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Hi Dalebuttdalebutt wrote:I think you should create a thread or post your queries in one of the thread under the centre of life refusal. Going forward, in your situation I will book a flight, ferry or if I had a car drive into the UK and submit an application for EEA2.
In your position I would not wait a further week since receiving the letter from the tribunal, except there are important things to do in Ireland.
It has come to the point that applicants now have to wait for several months to get justice in this country, an FP appeal should not be taking more than 8 weeks, shamefully appeal timeline was not addressed in the directive so people have to get used to this shambles for a long time now. It would be interesting to see what the ECO's qualifying period is? Someone needs to scream at the lots of them, their legislation cannot stand, Singh route is not a priviledge, it is a right enshrined in the treaty of Rome, there cannot be time frame, the whole treaty will need overhauling if that's to be the case.
You definitely should be considered under the previous rules before the amendments, these people are time wasters, the refusal is not even worth the paper it was printed on. Shame!
Thanks for replying Chaoclive, have to say I am worried about going without the FP.chaoclive wrote:Not sure where in the UK you want to go, but you can always drive through Northern Ireland and then take the ferry across to Scotland and drive on to wherever your final destination might be.
Dalebutt is right re: the rule. It is fine to do this. An EEA FP is not needed any way...
Keep all your docs from Ireland. You will definitely need these when applying for the EEA2 when you get to the UK. Please make sure that you keep copies of EVERYTHING from everywhere. You can find details on what is needed for the EEA2 on the gov.uk website.
All the best!
C
From what I have read they are tightening the border controls, they are aware that the ferry route is a potential security risk.kristine015 wrote:Hi Radcon,
I too live in N.ireland. Am a non eea and been living in N.I 11 yrs. I have been on the ferry a few times couple of years ago. On the ferry from Ni to Scotland and I'm assuming to other parts of UK you only really need to show any of your photographic ID and ferry ticket. On board I have never experienced being checked for any visa as such. Last time I travelled via ferry was in 2011. Perhaps there might be changes now they've tighten rules who knows?
gprit I think the main problem, especially for Brits, is the UK government interpret the Regulations whichever way they like. Then rely on the Appeal system taking so long to deal with cases. My own case is a point in question. My wife's visa was refused in January and it will be at the very earliest July before the case will be heard.gprit wrote:Thanks for the comments/advice.
When I am in France March-June I plan to file tax returns there - I also (still) sometimes design websites in a self employed category.
The website is a .co.uk domain and payments are made to me in sterling.
Could this still count as 'self employed' as obviously I can work at this from wherever I am in the world, including France.
Radconn wrote:
gprit I think the main problem, especially for Brits, is the UK government interpret the Regulations whichever way they like. Then rely on the Appeal system taking so long to deal with cases. My own case is a point in question. My wife's visa was refused in January and it will be at the very earliest July before the case will be heard.
They assessed her application on the new rules as of 01/01/2014, but it should have been looked at according to the rules prior to that date. That's blatant. The ECO has to be aware what he/she is doing.
The wording on the amendments are deliberately vague enough to give the ECO's room to interpret them, I won't say how they please, but definitely not in most applicants favour.
I don't proclaim to be any kind of expert and there are far wiser people on this forum than myself, I am only giving you my point of view.
As far as the website being a .co.uk site in my opinion that doesn't matter. What might go against you is the payments made to you in Sterling. I do very similar work and I have websites that are .com registered in the US, but any payments I receive are paid to me in Euros through my bank account here in Ireland.
The ECO was not happy about my self employed status and used that as his basis for refusal. He decided that I had not "Transferred my life" for a "qualifying period"
At the time of the application we had been living in Ireland just over 4 months.
We have no connections in the UK such as property etc. We came here directly from 6 years in Thailand. Yet he still found a reason to refuse us.
I don't plan on waiting until the appeal has been heard, I intend to re-apply in April. That will be going on 9 months that we have lived here. Plus this time I intend to get an accountant here to provide accounts that I can present to them.
Anyway, as I said just my point of view.
Ask for a reconsideration where? I wrote to the ECM in Dublin and didn't even receive any acknowledgment, even though I sent it by registered post, and have a signature of the receiving person. There are no email addresses or telephone numbers listed anywhere anymore, they have all been removed.AngieD wrote:Radconn wrote:
gprit I think the main problem, especially for Brits, is the UK government interpret the Regulations whichever way they like. Then rely on the Appeal system taking so long to deal with cases. My own case is a point in question. My wife's visa was refused in January and it will be at the very earliest July before the case will be heard.
They assessed her application on the new rules as of 01/01/2014, but it should have been looked at according to the rules prior to that date. That's blatant. The ECO has to be aware what he/she is doing.
The wording on the amendments are deliberately vague enough to give the ECO's room to interpret them, I won't say how they please, but definitely not in most applicants favour.
I don't proclaim to be any kind of expert and there are far wiser people on this forum than myself, I am only giving you my point of view.
As far as the website being a .co.uk site in my opinion that doesn't matter. What might go against you is the payments made to you in Sterling. I do very similar work and I have websites that are .com registered in the US, but any payments I receive are paid to me in Euros through my bank account here in Ireland.
The ECO was not happy about my self employed status and used that as his basis for refusal. He decided that I had not "Transferred my life" for a "qualifying period"
At the time of the application we had been living in Ireland just over 4 months.
We have no connections in the UK such as property etc. We came here directly from 6 years in Thailand. Yet he still found a reason to refuse us.
I don't plan on waiting until the appeal has been heard, I intend to re-apply in April. That will be going on 9 months that we have lived here. Plus this time I intend to get an accountant here to provide accounts that I can present to them.
Anyway, as I said just my point of view.
Why did you not ask for a reconsideration of the decision? I have seen this happen to a couple of people - should have been dealt with under the old rules and were not. They had the decision overturned when the mistake was pointed out. The Home Office have transitional arrangements in place and they should have been adhered to in your case. You should write and ask for a reconsideration of the decision.
One case I know of his wife was refused in France - he wrote to the address on the refusal notice pointing out their deliberate mistake. He did also inform them that he was going to appeal the decision. As far as I know the Dublin FP's are actually done in London (probably Croydon) - was there any indication on your refusal where it was actually dealt with? If there is, then that would probably be the best place to contact.Radconn wrote:
Ask for a reconsideration where? I wrote to the ECM in Dublin and didn't even receive any acknowledgment, even though I sent it by registered post, and have a signature of the receiving person. There are no email addresses or telephone numbers listed anywhere anymore, they have all been removed.
I found the email address of a deputy chief caseworker in the UK, Linda Bateman at the HO in Liverpool. I emailed her the whole story but she wouldn't do anything because it was outside the UK.
I have gone down the appeal route, but that takes months. Other than what I have done, there doesn't seem to be anywhere else to go with it.
If you have any ideas where to write and ask for a reconsideration, I would be very grateful to hear them.
Thanks very much.
They are definitely done in London now. I think it's deliberate because they probably get more and more applications from Ireland. Just another way to make it more difficult.AngieD wrote:One case I know of his wife was refused in France - he wrote to the address on the refusal notice pointing out their deliberate mistake. He did also inform them that he was going to appeal the decision. As far as I know the Dublin FP's are actually done in London (probably Croydon) - was there any indication on your refusal where it was actually dealt with? If there is, then that would probably be the best place to contact.Radconn wrote:
Ask for a reconsideration where? I wrote to the ECM in Dublin and didn't even receive any acknowledgment, even though I sent it by registered post, and have a signature of the receiving person. There are no email addresses or telephone numbers listed anywhere anymore, they have all been removed.
I found the email address of a deputy chief caseworker in the UK, Linda Bateman at the HO in Liverpool. I emailed her the whole story but she wouldn't do anything because it was outside the UK.
I have gone down the appeal route, but that takes months. Other than what I have done, there doesn't seem to be anywhere else to go with it.
If you have any ideas where to write and ask for a reconsideration, I would be very grateful to hear them.
Thanks very much.
All good suggestions thank you.chaoclive wrote:How about putting in a Freedom of Information to see if you can possibly get access to the information that you require?
Alternatively, what about contacting the VFS/WorldBridge people (or whichever external body now deals with the visa applications in Dublin) and asking them for some contact details. Worth a try to see what they say, just takes a few minutes to send an email after all! I have just found this: Contact WorldBridge call centre 1570 214 314.
I know that WorldBridge are not the ones who can solve the problem, but it might be worth the few minutes to ask them if they know how you can directly contact the Embassy visa staff who make decisions, e.g. do they have a number/email address that they could give you?
I've also found this email address (don't know anything about it, but it might be a good idea to send something through, you'll have a draft anyways!): visa.dublin@fco.gov.uk. This is for the Trade Section, but...in desperate times...: trade3.dublin@fco.gov.uk
Again, what about a call to the Consular section to explain your issue. They may have an internal directory to hand and might throw you a telephone number?
Sorry, I know that the above are not really helpful, but I'm just trying to provide ideas that you may not have thought of before.
I know some of these contacts are unrelated to visas, but when desperate, I often try anything! You don't need to tell them who you are (unless they will try to get an ECO to contact you after the call).
Good luck! Hope you can get hold of someone soon!
C
Send your request to the team who made the decision on your original application - the address will be shown on the decision letter.