I'm afraid there are a numbers of significant misunderstandings here. I'll address them one by one.
Andrew13 wrote: ↑Tue Sep 01, 2020 12:48 pm
I’m an American citizen and my partner (unmarried) is Latvian, living in the UK with a settled status. We met in America in 2018 when she came to work for 3 months at the camp I worked at. We had a close friendship but only decided to make our relationship official the next summer she visited.
I interpret that this means your relationship started only in 2019? If so, I'm afraid it is unlikely that you qualify as an EFM unmarried partner. This route is open for couples whose relationship is 'akin to marriage', that is, relationships with significant commitments (usually at least two years of cohabitation and either financial in nature and/or with the care of a child), not recent couples with only the status of of boyfriend/girlfriend.
After summer 2019 , she extended her work contract and was able to stay until the end of October. During this time we both lived together on the camp property.
This suggests you have only lived together for a few months in 2019?
In December I decided I wanted to spend time with her in England before she came over for her third summer. Our original plan was to move to America in May 2020, she would go on her J1 visa and we would seek legal advice whilst over there. However , in March lockdown started and her program was cancelled and she was no longer able to go to the states on any visa. As it stands she still is prohibited from going there until the December.
And then after than your relationship has been long-distance?
My original visitor visa was due to expire May 31, due to COVID-19 it was extended until the July 31 and then eventually August 31.
Can you elaborate on these visits? How frequent, how many, when? Why a visitor visa when you are American?
In June I applied for the EEA EFM form, within a week I received a COA stating that I’m unable to work whilst my application is in process due to the fact I have not provided original documentation of all of the following:
1) current valid identity documents for
Yourself/your sponsor
2) evidence of relationship with your EEA national sponsor
3) sufficient evidence of your sponsor exercising treaty rights
I am unsure why this is the case , I sent both mine and my partners passports as well as separate passport photos.
If you sent both passports then the above line might be in error. The problem is more with the other stuff, as follows:
Evidence wise, we provided lots of text messages, photos, holidays we’ve been on.
This only proves that you know each other and that you have spent some time together as a couple. This can represent a genuine couple , but this is far from proving your relationship is durable, and ''akin to marriage'. Again, to qualify as EFM as unmarried/durable partner, you need to show proof of continuous cohabitation for at least 2 years and joint financial commitments.
With my partners treaty rights, she has a settled status which she is only able to prove online. Why would this be their reasoning?
You are mixing up two completely different routes:
a) The EEA route, which operates under EU law that required the exercise of treaty rights (the EU citizen needs to show they are in full-time work, full-time study, looking for work, or being a tax-paying self-sufficient person).
b) The EUSS, which will replace the EEA route come Brexit, and which is much more relaxed in terms of requirements (the EU citizen only needs to be in the UK to be granted Pre-Settled status, and to have lived in the UK for 5 years to obtain be Settled status. No need to show exercise of treaty rights).
The EEA EFM you are applying to is a), EU law, more strict.
The Settled status that your girlfriend has is b), less requirements.
So, no, having Settled status does NOT prove she is exercising or has exercised treaty rights.
Our biggest concern is that my partner is currently unemployed due to the virus and moving location in the UK.
Your biggest concern should be to take time to understand what your options are. From all you have shared, it does not seem like you are eligible to apply to the EEA EFM at all.
I understand that they now take into consideration previous earning to determine whether it’s a sufficient amount.
(FACE PALM) It is rare to find a case where some has managed to mix up so many things at once!!!
No.
There are no minimum earnings required either for the EEA EFM or the EUSS routes. That applies only for applications for spouses of British citizens or non-EU permanent presidents. None of which applies to your case at any point.
However she has had many temporary contracts travelling, meaning there won’t be a consistent annual income in her name. Will the deny my application because of this ?
Not because of this, but simply because from everything you said this is simply not the route for you!
I have also read many contradicting articles stating whether or not I can legally be in the UK whilst my application is in process.
Short answer is your application for any EEA route does not cover you in the event of expiration of your current visa.
Applying to renew or obtain a new visa sometimes prevents the applicant from being an overstayer but this applies to (some) categories of visas that operate under UK rules, like the Tier system, NOT for the EEA routes, which is EU law. So no, you are not covered by this provision.
My original visa was due to expire May 31 , now the extension is until August 31.
Then your permission to stay has officially expired.
I sent my application in June and have not received my passport back so I wouldn’t be able to go home if it was by choice.
This might help justify your overstay but will not look good if you extend your stay much longer.
I’ve asked many advisers and all have assured me that I’m not an overstayer and am able to reside in the UK until there is a decision on my application. Is this correct ?
No. It is not correct, and any 'advisor' who told you otherwise, specially and any 'advisor' who told you you could apply for the EEA EFM route given the information you have shared above, deserves a slow and painful death.
I appreciate any extra information on this form as there’s not a lot about it online.
As said above, I'm afraid the chances of your application being successful cannot be more than zero.
The best way we can be of help if you share more details of your timeline, where exactly you both have lived as a couple, and what has been your girlfriend status during that time (e.g. has she worked or been a student in the UK during that time?)
My posts express what I believe are the facts, based on the best of my knowledge, about the topics discussed in this forum. They do not constitute immigration advice.