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How to enter multi-country absence
Posted: Sat Sep 17, 2022 4:22 pm
by firmbeliever101
Hi,
I'm entering absences and am not sure how to enter an absence where I visited 2 countries on 1 trip. The form only allows you to enter a single country, and it wants to know the departure date and return date.
So, as an example, how would you enter this scenario:
July 1 - departed for country A
July 3 - traveled from country A to country B
July 5 - returned home from country B
Thanks in advance.
Re: How to enter multi-country absence
Posted: Sat Sep 17, 2022 4:40 pm
by contorted_svy
You can enter the dates you left and came back, add a reference in the further information to please look at the cover letter in more detail, and then explain in the cover letter.
So I would enter, in your example:
July 1 2022 - left the UK
Visiting Country A
July 5 2022 - returned home
add a note: please see the cover letter for multi-country trip in July 2022
And then say in the cover letter that on July 3 you went from country A to B and you got back to the UK from country B.
Re: How to enter multi-country absence
Posted: Sat Sep 17, 2022 4:49 pm
by kamoe
firmbeliever101 wrote: ↑Sat Sep 17, 2022 4:22 pm
Hi,
I'm entering absences and am not sure how to enter an absence where I visited 2 countries on 1 trip. The form only allows you to enter a single country, and it wants to know the departure date and return date.
So, as an example, how would you enter this scenario:
July 1 - departed for country A
July 3 - traveled from country A to country B
July 5 - returned home from country B
Thanks in advance.
I had several examples of this myself. What I did is that I simply added the second, and/or third countries as part of the "purpose of travel". E.g.
Country: France
Purpose of travel: Plus Italy and Switzerland. Visiting friends and family.
Then I would just put dates of travel as just one big trip, so just the date in and out of UK. Worked without a problem.
Re: How to enter multi-country absence
Posted: Sat Sep 17, 2022 5:02 pm
by firmbeliever101
Thanks to you both!
Referee Declaration - Exact Steps
Posted: Sat Sep 17, 2022 9:59 pm
by firmbeliever101
I've seen some posts here saying that the referee declarations don't need to be physically mailed or physically signed, but I'm unsure of what the whole process should be. Seems like at least of little bit of physical printing is still needed. Is something like this correct:
- get physical photo printed, e.g. at a photo booth that does passport photos
- print out the declaration
- attach physical photo to the physical declaration
- scan the declaration with photo attached so that I then have a PDF of the declaration with photo
- use something like DocHub to send declaration PDF to referee and they will electronically sign it
- I then have an electronically signed PDF that I can upload
Is that right? Also, is there a better or more preferred option than DocHub?
Re: Referee Declaration - Exact Steps
Posted: Sun Sep 18, 2022 8:37 am
by contorted_svy
You can print off a picture on normal paper, it doesn't have to come form a photo booth (once its' scanned it won't make much difference anyway).
The referee can use an electronic signature that has been scanned and add it to the document, I don't think specific signature software like DocHub is needed.
So the steps are:
Print the picture
Print the form
Scan it
Send it to referee
Referee signs it (via DocHub, digital signature, or prints it, signs it, and scans it) and sends it back to you
Or
Add the picture to the pdf directly (there are free programs to do it online)
Send the form to the referee
Referee signs it and sends it back to you
In the first example you can only print it once
In the second example no printing is needed
Re: Referee Declaration - Exact Steps
Posted: Sun Sep 18, 2022 8:54 am
by kamoe
contorted_svy wrote: ↑Sun Sep 18, 2022 8:37 am
Add the picture to the pdf directly (there are free programs to do it online)
Send the form to the referee
Referee signs it and sends it back to you
In the first example you can only print it once
In the second example no printing is needed
I'm the person who started the conversation about not ever having to physically do anything for referee forms, and this procedure is exactly what I meant.
With regards to pictures, today you can have your picture sent digitally to you instead of printed when you have your picture taken.
With regards to signatures, I think DocHub, DocuSign, and a few other online services let you sign up to five documents for free. Gmail let's you do it really easily from your Google drive, just upload the document to your drive, and it would guide you, see
this tutorial . Once up, you fill the form with your name and select where your referees need to sign and date. I would ask them not to use the option of typed signature (since that would just be their typed name on a different font) rather ask them to either sign using their mouse or uploading a digital or scanned version of their signature (many people have this at the ready, since it's becoming very common).
Now, if you are not comfortable with all these tools and neither are your referees, then it might be easier to do it old school and print and scan and physically sign.
But just saying going all-digital is possible.
Re: Referee Declaration - Exact Steps
Posted: Sun Sep 18, 2022 12:23 pm
by firmbeliever101
Thank you so much! This helps a lot.