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t-bag wrote:Apply under 40hrs/week which is what your WP was granted for. The options you have is to
1 - ask for your employer to increase your salary so you fall above the SOC code (even for this month and the next)
OR
2 - get a soc code with similar responsabilities for which you are above the threshold.
What's your current occupation??
Also, make sure your letter of employment states your current/new salary
Thank you for the useful advice.t-bag wrote:Apply under 40hrs/week which is what your WP was granted for. The options you have is to
1 - ask for your employer to increase your salary so you fall above the SOC code (even for this month and the next)
OR
2 - get a soc code with similar responsabilities for which you are above the threshold.
What's your current occupation??
Also, make sure your letter of employment states your current/new salary
rbd06 wrote:Thank you for the useful advice.t-bag wrote:Apply under 40hrs/week which is what your WP was granted for. The options you have is to
1 - ask for your employer to increase your salary so you fall above the SOC code (even for this month and the next)
OR
2 - get a soc code with similar responsabilities for which you are above the threshold.
What's your current occupation??
Also, make sure your letter of employment states your current/new salary
Currently I am working as a Design engineer in Gas utility sector.
I am finding bit hard to get the nearest code..and I heard for work permit holders prior to tier2 PBS implementation (can use up to NQF level 3 in Border line ) could you please shed your opinion on this
Thanks again for the help t-bag, much appreciated
manci wrote:The rules for ILR for work permit holders are in Immigration Rules 128-135:
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/polic ... les/part5/
and further details are given on pages 38-41 of this document:
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary
There is no requirement for the job to be at any NQF level but the employer needs to certify that your salary is at least what is given in the tier 2 codes of practice for the job. In this regard it is not so much the job title that matters but what you actually do (and also what occupation was given in your work permit). Isn't your salary sufficient for SOC code 2126 (design & development engineer, min. £28.080 p.a.)?
manci, that means employer could search relevant SOC, no matter NQF 6, 4 Or 3?manci wrote:It is not you, but your employer, who is responsible for determining the appropriate SOC code and salary. If they agree that 3531 is appropriate to what you are doing, and are prepared to certify it, that's fine. NQF 4 is not a problem but there should be compatibility with the job/salary stated in your work permit.