Hi
If you send any application along with its supporting documentary evidence to Border Agency, you always risk that your original documents will get lost either by the Border Agency itself or by Royal Mail. If it happens, nobody will probably be held accountable for it, and you will be left alone with all consequences of the loss. The document you will ask for (eg Permanent Residence card) will not be issued, and your original supporting documents (passport, P60s, P45s, pay slips, various letters of confirmation from your employers or educational establishments - many of them irreplaceable because of the disappearance of their originators or their unwillingness to issue any duplicates) will be missing when you need them in your further communication with Border Agency or with any other institution in the future.
Of course, there are some obvious things that you can do to reduce a risk of such sort of hazard. If the Home Office allow it to you, you can prefer the personal appointment to sending your documents by post. If you must use the post (like in the case of EEA3 Permanent Residence card applications), you can make photocopies of your original documents before sending them, you can use Special Delivery rather than only Recorded Delivery, you can keep safe the confirmation of sending of your postal item to Border Agency, and of course, you can also pray.
However, what about seeking yet even more additional security? Has anyone got any experience with benefits of getting certified copies of their supporting documents from solicitor or notary public before sending the originals to Border Agency? And/or any experience with benefits of receiving affidavits or statutory declarations for sending those particular supporting documents to Border Agency? If things go wrong and either Border Agency or Royal Mail lose your originals, can such certified copies and affidavits be really useful for you in your further communication with Border Agency or in taking effective legal actions against them? Or is it more likely that Border Agency will simply deny any responsibility for the loss and refuse processing any your applications without having the originals, and nobody at all will help you? At the bottom line, would you pay money to solicitors or notaries public for the certifications and affidavits, or would it be better to give up any such attempts for any additional security, and instead to brace for collecting documentary evidence (eg of exercising EEA rights) for further qualifying periods (eg 5 years) all over and over again, until the random occasion, when your original documents do not get lost and your application is successfully processed by Border Agency, so that you can get to a further stage (eg waiting and collecting documentary evidence for the naturalisation application with the same institution)?
Thanks anyone in advance for any assessment of my dilemma and for any accounts of real problems involving the loss of suporting documents in Border Agency of elswhere in Home Office and of the ways such problems were (not) resolved.
- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222


