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11/04/2007.UKnow wrote:Hi All,
I had a couple of questions before I prepare for citizenship application.
I came to the UK in April 11th 2007 on an EU family member permit ( 6 months), then applied for a residence permit ( 5 years) and was granted the approval in August 2007 ( expired in August 2012). I then applied for a permanent residence card (PR) and was granted the approval in September 2012 (28th of September is the date on the PR card). My question is:
Does the 6 years time counts from April 11th 2007 the day I entered the country on the FP, which means I can apply for citizenship in April 2013, or does it start the clock from August 2007 ( start date for the RC).
No affect and no need to mention in the application.
I also had another question. I had a ticket in 2008 for speeding, I was the given the option of 3 points on my license or doing a course ( 1 day ). I attended the course and paid what I had to do pay then to avoid the 3 points on my license. Will this affect my BC application and do I need to register it in my citizenship application.
Thank you for your help
Thanks for your help Jambo as always helpful.Jambo wrote:11/04/2007.UKnow wrote:Hi All,
I had a couple of questions before I prepare for citizenship application.
I came to the UK in April 11th 2007 on an EU family member permit ( 6 months), then applied for a residence permit ( 5 years) and was granted the approval in August 2007 ( expired in August 2012). I then applied for a permanent residence card (PR) and was granted the approval in September 2012 (28th of September is the date on the PR card). My question is:
Does the 6 years time counts from April 11th 2007 the day I entered the country on the FP, which means I can apply for citizenship in April 2013, or does it start the clock from August 2007 ( start date for the RC).
See Q5 in Citizenship FAQs - Common Questions - Read before posting.No affect and no need to mention in the application.
I also had another question. I had a ticket in 2008 for speeding, I was the given the option of 3 points on my license or doing a course ( 1 day ). I attended the course and paid what I had to do pay then to avoid the 3 points on my license. Will this affect my BC application and do I need to register it in my citizenship application.
Thank you for your help
UKnow wrote:Hi All,
I had a couple of questions before I prepare for citizenship application.
I came to the UK in April 11th 2007 on an EU family member permit ( 6 months), then applied for a residence permit ( 5 years) and was granted the approval in August 2007 ( expired in August 2012). I then applied for a permanent residence card (PR) and was granted the approval in September 2012 (28th of September is the date on the PR card). My question is:
Does the 6 years time counts from April 11th 2007 the day I entered the country on the FP, which means I can apply for citizenship in April 2013, or does it start the clock from August 2007 ( start date for the RC).
I also had another question. I had a ticket in 2008 for speeding, I was the given the option of 3 points on my license or doing a course ( 1 day ). I attended the course and paid what I had to do pay then to avoid the 3 points on my license. Will this affect my BC application and do I need to register it in my citizenship application.
Thank you for your help
This only applies if the EEA national is A8 national (one of the new joiners to the EU in 2004). Not applicable if the EEA national is from one of the "old" member states.TanyaUK wrote:He or she will have a Working Card registration Certificate to prove that, which you will need to submit with your application.
Thank you Both for your help. My wife is not from the A8 (Austrian), so this should not be an issue.Jambo wrote:This only applies if the EEA national is A8 national (one of the new joiners to the EU in 2004). Not applicable if the EEA national is from one of the "old" member states.TanyaUK wrote:He or she will have a Working Card registration Certificate to prove that, which you will need to submit with your application.
Thanks JamboJambo wrote:From your other posts in the EEA section, it seems that your PR was confirmed following an undocumented exemption of CSI. You might want to wait with the application until September (1 year after PR issue date). That would avoid having the Nationality team reviewing the EEA treaty rights period.
If you are referring to the exemption for those who asked a RC before a certain date, I thought that was documented. I don't have a link handy now, but I sort of remember reading about that in the UKBA site, and thinking it was going to cover me as well, as I had asked my RC in early 2006.Jambo wrote:From your other posts in the EEA section, it seems that your PR was confirmed following an undocumented exemption of CSI.
I'm not sure what you mean by "the exemption is legal". I'm not sure there is a legal basis for that (at least not without a fight if you would have been refused).UKnow wrote:Thanks Jambo
Why would you think this is a problem. It was their fault in the first place for not putting it in the application and the exemption is legal. I am not sure why I should be concerned?
Thank you Jambo for advice . I am not in a rush at all, I just thought to get it out of the way as I will do it sooner or later.Jambo wrote:I wish it would be so simple.
Any ordinary resident in the UK entitles for NHS treatment. Even if you don't work regardless if you under the EEA immigration route or not. However, if you are under the EEA regulations and don't work, the HO requires CSI. The legality of the requirement is another story and as you mentioned it is currently in discussion with the European Commission. Whether an exemption should always apply in your particular case is another story.
I just suggested it might make the application smoother if you wait. It probably won’t matter but if you are not in a rush after a red passport, waiting would reduce the uncertainty.
Have you recieved the PR Confirmation following EEA4 application? Then you don't need your wife's documents (if you apply 1 year after the issue date of your confirmation).UKnow wrote:Hi Jambo and others.
I had a question regarding proven the 5 years residency. If I have a PR card for my wife who is the EU citizen, would that be enough and I do not need to send all documents to prove exercising her rights in UK. I mean instead of sending all documents as I did for EEA4 application
Thanks in advance
if you did`t hold the card for one year you have to fill this section and send prove that you hold PR for one year. if you hold the PR confirmation for one year that card will be enough and you don`t need to fill in this section.UKnow wrote: So the wording as I understand it; if you do not have a PR issued as a document, then you need to fill this section. However if you have a PR issued, it does not matter how long you had it for before you apply ( not necessary 1 year from the date of issuing the card), as long as you have spent at least 6 years in the country. Isn't that right?
Thanks for your help in advance
I see what you mean. However, this is true for proving residency for 6 years period but not for practising your right in the UK. Your PR is a prove of you have been in the UK practising your right. If you mean here being in the UK for 6 years, then that is a different story and could be proved by sending leas or other documents.Jambo wrote:It is basically very simple.
You need PR for one year (unless married to a BC). The PR confirmation following EEA3/4 only confirms that you have PR on date of issue. It doesn't state when this status was actually obtained (usually at least several months earlier). So the only way for the caseworker to know if you meet the 1 year after PR requirement is either
1. The date of issue of PR confirmation is more than 1 year old.
2. You provide evidence to prove it.