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What was the reason for stopping work? This may be important.sconzy wrote:Could you please advise me if I stand a chance wining an appeal against the home office decision on refusing my application on permanent residence
my wife is an EEA national who has been excising treaty right in the UK
we arrived here in the UK on October 2006
she worked from October 2006 to december 2008.(full time work) contributed to NI and paid taxes
January 2009 to august 2010 self sufficient (hold EHIC card issued by UK )(income from my employment as support)
September 2010 to july 2011( full time work ) taxes and NI paid
july 2011 to july 2012 (self employed full time) taxes and NI paid
July 2012 to now (full time work )
I am a non-EEA national and the Home office has refused my application base on self sufficient without Comprehensive Sickness Insurance.
I want to appeal this decision and wants to know if I stand a chance.
sconzy wrote:Could you please advise me if I stand a chance wining an appeal against the home office decision on refusing my application on permanent residence
my wife is an EEA national who has been excising treaty right in the UK
we arrived here in the UK on October 2006
she worked from October 2006 to december 2008.(full time work) contributed to NI and paid taxes
January 2009 to august 2010 self sufficient (hold EHIC card issued by UK )(income from my employment as support)
September 2010 to july 2011( full time work ) taxes and NI paid
july 2011 to july 2012 (self employed full time) taxes and NI paid
July 2012 to now (full time work )
I am a non-EEA national and the Home office has refused my application base on self sufficient without Comprehensive Sickness Insurance.
I want to appeal this decision and wants to know if I stand a chance.
This is not accurate. The requirement for CSI has always been in the regulations although as you said, one can argue NHS is enough.Hubba wrote:but we know for a fact that their policy regarding CSI has changed on January 2011 (http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary , Annex A).
You could argue that given that they weren't explicit prior to that, which is clearly indicated on such document (which states a start date of January 2011 for the enforcement of such requisite) allowed you to interpret that the NHS coverage would be enough, given how the health services are offered here in the UK. There was no explicit guidance prior to that for you to base your actions on.
Jambo,Jambo wrote:This is not accurate. The requirement for CSI has always been in the regulations although as you said, one can argue NHS is enough.Hubba wrote:but we know for a fact that their policy regarding CSI has changed on January 2011 (http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary , Annex A).
You could argue that given that they weren't explicit prior to that, which is clearly indicated on such document (which states a start date of January 2011 for the enforcement of such requisite) allowed you to interpret that the NHS coverage would be enough, given how the health services are offered here in the UK. There was no explicit guidance prior to that for you to base your actions on.
For self sufficient, the HO requires (private) CSI since 2008 (it's part of the application form).
For students, the requirement for CSI was not enforced before 2011 so the HO is exempting students who have been issued Residence Certificate before June 2011.
I don't understand your question.XABI wrote: Jambo,
Can you please explain then why UKBA puts the explanation on their EEA4 form , EHIC that covers 5-years period. If this is not accurate then that dosent mean a misleading .
Sorry JumboJambo wrote:I don't understand your question.XABI wrote: Jambo,
Can you please explain then why UKBA puts the explanation on their EEA4 form , EHIC that covers 5-years period. If this is not accurate then that dosent mean a misleading .
A (non-UK) EHIC can be used as CSI. It needs to cover the time as student/self-sufficient.
The HO has always required CSI, not private CSI. It was never specified that the CSI would have to be private, prior to 2011, even for EEA1/2 applications. The first mention that the NHS wasn't a valid CSI for EEA1/2 applications came on 2011.Jambo wrote:This is not accurate. The requirement for CSI has always been in the regulations although as you said, one can argue NHS is enough.Hubba wrote:but we know for a fact that their policy regarding CSI has changed on January 2011 (http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary , Annex A).
You could argue that given that they weren't explicit prior to that, which is clearly indicated on such document (which states a start date of January 2011 for the enforcement of such requisite) allowed you to interpret that the NHS coverage would be enough, given how the health services are offered here in the UK. There was no explicit guidance prior to that for you to base your actions on.
For self sufficient, the HO requires (private) CSI since 2008 (it's part of the application form).
For students, the requirement for CSI was not enforced before 2011 so the HO is exempting students who have been issued Residence Certificate before June 2011.