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tom.tom wrote:Hi All,
Please advice me if I can apply for ILR.
I work for an Indian company and my details are as follows.
WP visa stamped on = 20 Mar 2007
Entered UK on = 27 Apr 2007
worked at offshore = 03 Aug 2007 - 02 Sep 2007 = 30 days
paid vacation EU = 21 Dec 2007 - 30 Dec 2007 = 9 days
paid vacation India = 23 May 2008 - 02 Jun 2008 = 10 days
paid vacation India = 10 Oct 2008 - 3 Nov 2008 = 24 days
Switched to Tier 1 General April 2009
paid vacation = 01 Aug 2009 - 22 Aug 2009 = 21 days
worked at offshore = 08 Nov 2009 - 22 Jan 2010 = 75 days
worked at offshore = 25 Jan 2010 - 10 May 2010 = 105 days
paid vacation USA = 18 Mar 2011 - 04 Apr 2011 = 17 days
paid vacation India = 28 Oct 2011 - 07 Nov 2011 = 10 days
Extended Tier 1 General until June 2014
My total days of absence are 301 days ( 210 days @ offshore + 91 days paid vacation)
I am still employed with the same Indian company and have difficulty in getting a letter detailing the periods I spend at offshore. However, all my work travels are recorded in the company intranet site.
The only letter I can get from my employer is a reference letter stating that I am employed with them.
would it be helpful if I write a covering letter with HR dept contact details, attach the employee reference and a print out of travel records.
what are my chances of getting ILR, considering the new guidance.
Take a look at the suggestion I've made under the following thread and do the same yourself to determine how many absences you have for each of the 12 month periods. Note that new immigration rule changes on absences came into effect on 13th Dec 2012, therefore it would be advisable to read through the updated immigration rules and case worker guidance to which I've provided links in that thread.tom.tom wrote:Hi All,
Please advice me if I can apply for ILR.
I work for an Indian company and my details are as follows.
WP visa stamped on = 20 Mar 2007
Entered UK on = 27 Apr 2007
worked at offshore = 03 Aug 2007 - 02 Sep 2007 = 30 days
paid vacation EU = 21 Dec 2007 - 30 Dec 2007 = 9 days
paid vacation India = 23 May 2008 - 02 Jun 2008 = 10 days
paid vacation India = 10 Oct 2008 - 3 Nov 2008 = 24 days
Switched to Tier 1 General April 2009
paid vacation = 01 Aug 2009 - 22 Aug 2009 = 21 days
worked at offshore = 08 Nov 2009 - 22 Jan 2010 = 75 days
worked at offshore = 25 Jan 2010 - 10 May 2010 = 105 days
paid vacation USA = 18 Mar 2011 - 04 Apr 2011 = 17 days
paid vacation India = 28 Oct 2011 - 07 Nov 2011 = 10 days
Extended Tier 1 General until June 2014
My total days of absence are 301 days ( 210 days @ offshore + 91 days paid vacation)
I am still employed with the same Indian company and have difficulty in getting a letter detailing the periods I spend at offshore. However, all my work travels are recorded in the company intranet site.
The only letter I can get from my employer is a reference letter stating that I am employed with them.
would it be helpful if I write a covering letter with HR dept contact details, attach the employee reference and a print out of travel records.
what are my chances of getting ILR, considering the new guidance.
April 2007 - Jan 2008 = 39 days
Jan 2008 - Jan 2009 = 34 days
Jan 2009 - Jan 2010 = 74 days
Jan 2010 - Jan 2011 = 127 days
Jan 2011 - Jan 2012 = 27days
Jan 2012 - Jan 2013 = 0 days
I was refused ILR at the end of December due to absences exceeding 180 days rule. They calculated absences disregarding calendar years - in my case from March to March, so that the total number of days absent would look higher (the rule states in any 12 months). All my absences were supported by the employer's letter and I paid taxes in the UK, but they did not find travelling for business compassionate enough. Sorry...cs95tdg wrote:tom.tom, what date do you intend to apply for ILR? As you entered on 27 April 2007, technically you would have been eligible to apply up to 28 days before 27 April 2012; but I presume you delayed applying either due to your absences or some other reason?
Your annual absences should be counted backwards from the ILR application date. E.g. if you are applying on 02 Feb 2013, then the annual periods would be as follows:
Year 1: 02 Feb 2013 to 01 Feb 2012
Year 2: 02 Feb 2012 to 01 Feb 2011
Year 3: 02 Feb 2011 to 01 Feb 2010
Year 4: 02 Feb 2010 to 01 Feb 2009
Year 5: 02 Feb 2009 to 01 Feb 2008
Hope this clarifies the annual periods you should calculate your absences for. Once you have decided when you intend to apply, you can do this yourself.
No, I was applying before new rules came in force so didn't calculate anything. But they applied new rules to me, and calculated the absences over 12 months selecting those months so that it would maximize my absences - to go above 180 days (their method was not tied neither to the calendar (Jan to Jan) nor to my application date (Apr to Apr)). Can't quote particular periods as the file is on my work computer.vd_ilr wrote:Hi Galathea,
so you calculated the 5 year period like:
Jan 13 to Jan 12
Jan 12 to Jan 11
Jan 11 to Jan 10
Jan 10 to Jan 09
Jan 09 to Jan 08
rather than counting it backwards from the date of your application? Also can you list out your absences from UK? dates?
Note that, business travel is not considered a reason for discretion (i.e. an exceptional circumstance or case), since Dec 13th. Unlike previously where discretion could be applied if the absences were supported by an employer letter.galathea wrote:I was refused ILR at the end of December due to absences exceeding 180 days rule. They calculated absences disregarding calendar years - in my case from March to March, so that the total number of days absent would look higher (the rule states in any 12 months). All my absences were supported by the employer's letter and I paid taxes in the UK, but they did not find travelling for business compassionate enough. Sorry...cs95tdg wrote:tom.tom, what date do you intend to apply for ILR? As you entered on 27 April 2007, technically you would have been eligible to apply up to 28 days before 27 April 2012; but I presume you delayed applying either due to your absences or some other reason?
Your annual absences should be counted backwards from the ILR application date. E.g. if you are applying on 02 Feb 2013, then the annual periods would be as follows:
Year 1: 02 Feb 2013 to 01 Feb 2012
Year 2: 02 Feb 2012 to 01 Feb 2011
Year 3: 02 Feb 2011 to 01 Feb 2010
Year 4: 02 Feb 2010 to 01 Feb 2009
Year 5: 02 Feb 2009 to 01 Feb 2008
Hope this clarifies the annual periods you should calculate your absences for. Once you have decided when you intend to apply, you can do this yourself.
What date does your refusal letter state as the decision date? What date have they used to calculate your absences for the 12 consecutive month periods during the 5 years? You say it's not your application date, so does the refusal letter give some information on how it was done. Without this, you will not be able to tell how they have reached the conclusion that you have exceeded the allowed 180day annual threshold. Additionally, we on this forum do not know the number of absences you had over the 5 years. I presume you had a high number during at least a period of a year, based on this refusal decision (i.e. this is irrespective of which 12 consecutive month period they fell under)? Can you shed some light as to the number of absences you had and when they were to be able to comment further?galathea wrote:I was applying before new rules came in force so didn't calculate anything. But they applied new rules to me, and calculated the absences over 12 months selecting those months so that it would maximize my absences - to go above 180 days (their method was not tied neither to the calendar (Jan to Jan) nor to my application date (Apr to Apr)). Can't quote particular periods as the file is on my work computer.
Tokarthik, as has already been suggested, you need to work your way through the guidance document and list your absences for the 12 consecutive month periods during your 5 year residence, counting back from your application date. Just listing your absences (or the total number) as you have done here is not sufficient to determine whether you are eligible or not. http://www.immigrationboards.com/viewto ... ht=#762242tokarthik wrote:I am also the same type of issue but one guy told to me total 180 days in five years thats why d2 section they gave that option so i am going to meet soliciter on sat and i will update it
in the mean while if any one got visa like me case
Date Left the UK Total Day out of country
3-Jul-08 133
11-Apr-09 19
20-Nov-09 9
23-Oct-10 10
08/09/2011 13
26/02/2012 16
Total days out 200