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Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator
so only at the end of this year you can expect your passport back within the legal limit of six months!There is currently a backlog of applications, and we are taking steps to address this situation as soon as possible. We aim to be operating back within our service standards from the beginning of December 2009
admission of failure to process within the stated timeThe time taken to process your application will depend on the type of application you make and how you submit it. There is currently a backlog of applications, and we are taking steps to address this situation as soon as possible. We aim to be operating back within our service standards from the beginning of December 2009.
If you make your application in person at the Croydon public enquiry office, we will usually process your application on the same day.
Robert, It is also interesting that now they have mentioned that they can deal with applications on same day at Croydon Office but on the same time it is not quite clear what sort of applications? Is it all EEA applications or just worker registration?runie80 wrote:http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/eucit ... ropeanlaw/
admission of failure to process within the stated timeThe time taken to process your application will depend on the type of application you make and how you submit it. There is currently a backlog of applications, and we are taking steps to address this situation as soon as possible. We aim to be operating back within our service standards from the beginning of December 2009.
If you make your application in person at the Croydon public enquiry office, we will usually process your application on the same day.
Some hope there.
Illegal. Member States are not entitled to refuse to issue a Residence Card to a person, solely for the reason that a member of his family has failed to correctly complete his own application.Applications submitted from families will be rejected in their entirety unless the necessary supporting evidence has been provided for all of the named applicants.
Unbelievable, no reaction of Home Office's incompetence from any member state? State members are just sitting their **** down and doing nothing about it. And all people with EEA applications are in a Legal Prison from now onwards in UK.benifa wrote:http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... ns-june-09Illegal. Member States are not entitled to refuse to issue a Residence Card to a person, solely for the reason that a member of his family has failed to correctly complete his own application.Applications submitted from families will be rejected in their entirety unless the necessary supporting evidence has been provided for all of the named applicants.
New rules will be applicable from 1st of June 09. And as soon as some one challenges the HO's incompetence with EU law in court these rules will be withdrawn. (I hope)megmog wrote:Hi,
I have some questions about this, not sure if it's worth starting a new thread though..
My husband sent in his EEA2 application in early Feb. At the time we were aware they were taking ages to process (still are) so we didnt send our passports in... we explained in his cover letter that I have to travel for work and that they can contact us by phone/email/post/whatever to request our passports when the time comes to actually process the application. We received our CoA in March and they didnt mention this was an issue.. based on the update to their website, would his application be refused because we havent sent in our passports yet? Has anyone had any issues because of this?
(Also, does anyone know how long they are taking to process EEA2 applications at the moment (roughly)? )
I thought that failure to use the form is not a reason for refusal. But I was looking to find where this was written down, and I could not find it. Does anybody else remember where this is stated? Or is it just the old rules, which are of course now withdrawn?benifa wrote:Member States are not entitled to refuse to issue a Residence Card to a person, solely for the reason that a member of his family has failed to correctly complete his own application.
Original documents were required all along. There is no change here. I suppose what HO is after is to have the passports early on. Many people realized that they wouldn't see theirs for a long time and stopped sending it in with the application form or sent certified copies.DFDS. wrote:Now if HO is to insist on ORIGINAL supporting Doc's, applicants who are out to abuse the system will find it very difficult as there applications wont be counted valid any more.
Sorry, no offense, but your line of argument doesn't make any sense to me. Actually, I don't understand what your argument really is.DFDS. wrote:Well I'll try make it more clear.
The discussions on this board are anecdotal evidence at best. Just speculation unless someone here really knows how the HO works internally.DFDS. wrote:If you have been following the forum very well, most successful applications, are those where the applicants have been so organised with all there supporting Docs! ... We' ve discussed this before & concluded that one of the reasons we experience major delays is b'se of some people's abuse of the system.
I totally fail to see what that has to do with sending in original documents at the time of application.DFDS. wrote:How do you expect HO to determine Sham marriages, illegal entrants, multi-applications, Multi-identities if they are to count each & every Tom, Dick & Harry's applications as valid?
The real problem as I see it is the centralistic approach through postal application. Other countries don't seem to have a problem doing this locally.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Imagine a process like the following: you submit the complete application. For straight forward primarily family members, they could do the required basic sanity checking and send back the passports and documentation within a week with the Residence Card in the passport. It is not an impossible thing to implement, and a number of member states manage to do it. For harder cases, such as beneficiaries, they could return the documentation and passports at one week (with the acknowledgement letter), and then ask for the passport back after they have done 3 months of extensive checks.
Well, not so remote for me...Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:In fact a number of member states that do it locally seem to do it quite quickly (I am thinking of Germany and Switzerland, though there may be others).
But there is nothing fundamentally faster about that then having a well trained, well organized, specialized European team sitting in remote Liverpool.
One other problem I can see is that applicants are more dependent on the 'opinion' of the local staff.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:The down side of the German approach is you have to go (no appointment!) to the big room at the Rathaus/Kreisverwaltungsreferat/Ausländerbehörde with the ticket machine and all sorts of different people queuing for different sorts of things. It takes at least the morning, if not longer. You learn to dread the hard plastic seats.
86ti wrote:Sorry, no offense, but your line of argument doesn't make any sense to me. Actually, I don't understand what your argument really is.DFDS. wrote:Well I'll try make it more clear.
The discussions on this board are anecdotal evidence at best. Just speculation unless someone here really knows how the HO works internally.DFDS. wrote:If you have been following the forum very well, most successful applications, are those where the applicants have been so organised with all there supporting Docs! ... We' ve discussed this before & concluded that one of the reasons we experience major delays is b'se of some people's abuse of the system.
I totally fail to see what that has to do with sending in original documents at the time of application.DFDS. wrote:How do you expect HO to determine Sham marriages, illegal entrants, multi-applications, Multi-identities if they are to count each & every Tom, Dick & Harry's applications as valid?
DFDS good enough in regards to your last point. But if you look at over all situation UK is stuggling to sort immigration problem, specially when it comes to EEA applications. In 2004 they increase the PR time limit from 4 years to 5 years by saying they want to come in line with rest of EU.DFDS. wrote:Fysicus you are right, neither do i disagree with any of you. I don't mean to support HO's bleach of the directive in times for processing EEA applications.We have been reading different peoples experiences in the process, & its awful anyway.
I disagree with you when you say that HO does not process applications with out original Docs! Have you read the case workers instructions exhaustively, and found out that HO has no discretion for applications without Original IDs? As i said in my original post, HO has been accepting any kind of application as valid, as long as one could explain the reasons for not submitting the necessary supporting Docs. They have been allowing this as long as you promised to submit them later, & they have been issuing the COAs to the applicants. I wounder when you say that there are no Bogus applications under EEA! Need to take an extensive study of the subject, find a number of AIT & ECJ judgments then this will enhance your knowledge on the current situation on EEA applications.
Reading the directive alone is just not enough! You have to study its transposition into a particular state in question.
When i look at the UK, its even fairer as compared to states like Sweden where they don't even mention Other Family Members on their website.
Well, I am afraid privilege has turned in to punishment these days. Most people are being treated as second until you fight back. As it was in the case of Gurkhas.DFDS. wrote:KESH i admire your point, as you said lets see where we are heading.But i do foresee more harder times if not disaster! Not forgetting that the UK has always referred to residency Docs as privilege,other than a right.