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Secondary legislation (under which such changes to immigration rules fall) does not require months to become a law. Such changes may become law on the day(s) specified (e.g. - immediately) - unless they are annulled within a defined timeframe (negative instruments).beatboy wrote:Krs - its a good point about the timing. One would assume that once the proposals are announced they would take several months to be passed into law. Hopefully it will buy us all a little more time.
http://britishexpats.com/forum/showthre ... 195&page=8"We will announce in due course which proposals we will take forward from the consultation. It is currently envisaged that any changes to the Immigration Rules would be implemented in April 2012. Such changes would not affect applications made before then."
So on the balance of probabilities these are significant reasons to believe that new rules will not affect the people already en route to ILR and a ray of light which suggests that we will escape the new rules and also in the consultation document there is no mention of whether the new rules would apply or not to the people who hold visas issued prior to the proposed changes this year in April.Any changes to the Immigration Rules arising from the consultation are due to be implemented in April 2012. We are looking closely at what transitional arrangements should be put in place for those granted a family visa or leave to remain before the changes come into force.
Hmm, no date set yet then. Hope it won't be as soon as April. Hope in fact this gets challenged in the courts should it be implemented.GrahamD85 wrote:Here's Damian Green's speech from earlier today in case anyone is interested. Nothing really new there and no news yet on when the final changes will be announced, how they'll be implemented and who they will apply to (i.e. those entering the UK after April 2012)
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/media-cent ... ation-work
Interesting points there. Could be there's more going on behind the scenes than meets the eye and not all is as smooth and easy as they'd want.krs133 wrote:A curious speech. I assumed from the weekend coverage that we would have a policy announcement in the Commons this week, not the restatement of existing principles to a think tank.
It wouldn't take this long to work out the policy details, so the delay must be either because of legal questions or disagreements within the coalition. I think the former is more likely because the hinted-at restrictions on family visas are a legal minefield.
I'm not sure. I would also like to know the answer to that as we're just about in that position now.Garnet wrote:Will these changes to the family visas apply to applications that are already processing?
In other words, if we get our application in before the changes are announced, will the current rules apply to us?
If that's the case, then that's something.Garnet wrote:I just spoke with an immigration advisor in London, who said that without the final policy they can't know for sure, but that it would be extraordinarily unusual for the new rules to apply to visas that are already in processing (already received by the home office).
Agree. Nothing's guaranteed at this stage.Garnet wrote:So, if you get the application in before the new rules come about, you *should* be OK, however it's not a guarantee until the official policy comes out I guess.
That's a good question and perhaps bears examination.Garnet wrote:I'm also curious is the new ILR requirements will apply to those on spouse visas who will then (in 2 years) graduate to ILR...seems to contradict Article 8 if you allow spouses into the country for 2 years and then require them to earn £30-50k a year to stay with their family...
It does go against Article 8 - judges already say that "not earning enough" isn't a good enough reason for splitting up a couple or family already living here. People win appeals on this a lot. That's why IOs hardly ever refuse ILR based on maintenance, and they are actively discouraged in the guidance from doing it. If they introduce a threshold for in-country people, expect masses of appeals, probably successful ones.Garnet wrote: I'm also curious is the new ILR requirements will apply to those on spouse visas who will then (in 2 years) graduate to ILR...seems to contradict Article 8 if you allow spouses into the country for 2 years and then require them to earn £30-50k a year to stay with their family...
if they were going to bring in the family route consultation changes for April then they would have said so in this announcement. it is clear that the announcement has been delayed. Probably because they know that it is going to a lot more controversial and they are still seeking advice on what they can get away with.GrahamD85 wrote:'Later this year' sounds like a significant delay if that's when they're going to announce the new rules. That's annoying, I'd rather know now.
You never know though, they might bring in new rules in time for the original implementation period of April. They'd look silly if they didn't.
Interesting - very different from Green's "we will shortly be announcing" just a few weeks ago. Well, they can't bring it in for April 1st now, because they have to give 28 days notice of the changes.krs133 wrote:From page 9 of the document on employment-related settlement:
"We have consulted separately on proposals to extend the probationary period before spouses and partners can apply for settlement in the UK from the current two years to five years. We will make an announcement on this and other proposals in the Family Migration consultation document later this year."
So it looks like a delay.
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/publicatio ... iew=Binary