- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha
In my opinion, for you, never! That is, if I were you I would not spend the extra £200 applying for ILR in person at a PEO. After all there is no guarantee that they will be able to process your application on a same-day basis, given the doubt regarding your facts.What is a good time ?
Personal apps are for straightforward cases, the person dealing with will find ur case not straightforward based on what u've posted and pass ur case back office to a caseworker.William Blake wrote:Taking the test shortly. The issue isn't doubt regarding facts. The issue is the one month gap outside the UK.
Putting money aside for the moment don't you think an in person application will increase my chance of success seeing that I get to speak with the caseworker. Does this not give me a better chance to have an influence ?
quote]Best would be to wait until 2009...[/
just to make one important addition.immigration1 wrote: I understand that but an Immigration Judge won't be able to take into account the Discretionary element i.e. whether the Secretary of State should or shouldn't have exercised his discretion when he made the decision. This has been clearly established in Case Law (unfortunately I can't remember the name of the case). Best would be to wait until 2009...
If you are refused and threatened with removal, your clock will stop and any time you spend pursuing your appeal will not be included into your continuous residence. I do not see much chance of success out of this type of appeal, though.William Blake wrote: Point taken but why wait. If I am refused then I appeal.
I applied after the incorporation into the Immigration Rules but before the new guidelines came out. I had a five-month period where I was studying in China (part-paid for by my employer-to-be) and a four month period when I went home after my degree but before coming back to the UK as a working holidaymaker, both of which times I had no leave to enter/remain. I had no problems getting ILR in person.20A. Leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom will usually lapse on the holder going to a country or territory outside the common travel area. However, under article 13 of the Immigration (Leave to Enter and Remain) Order 2000 such leave will not lapse where it was given for a period exceeding six months or where it was conferred by means of an entry clearance (other than a visit visa).
To be honest, your case sounds a bit too complicated for the in-person application. Most people would advice to use postal service if the application is complicated. Yet at least your outcome is very positive.penanglad wrote:William Blake
There were guidelines before as well, it's just that they continued to apply the old guidelines even after they incorporated the long residence concession into the Immigration Rules. Previously, it was a concession outside the rules.
Strictly speaking yes, I agree you wouldn't qualify based on the words of the Immigration Directorate Instructions.
But you have to realise that if you don't qualify, neither do 99% of lawful long-term residents. In those days most non-visa nationals would go back to their home countries for a holiday, etc., when their leave was due to expire and get new leave to enter on re-entry. There were no entry clearance requirements for long-term students, work permit holders, etc. So this was more convenient than applying to the Home Office. All students did this, e.g. if they had leave to enter for A-levels, then started a university degree after the summer holidays.
But not only that, until around 2000, all leave to enter/remain expired each time you left the country. So if you were given a four-year student entry clearance, and the next week you went to France for a weekend, then your leave to enter lapsed as soon as you left the UK. When you re-entered you would be given fresh leave to enter to complete your previous leave if you still qualified, but while you were outside the UK you had no leave to enter/remain. So for example, the situation would not have been different if your working holiday entry clearance had not expired when you were in France, but you simply decided to seek re-entry as a student when you returned.
In 2000 they changed the rules so that leave to remain for longer than 6 months did not lapse:
I applied after the incorporation into the Immigration Rules but before the new guidelines came out. I had a five-month period where I was studying in China (part-paid for by my employer-to-be) and a four month period when I went home after my degree but before coming back to the UK as a working holidaymaker, both of which times I had no leave to enter/remain. I had no problems getting ILR in person.20A. Leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom will usually lapse on the holder going to a country or territory outside the common travel area. However, under article 13 of the Immigration (Leave to Enter and Remain) Order 2000 such leave will not lapse where it was given for a period exceeding six months or where it was conferred by means of an entry clearance (other than a visit visa).
I would advise going in person, you cannot overestimate the value of being able to get across that you are a normal person who speaks English and has lived here a long time and has strong ties to this country, and being able to answer any of their questions. Go in a suit and tie, as if you were going to a work interview, have a file of papers documenting the whole time you were in this country, smile and be polite.
If you are challenged about this period when you have no leave, I would say:
1) I am a non-visa national and there was no reason in those days for me to apply for leave to enter when I was in France when I could get it at Heathrow. This is what everyone used to do.
2) In any case, before the Immigration (Leave to Enter and Remain) Order 2000, leave to enter/remain always used to lapse each time you left the country, so even if you went for a weekend during the period of your leave your leave to enter/remain would have lapsed while you were abroad.
Yes. SeeWilliam Blake wrote:Hi penanglad,
Thanks for your valuable input. I really appreciate your time. You quoted from the immgration order 2000 (arrival and departure). So, am I to understand - can you confirm - that even if I had a valid visa back then in 1999 when I left the UK and returned it would still mean that I would not have continuous residence as it is currently defined ? That is to say that even if I had done all that the law currently requires I would still not be able to qualify ? Can you provide me with a link or reference to this 2000 act ?
You mean they said they can take up to 14 weeks right ? Not that you have to wait 14 weeks before someone looks at it.aboudi wrote:I am in a similar situation to yourself, the difference is i have lost the original passport i came to the uk in and had to send in alternative proof, i also had a copy of my SAB, the interesting bit is that on both occasions when i had leave to remain given to me at the airport in 97 and 98 there was a copy of the landing card in these instances in my SAB with an explanation for giving me leave, but there was no copies of any of the other landing cards which really makes me think do they really keep them? cuz if they held that information they should have provided it to me under SAB rules..
Jeff Albright wrote:VERY relevant point.immigration1 wrote: Secondly, even if you get the file of papers from the HO, it won't show you much that you don't know already also the immigration service stopped using embarkation checks from March 1998 onwards and in any event the burden is on you to show that you remained in the UK throughout these ten years without any gap.
Your Home Office file will probably not show up any records of you getting visa from abroad (through the Embassy) and I have some confidence that if you are non-visa national and was given leave to enter at the port, this might not have been linked to your HO file, either. The port file is not automatically linked to your HO file, anyone seeking information from your port file would have to physically pick up the phone and call Ports Liaison Unit to obtain those records.
I also have suspision that when you enter the UK and fill in the landing card, there is no electronic record of your entry - at least in 1998 it is unlikely there was any. The only record of your entry is your filled in landing card with the IO records at the back showing your reasons for entering the UK and his stamp. The card is then sent to Landing Cards Unit and held there for N number of years.
So Immigration1 is correct that you will have to document all the years you stayed here and produce evidence to satisfy the officer that your were present in the UK all this time, which would probably be the passports you held in the past 10 years with the UK immigration stamps in them.
in reply to your first question i submitted my application and had a confirmation letter sent to me dated "1 October", until now every time i call i am told it is still under further consideration... and i have to wait until the 14 week period expires before anyone can look into it.... so i think your gona have to wait a bit longer.... Best of luck.