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cheers @coolguy nice one!coolguy9 wrote:Hi Guys,
I am following this thread closely since the last few days and yesterday I contacted my solicitor about this issue and he replied that there is nothing to worry about this rule if the applicant has followed previous rules ( before 2012 December) for ILR. This new absence rule will be a big issue only if the applicant has exceeded 180 days in any 12 months period. Then they have to provide proof for that.
If the applicant has completed 5 years residence with total holidays under 180 days as was the case initially and has met the necessary points for the ILR, then there is nothing to worry about.
So guys stay cool and carry on as usual
CongratsRAW wrote:Hello Everyone... ok it seems I may be the first one to share my PEO appointment experience I had today for my successful SET(O) ILR application at Sheffield..... last two days were one of most distressing days for me .... n specifically this message thread exponentially increased my stress level...... yesterday I even tried to cancel my appointment due to fear of rejection because the burden of providing proof of my first absence....
First of all my timeline
1st EC as HSMP on 20th Aug 2007 for two years
Got LTR extension as Tier1-gen on 20th Aug 2009 for three year
Got further LTR Extension as Tier1-gen on 14th May 2012 till for two years
My 1st entry in UK on this HSMP EC was 11th December 2007 but I left UK after just 4 weeks on 7th January 2008 (reason: family issues) came back after 170 days on 25th June 2008. Got into employment in UK on 15th July 2008 and still with the same employer.
Following are my all absences from UK
7th Jan 2008 to 25th June 2008 (170 Days) -- (Family issues - was not in employment in UK)
19th Dec 2008 to 7th Jan 2009 (19 Days) -- Paid Leave
27th Nov 2008 to 3rd Jan 2010 (37 Days) -- Paid Leave
25th Aug 2010 to 19th Sept 2010 (25 Days)-- Paid Leave
11th Mar 2011 to 9th April 2011 (29 Days) -- Paid Leave till 1st Apr 2011 and from 2nd was off sick and was unable to travel back
When I started filling up my form and gathering all the relevant documents ... I thought my case was very straight forward... but as I said earlier.... more I read this thread more distressed I became since I had no documentary proof for my 1st absence and even for the sick leaves I had during my last absence.....
However, I decided to wrote a personal statement for these two absences explaining reasons and confirmed that I cannot provide any documentary proof for either of these. For other paid leave my HR were only able to confirm last two sets of paid leaves but not the first two due to change of HR system, which they acknowledged in an email. I attached this acknowledgement email with my application.
Overall processing for my application at Sheffield PEO took less than 3hrs which includes getting initial token, submitting application, payment of fee, Biometrics enrolment, caseworker introducing herself and explaining about my application and handing over decision letter after half n hour.
However, since all other aspects of application was very straight forward, caseworker only mentioned about my absences while she 1st introduced herself... and said that she has gone through my personal statement and she has considered it and its fine and not an issue.... and then confirmed that she will take around 45 mins to an hour to complete my case ... if I want I can go out.... but I opted not to and she kindly replied that she will try to finish it earlier then.... and yes she handed over her decision in half n hour.... a great sigh of relief.....
It's cool that your solicitor thinks this way, but there is no mention of this either in the immigration rules, or in ILR guidance. There is definitely no mention of any transitional arrangements that I could notice.coolguy9 wrote:
If the applicant has completed 5 years residence with total holidays under 180 days as was the case initially and has met the necessary points for the ILR, then there is nothing to worry about.
Can I ask why you mention the Dec 2012 rule change, per the above bolded text?coolguy9 wrote:Hi Guys,
I am following this thread closely since the last few days and yesterday I contacted my solicitor about this issue and he replied that there is nothing to worry about this rule if the applicant has followed previous rules ( before 2012 December) for ILR. This new absence rule will be a big issue only if the applicant has exceeded 180 days in any 12 months period. Then they have to provide proof for that.
If the applicant has completed 5 years residence with total holidays under 180 days as was the case initially and has met the necessary points for the ILR, then there is nothing to worry about.
So guys stay cool and carry on as usual
RAW wrote:Hello Everyone... ok it seems I may be the first one to share my PEO appointment experience I had today for my successful SET(O) ILR application at Sheffield..... last two days were one of most distressing days for me .... n specifically this message thread exponentially increased my stress level...... yesterday I even tried to cancel my appointment due to fear of rejection because the burden of providing proof of my first absence....
First of all my timeline
1st EC as HSMP on 20th Aug 2007 for two years
Got LTR extension as Tier1-gen on 20th Aug 2009 for three year
Got further LTR Extension as Tier1-gen on 14th May 2012 till for two years
My 1st entry in UK on this HSMP EC was 11th December 2007 but I left UK after just 4 weeks on 7th January 2008 (reason: family issues) came back after 170 days on 25th June 2008. Got into employment in UK on 15th July 2008 and still with the same employer.
Following are my all absences from UK
7th Jan 2008 to 25th June 2008 (170 Days) -- (Family issues - was not in employment in UK)
19th Dec 2008 to 7th Jan 2009 (19 Days) -- Paid Leave
27th Nov 2008 to 3rd Jan 2010 (37 Days) -- Paid Leave
25th Aug 2010 to 19th Sept 2010 (25 Days)-- Paid Leave
11th Mar 2011 to 9th April 2011 (29 Days) -- Paid Leave till 1st Apr 2011 and from 2nd was off sick and was unable to travel back
When I started filling up my form and gathering all the relevant documents ... I thought my case was very straight forward... but as I said earlier.... more I read this thread more distressed I became since I had no documentary proof for my 1st absence and even for the sick leaves I had during my last absence.....
However, I decided to wrote a personal statement for these two absences explaining reasons and confirmed that I cannot provide any documentary proof for either of these. For other paid leave my HR were only able to confirm last two sets of paid leaves but not the first two due to change of HR system, which they acknowledged in an email. I attached this acknowledgement email with my application.
Overall processing for my application at Sheffield PEO took less than 3hrs which includes getting initial token, submitting application, payment of fee, Biometrics enrolment, caseworker introducing herself and explaining about my application and handing over decision letter after half n hour.
However, since all other aspects of application was very straight forward, caseworker only mentioned about my absences while she 1st introduced herself... and said that she has gone through my personal statement and she has considered it and its fine and not an issue.... and then confirmed that she will take around 45 mins to an hour to complete my case ... if I want I can go out.... but I opted not to and she kindly replied that she will try to finish it earlier then.... and yes she handed over her decision in half n hour.... a great sigh of relief.....
yes as per ukba response on WhatDoTheyKnow in some previous email. do not exactly where I saw that but they confimred it means HSMP.syed_ILR wrote:RAW wrote: Does Highly skilled migrant means hsmp??
does it mean that ...RAW was not asked for the proofs as he was on hsmp at the the of his 170 days absence from UK . loooool..now I am being over analyticalapahuja wrote:syed_ILR wrote:yes as per ukba response on WhatDoTheyKnow in some previous email. do not exactly where I saw that but they confimred it means HSMP.RAW wrote: Does Highly skilled migrant means hsmp??
Not sure where I got this and need validation: if the applicant is on hsmp+tier 1 route then he needs to meet the requirements for tier 1.syed_ILR wrote:apahuja wrote:does it mean that ...RAW was not asked for the proofs as he was on hsmp at the the of his 170 days absence from UK . loooool..now I am being over analyticalsyed_ILR wrote:yes as per ukba response on WhatDoTheyKnow in some previous email. do not exactly where I saw that but they confimred it means HSMP.RAW wrote: Does Highly skilled migrant means hsmp??
apahuja wrote:syed_ILR wrote:yes as per ukba response on WhatDoTheyKnow in some previous email. do not exactly where I saw that but they confimred it means HSMP.RAW wrote: Does Highly skilled migrant means hsmp??
That is not true ... read this: https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... ing-378134nadnet wrote:apahuja wrote:syed_ILR wrote:yes as per ukba response on WhatDoTheyKnow in some previous email. do not exactly where I saw that but they confimred it means HSMP.RAW wrote: Does Highly skilled migrant means hsmp??
In Immigration Rules (Introduction):"Under Part 6A of these Rules, Highly Skilled Migrant" means a migrant granted leave under paragraphs 135A to 135G of the Rules in force before 30th June 2008."
Yes exactly, I wanted to see that, I said earlier we have to wait and watch, it is quite worried and need consideration. I think people who should worry more are like me or anyone who are in their 5 years stayed in Tier 1 (general). I think people who came in with HSMP and extended their visa using Tier 1 General are fine and they don't have to worry much. HSMPsyed_ILR wrote:apahuja wrote:does it mean that ...RAW was not asked for the proofs as he was on hsmp at the the of his 170 days absence from UK . loooool..now I am being over analyticalsyed_ILR wrote:yes as per ukba response on WhatDoTheyKnow in some previous email. do not exactly where I saw that but they confimred it means HSMP.RAW wrote: Does Highly skilled migrant means hsmp??
to be very frank, yes it is a break in continuity as per reading responses from UKBA but still not too worry that much.hsmpilr wrote:What about unpaid leaves ? Are they all in trouble ?
ilrdep wrote:Just wanted to update you that one of friend got approval from Solihull today with 60 days(Total) absence all were vaccation , no letters were asked.
Also want to inform that process in Solihull now changed (payment before Caseworker looks the case)
Exactly what happened to my mate too. I think you guys are stressing too much.syed_ILR wrote:ilrdep wrote:Just wanted to update you that one of friend got approval from Solihull today with 60 days(Total) absence all were vaccation , no letters were asked.
Also want to inform that process in Solihull now changed (payment before Caseworker looks the case)
I think people missed this post!!
Great news ..
Congratulations Wildjoecrazy!!!!....all those who were panicked by new rule will be bit relieved ...Wildjoecrazy wrote:Hello
I would just like to share with everyone that I had my ILR approved! I only found out about the rule change on 5 April, which of course instantly set me off into panic mode, as I had very little time to gather any information or evidence and was not sure if I was eligible!
My situation is this:
HSMP 2008 - 2010
Tier 1 General 2010 - 2013
My work situation was:
3 years contracting under an umbrella company or on a temporary basis
2 years permanent job
I explained my absences in the following way in my cover letter:
- When I was under HSMP, I understood that under the immigration rules that I did not have to quantify my work related absences during this period according to rule 245 (c).
However I chose to explain these for purposes of demonstrating my employment in the uk over five years and if info required.
- I explained that when I was an employee of an umbrella company I took on work assignments on a contracting basis. Therefore there were times I was not in employment. I explained that my annual leave was paid out to my in my weekly wage which equated to the equivalent of x number of days paid leave, however I exceeded the x number of days per year. Additionally that the employer was unable to differentiate the difference between days off that were considered paid annual leave (or equivalent of) or times when I was not in employment. I explained that due to the nature of my employment I was able to negotiate leave during work assignments or take leave between work assignments, in which I decided to travel abroad for short holidays.
- for my permanent post, I asked the employer to write a letter explaining that they are unable to confirm my absences from the UK in relation to my approved leave as they are not required to ask this or record this. I stated in my cover letter that there is consistency between my approved annual leave and my absences.
- I had 230 days of absences and these were not all paid!
Evidence I submitted:
1. Employment statements
2. Contracts highlighting my annual leave entitlement and nature of my employment
3. Sample of payslips from contracting to demonstrate how my holiday pay was calculated
4. Cover letter explaining all of the above.
As Tier 1 you do not need to always be in employment. I think even if you are permanent you can take unpaid leave from work, as long as your intention is to return to the same job when you get back or look for other work.
Huge fees - yourself and 3 dependants, that is really painful . I have same number of dependants but I am going to apply for my wife and myself only as my both kids are born here hopefully we will apply for their passports once I will get ILR, if and only ifletmec2006 wrote:Good news then, that's some more people getting approved with not having too many hassle with the AL. In all these panic mode, I forgot to think about my visa fees for us went up from £3444 to £4915!!
I confirm this. This has happend to one of my mate here. He and his wife applied for ILR and once they got it they applied for their son who got his Biritsh passport directly.Sep08T1Applicant wrote:Huge fees - yourself and 3 dependants, that is really painful . I have same number of dependants but I am going to apply for my wife and myself only as my both kids are born here hopefully we will apply for their passports once I will get ILR, if and only ifletmec2006 wrote:Good news then, that's some more people getting approved with not having too many hassle with the AL. In all these panic mode, I forgot to think about my visa fees for us went up from £3444 to £4915!!