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Have a look at the list on p45 of this thread.
Thank you. Also assume no one else heard anything until the point of it being actually confirmed?
I'll know next year! You can just call and ask them. Didn't cost me a dime to notarize since my bank does it for free.cbizzle415 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2019 2:28 amDid that work though? I'd rather not spend time/money on something that isn't required.
costus wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2019 8:03 amHi All
I am one of the Sep 2018 applicants I received this generic email yesterday.
OFFICIAL NOTICE: IRISH CITIZENSHIP APPROVED/GRANTED - APPLICATION IN QUEUE FOR CERTIFICATE PRINTING
Dear FBR applicant,
Please be advised that your Irish citizenship by descent application has been completed successfully. Your name has been entered onto the Foreign Birth Register and from the date of entry you have become an Irish Citizen. However due restructuring and the introduction of the new more secure certificates; there is a delay in the issuance of certificates. Citizenship certificates production is only done in Ireland.
Your application is in line to be printed but due to very high volumes globally we cannot give you a specific time for when these will be ready. Once we have received the printed certificates back from Ireland you will be notified.
Kindly note that you will not be able to apply for an Irish passport until you have received your certificate.
We apologise for any inconvenience caused.
Current timescales are circa the 12 month mark. I would not expect to hear anything for another couple of months. We still have a host of August and September applicants that are waiting and added to this, there seems to be a a backlog with printing of certificates recently.shaunier wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2019 1:31 pmHi everyone - newbie here and have been catching up on all the posts - a lot to go through!
My application through descent of parents/ grandparents was received on 4th October 2018, sent from the UK. Since receiving the email on that date to say it has been received, I have heard nothing.
Do you think it will take much longer for it to be confirmed? Or anyone know the current timescales? I read people sending in September 2018 who have just been confirmed but any help anyone can give would be appreciated! X
Added in. Thanks for sharing your info with us.
Congratulations Costus on making it onto the register. I'm not sure what they mean in terms of time-frames for this printing backlog, but I hope it is not on the same level as the printing delay I faced.costus wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2019 8:03 amHi All
I am one of the Sep 2018 applicants I received this generic email yesterday.
OFFICIAL NOTICE: IRISH CITIZENSHIP APPROVED/GRANTED - APPLICATION IN QUEUE FOR CERTIFICATE PRINTING
Dear FBR applicant,
Please be advised that your Irish citizenship by descent application has been completed successfully. Your name has been entered onto the Foreign Birth Register and from the date of entry you have become an Irish Citizen. However due restructuring and the introduction of the new more secure certificates; there is a delay in the issuance of certificates. Citizenship certificates production is only done in Ireland.
Your application is in line to be printed but due to very high volumes globally we cannot give you a specific time for when these will be ready. Once we have received the printed certificates back from Ireland you will be notified.
Kindly note that you will not be able to apply for an Irish passport until you have received your certificate.
We apologise for any inconvenience caused.
There have been several previous cases where an applicant had the photocopy of their ID certified as a true copy by the witness to their application and experienced no issues. Strictly speaking, the guidance notes do suggest official notarization is required. However, it does seem that, as long as your witness type is on the qualifying approved witness list, then the witness signing the ID copy is accepted. I would recommend having your witness sign the front of the copy - obviously without obscuring any part of the image.cbizzle415 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2019 2:04 amHello all,
So I keep reading conflicting information on this. My witness (credit union manager) signed my application form today and my photos. They also signed and dated the back of the photocopy of my passport. Is this sufficient to certify it as a true copy of the original or should I get it notarized? The same question for my mother's passport copy. The directions are not entirely clear.
Thank you and good luck to everyone.
The guy was dead wrong. At least we agree on that. Being completely wrong, he encountered Jacqui's more nuanced opinion and rejected it out of hand in rather abrupt and condescending fashion. Very simple indeed. Simply wrong. Moreover, "Good day to you!" is a curt and hostile way to cut off a conversation more suited to an outraged character in a period drama than the modern era. It was unnecessary given that Jacqui was being nothing but nice to the guy. That is my interpretation of what was written anyway and the tone of it. As usual, your view may well differ.BrexitEscapee wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2019 11:45 amNobody is trying to 'force' their opinion on others - this is a forum: stuff gets typed and we're free to agree or disagree with any of it. Dth's post may not be legally correct (i.e. Irish legislation currently does give us a right to FBR) but I fully support the sentiment - i.e. I feel grateful for Ireland's unusually generous citizenship rights and I don't bite the hand that feeds me.
Dth would have been correct if he'd written 'Irish citizenship may not always be a right' because legislation can always be revoked. When I took my new Irish passport on a ground tour of Ireland this year, a common discussion topic in pubs was that Ireland is currently experiencing the downside of the 'Celtic Tiger' boom - i.e. they've now got a load of multinational companies that don't pay much, if anything, in taxes. I'm pretty sure that if an Irish journalist wanted to do some clickbait journalism, they'd strike gold by doing a piece on this forum. If the Irish public were to read Sulla's uncompromising views on the DFA staff that handled his citizenship application, knowing that he jumps from country to country to avoid paying any taxes, it would generate an outcry. And it's when the public start waving pitchforks that we see 'rights' can be taken away just as easily as they were given - as the Brexit disaster is demonstrating.
If you want to pull people up for being rude, then I'd be the last person to stop you. You actually pulled him up for forcing his opinions on others though.
This sounds a bit like you're saying that it's okay to kick away the ladder now that you're safely over the wall... However, I understand your overall point that the Irish are unlikely to repeal their FBR legislation. I profoundly disagree with your confidence in this. In any country, the issue of wealthy tax-exiles is absolutely guaranteed to generate hatred, and my unscientific straw poll of the Irish people I bumped into this year strongly demonstrated that the Irish feel particularly strongly about this. I have radically differing views to you about the macroeconomic benefits of tax-avoiding multinationals, but that isn't the point here - as with the Brexit vote, this is an issue of emotion rather than cold logic. A newspaper editor would strike click-bait gold by riling up readers with tales of wealthy tax exiles making personal slights against DFA staff and demanding their services be privatised. (For an interesting illustration of how this works, try Googling 'Porthleven Lilo.' You'll find a news story currently doing the rounds in the world media. The story has already been proven to have been falsified, but it's still provoking public fury simply because the newspaper editors have massaged the facts to play up to their readers' prejudices.)
OK I have added you in. Just to clarify one point: do you mean received by the DFA in Dublin? Are you a direct to Dublin applicant or are you going through an embassy overseas?
There is a great deal of hatred out there for wealthy people in general. Whatever the tax situation of VHNWI's and UHNWI's, we will almost always be called upon to pay more. I regularly hear vicious diatribes from expats in Thailand railing against me and all my ilk. Ludicrously, these are people who themselves pay no taxes and illegally continue to register themselves as UK resident (while living in Thailand) so as to avail themselves of the NHS and annual pension increases. The fact is that for instance in the US, 50% of people pay no Federal income taxes. All too often, it is these same individuals who are calling for the rich to pay more. It is easy to call for others to do more and envy is rocket fuel for this kind of sentiment.BrexitEscapee wrote: ↑Wed Aug 14, 2019 9:05 pm
This sounds a bit like you're saying that it's okay to kick away the ladder now that you're safely over the wall... However, I understand your overall point that the Irish are unlikely to repeal their FBR legislation. I profoundly disagree with your confidence in this. In any country, the issue of wealthy tax-exiles is absolutely guaranteed to generate hatred, and my unscientific straw poll of the Irish people I bumped into this year strongly demonstrated that the Irish feel particularly strongly about this.
Good lad - I'll also keep my interjections to a minimum...
By missing out this sentence, they were deliberately trying to make out that the incident happened recently and that it was based on real witness evidence rather than hearsay. If you google 'KentLive Porthleven lilo,' you'll find they've done a good job investigating the story and basically found zero evidence of it - even the helicopter which was supposedly involved has never existed."He said he had been told the story by a former member of 771 search and rescue squadron on Sunday, which is believed to have taken place when the rescue helicopters were still based out of RNAS Culdrose in Helston."
Hi V,Valiant24 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 15, 2019 5:06 pmJust a small (non-) update:
Today is the 1st anniversary of my submitting my application. Aside from the more-or-less instantaneous auto-reply, I've heard absolutely nothing.
Is there any point in chasing it up, in people's experience? If so does anyone have a number
Thanks
V
I appreciate they're busy, with Brexit. But with all those $400 fees or whatever you paid, you'd think they might be able to employ a few more people to help process, and inform. That's government the world over though I guess: don't care because they don't need to care!usczkat wrote: ↑Thu Aug 15, 2019 5:16 pmHi V,Valiant24 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 15, 2019 5:06 pmJust a small (non-) update:
Today is the 1st anniversary of my submitting my application. Aside from the more-or-less instantaneous auto-reply, I've heard absolutely nothing.
Is there any point in chasing it up, in people's experience? If so does anyone have a number
Thanks
V
I'm a week away from the point you are now. The past couple weeks I have sent an email and not received any response to my request for any update on my application status.
Waiting in cali.