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Hi xxxtieee,xxxtieee wrote:Man..!!!! I guess these guys take really advanced courses in framing complex sentences.... two interesting pointers come through.
1. Residence card should be issued "no later than six months from the
date on which they submit the application." Something which the inis guys are happily ignoring.
2. The listed documents "may under no circumstances be made a precondition for the exercise of a right or the completion of an administrative formality, as entitlement to rights may be attested by any other means of proof. " This is what I understand - as long as you can prove that you are legally married to a European citizen, you can exercise your rights immediately. As long as you have some documentary evidence that you are married to a European citizen - you can safely exercise the rights given in the directive.
Unfortunately, we can't exercise any rights until the Irish government is understands and accepts what this means.
Have you forwarded this to Inis?
Only problem with that is, any precedent set in that case might be merely that those issued with Stamp 3 prior to 1st June were so issued incorrectly, since 1st June was the advertised date by the DoJ.Monifé wrote:My firm of solicitors are currently in the process of taking the Department to court over this issue (not through us, someone who applied on 31 May was given stamp 3). Hopefully it will cause a precedence and not just be settled out of court.
Ok, I sent the signed contract off either way today. I also wrote an immigration solicitor in Galway with the information and asked their opinion, etc. The letter I have is only via e-mail. Does that still "count"?Monifé wrote:Hi Sarah
We have yet to receive any temporary stamp for my partner so I am not sure.
My firm of solicitors are currently in the process of taking the Department to court over this issue (not through us, someone who applied on 31 May was given stamp 3). Hopefully it will cause a precedence and not just be settled out of court.
I am with xxxtie and Ben on this one. You can work straight away, nothing illegal about it. Just get a copy of the directive, that letter you have, documentary evidence, maybe solicitors letter to same effect and go to your employer armed with that.
You can also complain to the EU commission which Ben and I have also done.
Good luck
http://www.immigrantcouncil.ie/newsletter_details.php?id=85 wrote: Leave granted to challenge Govt. Policy to issue Stamp 3 to family members of EU citizens
Leave has been granted by the High Court to challenge Government policy in relation to administrative procedures regarding the ability of non-EU citizen family members of EU citizens to work or set up a business while their application for a residence card is being processed. The changes to the administrative procedures mean that non-EU spouses are currently being issued Stamp 3 permits which did not grant access to the labour market.
Previous News Bulletins have mentioned this change to the administrative procedures by the Irish Naturalisation and Immigration Service, and that the ICI felt these changes represent a breach of EU Directive 2004/38/EC and are contrary to established case law. The ICI called on the Minister for Justice and Law Reform to review the arrangements. Leave was granted to an EU citizen and their non-EU citizen spouse by Judge Clarke to challenge the Minister for Justice and Law Reform on the new policy to issue stamp 3 permits to applicants for a residence card last week. Brophy Solicitors represent the applicants in this case. For more information, please contact Senior Solicitor Catherine Cosgrave – catherine@immigrantcouncil.ie