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Welfare.ie wrote:4. HABITUAL RESIDENCE - National law
The habitual residence condition is included in the particular Section listing the conditions of entitlement for each of the relevant schemes.
In addition, Section 246 of the Social Welfare Consolidation Act 2005 provides that:
"it shall be presumed, until the contrary is shown, that a person is not habitually resident in the State at the date of the making of the application concerned unless he has been present in the State or any other part of the Common Travel Area for a continuous period of 2 years ending on that date."
Hi thanks for the reply. Yes we have read that and we are very confused why they have said he is not habitually resident. He has lived in the uk all his life. do you know if any others from the uk have encountered this problem.Ben wrote:You're right.
Welfare.ie wrote:4. HABITUAL RESIDENCE - National law
The habitual residence condition is included in the particular Section listing the conditions of entitlement for each of the relevant schemes.
In addition, Section 246 of the Social Welfare Consolidation Act 2005 provides that:
"it shall be presumed, until the contrary is shown, that a person is not habitually resident in the State at the date of the making of the application concerned unless he has been present in the State or any other part of the Common Travel Area for a continuous period of 2 years ending on that date."
I'm afraid not.bobbo wrote:do you know if any others from the uk have encountered this problem.
ok thanks for your help.Ben wrote:I'm afraid not.bobbo wrote:do you know if any others from the uk have encountered this problem.
I would suggest writing to the Deciding Officer and ask that they review their decision. If that fails, send an appeal to Dublin.
If you need further opinion I would advise asking here.
Are you sure Tom?IrishTom wrote:If he was has two years worth of stamps paid in the UK, he can transfer them over to Ireland and receive Jobseekers benefit which is circa 200 euro per week.
It doesn't mention an exemption in the case of people coming from the UK there, unless you've seen something like that mentioned elsewhere?CitizensInformation.ie - Jobseeker's Benefit wrote:Contributions you have paid in other member states of the EU/EEA will be added to your Irish contributions. If you are applying for Jobseeker's Benefit and need the contributions paid in another EU/EEA country to help you qualify, then your last contribution must have been in Ireland.
No, not 100%.Ben wrote: Are you sure Tom?
Benefits for Unemployed peopleBen wrote:It doesn't mention an exemption in the case of people coming from the UK there, unless you've seen something like that mentioned elsewhere?