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Doesn't that represent an unlawful deduction from salary though? Contrary to the Section 13 of the Employment Rights Act 1996, and also a loss of statutory rights in regards to the effects of Section 3C of the Immigration Act 1971.wpilr_nov12 wrote:Employers are not required to make use of the UKBA checking facility if the employee cannot furnish proof of right to work. It is pretty normal for employers to take employees off of payroll until such proof is submitted. Acknowledgement letter from UKBA is one such proof.
INCORRECT. And the person in question understands why (3C).bobby80gh wrote:If you want your wife to keep her job then you should pray that her employer does NOT use the employer checking service to confirm her status. As she has not given her biometric, the employer checking service will confirm she has NO right to work in the UK. This will give the employer enough grounds not just to suspend her but to sack her. That's how useless the employer checking is. It is a total waste of the tax payers money.
please do not be ignorant as I really know what I am talking about. I have recently been in the same situation. when i sent a complain letter to ukba they called me on phone and explained to me that currently until you receive the biometric invitation any check you do will come out negative. Many people on this forum has experience the same predicament.wpilr_nov12 wrote:INCORRECT. And the person in question understands why (3C).bobby80gh wrote:If you want your wife to keep her job then you should pray that her employer does NOT use the employer checking service to confirm her status. As she has not given her biometric, the employer checking service will confirm she has NO right to work in the UK. This will give the employer enough grounds not just to suspend her but to sack her. That's how useless the employer checking is. It is a total waste of the tax payers money.
I think it is somewhat right.bobby80gh wrote:If you want your wife to keep her job then you should pray that her employer does NOT use the employer checking service to confirm her status. As she has not given her biometric, the employer checking service will confirm she has NO right to work in the UK. This will give the employer enough grounds not just to suspend her but to sack her. That's how useless the employer checking is. It is a total waste of the tax payers money.
bobby80gh wrote:If you want your wife to keep her job then you should pray that her employer does NOT use the employer checking service to confirm her status. As she has not given her biometric, the employer checking service will confirm she has NO right to work in the UK. This will give the employer enough grounds not just to suspend her but to sack her. That's how useless the employer checking is. It is a total waste of the tax payers money.
If this is the case, then it's a serious issue. As how would a new employer verify a potential/new employees right to work in the UK, if they have a pending postal application (where processing times are lengthy, i.e. biometric enrollment happens one or several months after the application itself is submitted). May I ask whether you questioned (UKBA), how then employers should go about verifying any potential employees right to work in the UK (in the event the employee has an outstanding immigration application)? And what they said in response?bobby80gh wrote:I have recently been in the same situation. when i sent a complain letter to ukba they called me on phone and explained to me that currently until you receive the biometric invitation any check you do will come out negative.
you can ask ur employer to contact ,,command and control unit of home officemwink wrote:Hi there.
My partner submitted an in-time application for ILR on 3/1/13 through our solicitors. Received by UKBA 4/1/13.
Her FLR (unmarried partner) was due to expire on 12/1/13.
On 2/1/13 she had surgery and was off sick for 3 weeks (later extended for another 2 weeks).
No UKBA acknowledgment letter received, so employer decided to suspend her without pay, via a phonecall, on 22/1/13 (last day of her original sick note).
Same day she provided her employer with a letter from our solicitor stating that her application was pending, and as such her leave to remain was continued by virtue of Section 3C Immigration Act 1971.
Employer passed this through the HR department, whom would not accept it.
She asked the employer to provide written reasons for the suspension, to which they relied solely on potential illegality.
There was a lack of a proper disciplinary procedure in respect of suspending her.
She told the employer that they should use the UKBA Employer Checking Service to ascertain her right to work. Employer seemed totally oblivious to this, and pretty much refused to use this facility.
She is in the process of writing a formal grievance letter to the employer.
Does anyone have any advice on what her next step should be?
cs95tdg wrote:Yes, I agree completely with the fundamental S3C legislation/immigration law. The key question raised above is how the UKBA enable employers to verify an employees right to work in the UK, if their so called "employer checking service" has such a limitation (I.e. it only recognises outstanding applications where biometrics have been submited) as that which has been described in this thread.
If this limitation/flaw has been acknowledged by the UKBA, then they clearly need to either address it via systematic means or some other manual process, to avoid both employers and potential/current employees from being affected by it.
Hello mwink,mwink wrote:Still going to go ahead with the grievance, just to make sure she gets paid in full for the suspension period.