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86ti wrote:Arguing to have been a job-seeker for over one year will be quite a challenge. Was her unemployment registered?
86ti wrote:So simply put she appears to not have been lawfully resident until Sep 2007 unless she had CSI and can claim self-sufficiency. That should give you an idea when the earliest possible day for application will be.
I am not so clear on this, and also 86ti's earlier comments. I would argue that there is a lot of flexibility here.Jambo wrote:If she started working in 2007 in McDonald's (just as an example), it would be difficult to claim she was job seeker for one year without finding employment.
Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:I am not so clear on this, and also 86ti's earlier comments. I would argue that there is a lot of flexibility here.Jambo wrote:If she started working in 2007 in McDonald's (just as an example), it would be difficult to claim she was job seeker for one year without finding employment.
To be a jobseeker, you have to be
(1) actively looking for employment, and
(2) likely to get employment in the end.
Lets take a hypothetical of a computer person who comes to the UK and looks for work and then after a year takes a job at McDonalds.
First off they have been looking for work, and they will need to produce evidence of this. They could write an affidavit which lays out what they were doing to seek a job. And provide evidence of who they contacted, who they sent resumes to, who they got rejections from, who they did not hear from.
Second they need to be likely to get employment in the end. In this case they did get employment in the end, so I think this requirement is satisfied. Note that there is not the requirement that "they are likely to get employment with a specific job title", and in the "modern flexible economy" that governments in the UK and most countries want to achieve this would be unrealistic.
Anyone have references to the ECJ case law on jobseekers?
My point was that you need to prove that you were actually looking for a job. Sure, if you ended up working for McDonald's because you could not find a job in your profession, that a different story.Jambo wrote:If she started working in 2007 in McDonald's (just as an example), it would be difficult to claim she was job seeker for one year without finding employment.
Jambo wrote:I would expect the HO to challenge a job seeker claim for one year if you were applying for jobs from time to time but this depends on the circumstances of course.
If you cannot come up with a better story for the UKBA your will most likely be turned down.imraniqbal2010 wrote:No,she did not register anywhere,but she been applying for jobs time to time but we dont have any record of that job search
Which means that she didn't report it to HMRC?imraniqbal2010 wrote:Actually she worked for sometime as a carer but it was not on NI and it was cash in hand job.
86ti wrote:Jambo wrote:I would expect the HO to challenge a job seeker claim for one year if you were applying for jobs from time to time but this depends on the circumstances of course.If you cannot come up with a better story for the UKBA your will most likely be turned down.imraniqbal2010 wrote:No,she did not register anywhere,but she been applying for jobs time to time but we dont have any record of that job search
Which means that she didn't report it to HMRC?imraniqbal2010 wrote:Actually she worked for sometime as a carer but it was not on NI and it was cash in hand job.
Did't she know that she is not paying tax for job she was doing?imraniqbal2010 wrote:Punjab wrote:the best thing will be to waite a little and apply for PR in september 2012 when exactly she will have a 5 year work history.
ta
I know that's the best thing to apply but what I want to know is that there is no provision how you can show as a job-seeker??