Success - In-Person ILR - Solihull/Birmingham PEO - HSMP JR
Posted: Thu Feb 11, 2010 11:27 am
Dear Forum Folk,
This is a quick note to say 'Thank You' for all the trouble you take to post your experiences up here - it is an incredible pool of information and has been very helpful!
My husband (main applicant) and I (dependent) had an in-person appointment booked at the Solihull PEO for 12pm yesterday. Our status was HSMP in Jan 2006 (1year) + Entry clearance in Feb 2006 + Entered in March 2006 + 4-year Extension in Feb 2007 --> HSMP JR ILR application.
We drove up from Oxford and decided to get there early to try to be seen earlier than our appointment. As others have said on the forum, the PEO is located smack bang in the middle of the town centre and we decided there would be plenty to do to kill time in case they asked us to come back at our appointed time. We parked in the Marks & Spencer secured car park, which is a 5-minute walk from the PEO building. In hindsight, I suppose we could've parked closer in the many public pay-on-foot car parks around (which are very well signed), but we got to the first one we found on the way in.
The PEO is on the ground floor of Dominion Court which looks like a bunch of new-build Victorian terraces stuck together. The building doesn't have a prominent signboard nor does the PEO, so we walked right past it because we couldn't see the signs behind the foliage and parking at the front of the building. We circled the block and eventually found it because of the building's car park being labelled 'Dominion Court Car Park'. What is easy to see however is the sign for a company called 'Taylor Wimpey' and the PEO is right next to it. This may save you a trek if you have the same problem as us.
We went inside and it was pretty much as described by the others who have shared their experiences of the Solihull PEO.
1. We entered at 9:30am and were made to go through a security beeper gate and our bags were checked. We were also scanned with a handheld metal detector. This was not intrusive at all and didn't take more than three minutes or so.
2. They are then supposed to give you a token number which they didn't in our case, as we went and sat down in the waiting area. After five minutes or so, we realised that we probably did need the token number and went to the reception desk to ask for it and they gave us one, apologising for not giving us one earlier. So, if you don't get one up front, ask for one.
3. We waited for our number to be called. The wait was reasonably short; about half an hour.
4. When called, we went over to the designated desk with our trolley-load of documents. I think the lady at the counter was mildly amused! Our documents were:
- Application Form
- Continuation Sheet for the Absences from the UK Section
- 2 photographs for each applicant (taken a week ago)
- Letter from employer confirming current permanent employment, job title, and employment history.
- P45s and P60s (for all four years)
- Salary slips (for all four years)
- Employment Contracts
- 12 months' worth of current account statements
- 12 months' worth of savings accounts' statements
- Land Registry Certificate
- Last Mortgate Statement
- Latest Council Tax Bill
- Latest Utility Bill (Gas/Elec)
- Letters confirming listing on the Electoral Roll
- 1st HSMP letter and HSMP extension letter
- 3 months worth of dependent's payslips
- Letter from dependent's employer
- Dependent's P60s
- Marriage Certificate
- Driving License
- Spreadsheet detailing absences from the UK
We had all of these indexed in a folder and photocopied and indexed in a separate folder.
5. The lady at the counter was extremely polite and friendly and asked us:
- what category we were applying under?
- how recent our photographs were?
- how we booked our appointment and if we had trouble with the booking?
- if the absences had all been for holidays or whether some had been business trips?
6. The lady said we didn't need to worry about bringing so many documents because they had all the information they needed linked to our profile on their systems from our earlier applications to the Home Office. So we didn't need to re-establish basics like proving we were married and giving our original approval letters.
7. She checked items off a list on a form she had, requested three most recent payslips for the main applicant, the latest P60 and also the letter from the employer endorsing the business absences.
8. She then said she was pleased to inform us that she was going to grant us our ILR and told us to pay at another counter and the come back in a couple of hours, with the same number slip, to pick up our stamped passports. All of this took no more than 5 to 10 minutes.
9. After paying at about 10:15am, we spent a couple of hours in the shopping centre, had lunch and got back at about 12pm. The PEO was heaving with lots of people standing.
10. We then unfortunately had to sit around and wait a good two hours or so before our number was finally called.
11. The passports were handed to us at a desk near the exit along with a letter and a leaflet about our basic entitlements as permanent residents.
Our experience was very pleasant and pain-free, save for the two-hour wait (a total of four hours) from when it was actually decided to give us our ILR. My only slight criticism would be that paying over 1000 quid for a premium service should make way for quicker processing times, especially in a straightforward case where a decision has been made. That said, it was not an unpleasant wait and it pales in comparison to the satisfaction of having had success with our application.
I hope our story is useful to someone. Please feel free to ask questions if you have any and I hope to be able to be as helpful as this forum has been to us.
Thanks again!
This is a quick note to say 'Thank You' for all the trouble you take to post your experiences up here - it is an incredible pool of information and has been very helpful!
My husband (main applicant) and I (dependent) had an in-person appointment booked at the Solihull PEO for 12pm yesterday. Our status was HSMP in Jan 2006 (1year) + Entry clearance in Feb 2006 + Entered in March 2006 + 4-year Extension in Feb 2007 --> HSMP JR ILR application.
We drove up from Oxford and decided to get there early to try to be seen earlier than our appointment. As others have said on the forum, the PEO is located smack bang in the middle of the town centre and we decided there would be plenty to do to kill time in case they asked us to come back at our appointed time. We parked in the Marks & Spencer secured car park, which is a 5-minute walk from the PEO building. In hindsight, I suppose we could've parked closer in the many public pay-on-foot car parks around (which are very well signed), but we got to the first one we found on the way in.
The PEO is on the ground floor of Dominion Court which looks like a bunch of new-build Victorian terraces stuck together. The building doesn't have a prominent signboard nor does the PEO, so we walked right past it because we couldn't see the signs behind the foliage and parking at the front of the building. We circled the block and eventually found it because of the building's car park being labelled 'Dominion Court Car Park'. What is easy to see however is the sign for a company called 'Taylor Wimpey' and the PEO is right next to it. This may save you a trek if you have the same problem as us.
We went inside and it was pretty much as described by the others who have shared their experiences of the Solihull PEO.
1. We entered at 9:30am and were made to go through a security beeper gate and our bags were checked. We were also scanned with a handheld metal detector. This was not intrusive at all and didn't take more than three minutes or so.
2. They are then supposed to give you a token number which they didn't in our case, as we went and sat down in the waiting area. After five minutes or so, we realised that we probably did need the token number and went to the reception desk to ask for it and they gave us one, apologising for not giving us one earlier. So, if you don't get one up front, ask for one.
3. We waited for our number to be called. The wait was reasonably short; about half an hour.
4. When called, we went over to the designated desk with our trolley-load of documents. I think the lady at the counter was mildly amused! Our documents were:
- Application Form
- Continuation Sheet for the Absences from the UK Section
- 2 photographs for each applicant (taken a week ago)
- Letter from employer confirming current permanent employment, job title, and employment history.
- P45s and P60s (for all four years)
- Salary slips (for all four years)
- Employment Contracts
- 12 months' worth of current account statements
- 12 months' worth of savings accounts' statements
- Land Registry Certificate
- Last Mortgate Statement
- Latest Council Tax Bill
- Latest Utility Bill (Gas/Elec)
- Letters confirming listing on the Electoral Roll
- 1st HSMP letter and HSMP extension letter
- 3 months worth of dependent's payslips
- Letter from dependent's employer
- Dependent's P60s
- Marriage Certificate
- Driving License
- Spreadsheet detailing absences from the UK
We had all of these indexed in a folder and photocopied and indexed in a separate folder.
5. The lady at the counter was extremely polite and friendly and asked us:
- what category we were applying under?
- how recent our photographs were?
- how we booked our appointment and if we had trouble with the booking?
- if the absences had all been for holidays or whether some had been business trips?
6. The lady said we didn't need to worry about bringing so many documents because they had all the information they needed linked to our profile on their systems from our earlier applications to the Home Office. So we didn't need to re-establish basics like proving we were married and giving our original approval letters.
7. She checked items off a list on a form she had, requested three most recent payslips for the main applicant, the latest P60 and also the letter from the employer endorsing the business absences.
8. She then said she was pleased to inform us that she was going to grant us our ILR and told us to pay at another counter and the come back in a couple of hours, with the same number slip, to pick up our stamped passports. All of this took no more than 5 to 10 minutes.
9. After paying at about 10:15am, we spent a couple of hours in the shopping centre, had lunch and got back at about 12pm. The PEO was heaving with lots of people standing.
10. We then unfortunately had to sit around and wait a good two hours or so before our number was finally called.
11. The passports were handed to us at a desk near the exit along with a letter and a leaflet about our basic entitlements as permanent residents.
Our experience was very pleasant and pain-free, save for the two-hour wait (a total of four hours) from when it was actually decided to give us our ILR. My only slight criticism would be that paying over 1000 quid for a premium service should make way for quicker processing times, especially in a straightforward case where a decision has been made. That said, it was not an unpleasant wait and it pales in comparison to the satisfaction of having had success with our application.
I hope our story is useful to someone. Please feel free to ask questions if you have any and I hope to be able to be as helpful as this forum has been to us.
Thanks again!