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Very strange, you should have granted visa for at least 2 years. Please write to UKBA and if you get any response please let the forum know.pramo wrote:I've had a unpleasant experience at Croydon PEO.
1. Date of PEO Appointment : 24th Sep 2012
2. Date of expiry of current leave (Tier 1 Genearal visa) : 23rd Feb 2013
3. Date of expiry of the new visa : 24th Sep 2013
4. Payment mode : Debit Card
5. Name of PEO Applied : Croydon
6. Entry clearance date (HSMP) : 23rd Feb 2008
7. Date of entry into UK: 27th May 2008 (more than 3 months gap from visa approval)
8. Date of application for initial Tier 1 General Visa : Aug 2009 ( applied 6 months in advance )
9. Date of expiry of initial Tier 1 General Visa: 23rd Feb 2013
The caseworker had given me one year Tier 1 General extension from date of approval instead of two.
According to the caseworker, I'll be given 2 yrs visa if I would have applied upto 3 months in advance but since I applied almost 6 months in advance, he said I would only get an extension for an year which doesn't sound right to me. I argued with him and another senior caseworker that I should be extended for 2 yrs from date of approval but in vain.
Did I get anything wrong? This is my second extension, so is there anything different when I extend more than once or has the rules changed?
Did anyone have a similar experience?
I strongly think that the less informed case worker had taken a wrong decision in my case, is there anyway I can get this rectified by highlighting the issue with UKBA ?
I did quote the below information in the mail I've sent to home office.Thank you for your enquiry regarding the expiry date of your Biometric Residence Permit (BRP). We have looked into this matter, and the expiry date showing on your BRP is correct according to our records. If you wish to dispute the expiry date, you should consult the guidance on our website at www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk in the first instance. If this does not answer your query, you should write to your caseworker setting out why you believe the expiry date on your BRP is incorrect. Please do not return the BRP at this point – your case worker will advise you if they need you to return your BRP. Your case workers details are on your decision letter.
We are unable to assist you any further in this matter.
Thank you
BRP Management Unit
I will be writing to my caseworker regarding this.According to UKBA website,
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/polic ... es/part6a/
245CB. Period and conditions of grant
(a) Leave to remain will be granted for a period of 2 years, to an applicant who has, or was last granted, leave as a Tier 1 (General) Migrant under the Rules in place before 6 April 2010.
(b) in all other cases, leave to remain will be granted for a period of 3 years.
I was not able to find any information regarding leave to remain duration when one applies 3 months in advance (if it should be stamped from date of approval or from date of expiry) ? Is this information available in UKBA website ?245CB. Period and conditions of grant
(a) Leave to remain will be granted for a period of 2 years, to an applicant who has, or was last granted, leave as a Tier 1 (General) Migrant under the Rules in place before 6 April 2010.
(b) in all other cases, leave to remain will be granted for a period of 3 years.
It doesn't matter when you apply for extension. They should give you 2 years visa. The 3 months rule only matters for expiry date. If you apply early, the visa expiry date will be 2 years from the visa issue date. But if you apply within 28 days then your visa expiry date should be 2 years from current leave expiry. Regardless of when you apply, they should give 2 years visa not 1. it is clearly a mistake by CW.pramo wrote:Thanks for your advice sushdmehta.
Regarding the evidence I need to provide to support my case, will this information be enough?
I was not able to find any information regarding leave to remain duration when one applies 3 months in advance (if it should be stamped from date of approval or from date of expiry) ? Is this information available in UKBA website ?245CB. Period and conditions of grant
(a) Leave to remain will be granted for a period of 2 years, to an applicant who has, or was last granted, leave as a Tier 1 (General) Migrant under the Rules in place before 6 April 2010.
(b) in all other cases, leave to remain will be granted for a period of 3 years.
Is this stated anywhere in the UKBA website?The 3 months rule only matters for expiry date. If you apply early, the visa expiry date will be 2 years from the visa issue date. But if you apply within 28 days then your visa expiry date should be 2 years from current leave expiry.
I've sent the BRP card back to the address specified in the mail communication around 3 weeks back but haven't heard from them later to that.In response to your e-mail we would confirm the following:
Your initial T1 LTR granted in August 2009 covered the period until 23/02/13 in line with the expiry of your HSMP visa. Technically at that time you should only have received LTR until 09/08/12.
Now you have applied for an extension to your current T1 visa the period applicable is 2 years. As you applied nearly 6 months prior to the expiry of your current visa we can only grant you the 2 years from the date of application which in your case was 24/09/12.
We confirm that we have made an error as we only granted LTR until 24/09/13 instead of 24/09/14.
Can you please therefore return your BRP card to the following address in order that we can amend our error.
pramo wrote:I've finally received my corrected BRP card after a month wait.
Thanks sushdmehta and Greenie for your timely advice.
Based on my experience, I can suggest these:
Though you can hope for the best, always prepare for the worst, so make sure the documentation is extensive though do provide them only those that are necessary.
Though I've paid penalty for applying early, I would still consider it as a safe decision as it gives me quite some time to plan instead of rushing things at the last minute. The issue that I faced was purely bad luck.
It is good to have the necessary guidelines relevant to the application printed out, also go through it thoroughly once so that the case worker understands that you know what you are talking about.
Have these mail id's handy just in case if anything goes wrong, ukbacustomercomplaints@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk, PEOComplaints@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk. UKBACustomerComplaints was the only mail id that helped me and I did get a response within a week, so not too bad. Any other mail id's or letters to UKBA was of no use.
Any update on your case?trek wrote:Hi Pramo,
I am in exact situation like you, in my case its Tier 1 extension they have issued me 2 yrs against 3 yrs. The experience and details shared by you has been acting as a guide for me. I have also mailed the below and waiting for them to come back.
ukbacustomercomplaints@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk, PEOComplaints@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk
As expected the BRP error guys were of no use and a standard response was sent.
I can understand the pain you went through.
These people should be held legaly responsible for the pain and mental stress one has to go through.
Thanks for your inputs.
Regards,
Trek
pramo wrote:I've finally received my corrected BRP card after a month wait.
Thanks sushdmehta and Greenie for your timely advice.
Based on my experience, I can suggest these:
Though you can hope for the best, always prepare for the worst, so make sure the documentation is extensive though do provide them only those that are necessary.
Though I've paid penalty for applying early, I would still consider it as a safe decision as it gives me quite some time to plan instead of rushing things at the last minute. The issue that I faced was purely bad luck.
It is good to have the necessary guidelines relevant to the application printed out, also go through it thoroughly once so that the case worker understands that you know what you are talking about.
Have these mail id's handy just in case if anything goes wrong, ukbacustomercomplaints@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk, PEOComplaints@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk. UKBACustomerComplaints was the only mail id that helped me and I did get a response within a week, so not too bad. Any other mail id's or letters to UKBA was of no use.