posted the Letter of No Trace to me three or four days later.Vadrar91 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2023 12:27 pmThe Letter of No Trace info is really helpful- I didn’t know that was an option, many thanks. May I ask how long it took them to respond and what information you had to provide them - eg copy of baptism certificate and/or something else?dogdayafternoon89 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2023 12:00 pmUpdate:dogdayafternoon89 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 26, 2023 9:58 amI've also been lurking this board since I submitted a joint application with my sister last summer (2022).
Timeline so far:
Application submitted: July 10th 2022
Application received: August 4th 2022
Based on recent posts, I'm hoping to receive the address confirmation email soon—I'll post an update when I do. Good luck all!
My sister and I are doing a joint application through our paternal grandmother. On Wednesday 26th April, I received an email from the FBR requesting our long-form birth certificates (we'd sent them short-form versions) and a copy of my grandmother's birth certificate.
There's the rub: our grandmother never had a birth certificate. However, she was baptised and there is a record of this in the parish where she lived.
Several years ago, our half-sister successfully applied for and received citizenship using our grandmother's baptism certificate as evidence. My sister and I submitted the same baptism certificate that she used to the FBR to support our current application, but the FBR said that this is no longer sufficient evidence. Instead, the FBR told me to get a "Letter of No Trace" from the Government Records Office (GRO)—effectively, a letter to say that the GRO has searched for a birth certificate but was unable to find one.
We have now received and submitted the Letter of No Trace to the FBR, and hopefully they now have all the documents they need to move forward with our application.
So, a summary of learnings that may be of use to others:
- You need to use long-form birth certificates for your application (i.e., ones that show your parents' names and occupations); you can order these for a tenner from gro [dot] gov [dot] uk if you were born in the UK.
- If you need to request a Letter of No Trace for a birth certificate, the address to write to is gro@welfare [dot] ie.
Re the info we provided to the FBR: as I recall, we sent copies of my grandmother's baptism certificate (official parish copy), as well as her marriage and death certificates. We also forwarded my half-sister's correspondence with the BDM Online Ireland service (showing that they had searched for the birth certificate but were unable to find it), as well as a copy of our half-sister's Foreign Birth Registration Certificate (showing that she had already been granted citizenship via our grandmother).
Hope this helps!
I am only passing on what the FBR has told me re my specific application—your milage may vary!hattie9 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2023 9:12 pmI also only had a copy of my late grandmother's baptism certificate. Her birth (in 1896) was never registered. I was told by the GRO I had to apply for a "late registration" of her birth in order to obtain the necessary birth certificate required to apply for FBR-- this actually involved submitting even more paperwork than the FBR itself! Once her birth was officially entered, I had to then apply for her birth certificate before I could submit my application to the FBR. It delayed the process by quite a few months.
I am mentioning this because it seems completely different to what you were advised. I would find it hard to believe they would grant citizenship without any evidence of the individual born in Ireland through whom the claim is being made.
Oh the horror of the hastily hand written birth certificates! My mother was born in London during WW2, I have her original birth certificate and I will say it is almost completely illegible. The only thing you can make out is her first name being Anne. Good luck! Hopefully you've provided enough evidence that it's simply a transcription error.MercyGirl wrote: ↑Mon Jun 12, 2023 8:55 pmHi, I'm new, although have lurked for awhile. It looks like it is getting closer for me, so I figured it was time to join and put my dates out there.
Application Date: 15 May 2022
Docs Received: 4 Oct 2022
Fingers crossed to get address check soon!
My sister and I submitted our applications together. There is one hitch in our application, and it's not a small one. My grandfather's (born in Dublin in 1884) first name is wrong on my mother's birth certificate. The certified copy says Lewis instead of Denis. I've seen the original, handwritten register, and I think that's a transcription error of the elaborate cursive writing (capital L and capital D can look very similar, as can small w and small n), but the issuing authority for Mom's certificate won't change it without a court order, and there is nobody alive who could testify from personal knowledge about this anymore to support a request for a court order. I did send additional documents showing Grandpa's name as "Denis" (which is on his birth certificate) and showing my mother as the daughter of "Denis." These include her marriage license, which I sent along with the marriage certificate, and her baptismal certificate, as well as admittedly unauthenticated copies (from microfiche) of his US World War II draft registration card (yes, they required all men, including the elderly, to register in 1941) showing my mother, living at the same address, as his "person who will always be able to contact me," the notice in the paper of my mother and father's wedding in 1942, which identify her as the daughter of Denis and which show her married to my father, and of an obituary notice, also from microfiche, from when Grandpa died in 1954. Oh, and my mother's death certificate identifies her father as "Denis," born in Ireland.
I'm hoping that's enough. I guess we'll see.
Anyway, thanks to those who maintain and oversee this board. It's been a wealth of information for me, and I appreciate it.
Dyno66 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 20, 2023 4:48 pmHey Folks,
I'm new to the forum and I have two, hopefully not too stupid , questions. My partner and I are both naturalised Irish citizens, having lived in Galway for over 10 years. We are currently living in Spain and our daughter was born here last year. We have applied for FBR for her, providing all necessary documenation.
1. Is anyone else in a similar scenario (naturalised parents, living in Spain) that can let me know, from experience, if the process is cumbersome or fairly straight-forward?
2. What is the actual phone number and web-chat link for contacting the FBR office? I'm browing several, slightly similar pages with info but I cannot find a dedicated webchat for FBR.
Application Date: 18-Oct-2022
Application Received Date: 28-Oct-2022
Address Confirmation Date: TBD
Thank you for your help! Much appreciated.
D.
I believe it's going to be further delayed as the new documents follow a different path before being addressed on your application. There are a few posts on it recently.TayBluetooth wrote: ↑Mon Jun 19, 2023 12:10 pmHi everyone,
I sent my application away on 30/06/22.
Documents were received on 08/07/22.
I got an email on 23/03/23 mentioning a problem with my Grandfather's death certificate not being original. In this email, they also asked me to confirm my address which I did.
After this email, I sent the correct original document away and followed up twice asking if it had been checked, but they replied that it hasn't yet due to a backlog. They received this document on 11/04/2023.
I was just wondering if anyone is/was in a similar situation and how long it normally takes to resolve. My last correspondence with them was on 09/06/2023.
Thanks!