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Wow, human rights claim? What a wonderful idea (not). Imagine how the human rights claim will progress.wiggsy wrote:
But if you have a visa at the moment, do you have kids? It might be worth looking into an Article 8 claim...
* Wiggsy, I'm going to ignore the reply of Ayyubi72 to your message that IMO mocks your mention of an Article 8 claim to an unreasonably extreme degree. That's not because I think you have a point about the Article 8 claim -- you don't, in my case; not only do I not-have kids but also, I've historically had a substantial chunk of monetary wealth and a substantial lifestyle comfort that legitimately frames me as firmly 'middle class' or perhaps even petty-bourgie; I've only most recently started to run in to trouble with that -- but rather because I don't really give a rats mule about the playground antics currently going on in the UK press over the supposedly 'wide abuse' of Article 8 claims (or of the NHS, huge abuse because of that one black lady from Africa who came over and had her baby and then went home, or, of the enormous 0.8% disability-benefit fraud total, or, or, or). I didn't make this thread so that some could use it as a platform for a slide in to dearly beloved and/or xenophobic attacks. We have plenty of that already, thanks mostly to the slide to the hard-right initiated by Maggie Maggie Maggie and continuing under the ConDems.The six months is not fixed... but it is an example.. people have posted about getting back in a matter of 8 weeks etc... But if you have a visa at the moment, do you have kids? It might be worth looking into an Article 8 claim... Also, I suggest checking out the Ireland forum too, "Bridged from Ireland" has written A LOT of helpful posts :)
I'm not planning on using Tier 4 as a means to further my ILR; I'm aware that Tier 4 "stops the clock" because it doesn't count towards ILR. However, during my university time, which would be at least a year, I would be hoping to gain enough new funds in to my film to enable me to jump back on to Tier 1 and complete the £200K my business needs to show it has invested in itself. A sort-of long shot, given no outside funding came in from 2011 through 2013 and my own money to self-fund it is now gone and according to my accountant the amount evidenced as having been spent in to the business is 'only' (ha!) about £90,000 -- meaning I've still got £110,000 needing to come in, and I sure as hell can't get £110K in between now and this October. Basically, switching to a T4 would be a delaying tactic on my part (although not to the level of fraud; I really and genuinely do want to get a full Masters degree in film at a London university), and frankly if it turns out I can do the Spouse visa under disability provisions instead of either switching visas or partaking in the Surinder Singh route (I'm still in talks with my emigration attorney about spouse visa qualifications in my and her case-- she has a collection of diffuse neurological symptoms resembling MS in some ways although doctors aren't sure what's up, and meanwhile, I have cerebral palsy), it would _probably_ be the more preferable of the two options. Otherwise it could possibly emerge that I would enter a crazy game of switching from T1E over to T4 and then either back to T1 or figuring out some crazily-desperate route of someone somehow hiring me of their own accord and under their own power for T2 which is basically not going to be happening, especially not in this economy.Jambo wrote:I didn't say you need a Residence Card in Ireland to prove residence. The FAQ also doesn't say that (Q2). It is useful to have but you can prove residence by other means also (tenancy agreement, utility bills etc). Tier-4 doesn't lead to ILR after 5 years. Only after 10 years. With spouse visa, I don't believe you could count the 3 years for settlement under the new rules.
I did say that I _had_ several hundred thousand quid when I started all this, yes, but that's past tense and now I don't have any of it any more at all, much less anywhere near £64,500.Ayyubi72 wrote:If you have liquid cash, and if you wife does not work, and you can spare £ 64500 to sit in a savings account for minimum six months, then you can easily get spouse visa.
That's hard to believe, given my research and the knowledge of my emigration attorney. Please explain what these 'right steps' would have been at what 'right time'. It's very easy to say these things flippantly, but since you seem to know exactly what it is I should have done that I did not do, I welcome you to tell me exactly what that would have been.If you had taken right steps at the right time, you would had spouse visa already.
I am very aware of that, and I never said 'general' disability provisions; I'm aware the £18,600 exception route is tricky, and I know my wife would need to be on very specific benefits, and in fact she is on at least one (actually, two, coming up) of those exact benefits. I ask these things having already looked in to them at least a little bit.There is no general disability provisions as such for spouse visa. Only people who get certain specific benefits qualify.
My wife is not yet on one of the qualifying benefits, but has been fighting like mad for like a year to get on DLA which, because of her disabilities, all the various Jobcentres always seem to ask her why she's not already on it (as if SHE would know when she's the one who keeps getting rejected by _their_ people! ... but nevermind). The DWP keeps rejecting her but now that she has Council support it might just be that she'll get on it just in time, or if PIP has already totally supplanted DLA by then, perhaps PIP instead.D4109125 wrote:If your spouse is receiving a qualifying benefit, then you will be exempt from the financial requirement, rather you just have to be able to adequately maintain and accommodate. The route to settlement as a spouse is still 5 years. Don't take what Ayyubi takes seriously, no one else does. If your spouse application fails in finance alone, your application will be stayed (on hold) due to a recent high court decision.
KEY PART: DO YOU HAVE KIDS!... - Zambrano / Article 8 Guidance CLEARLY STATE THAT CHILDREN CANNOT BE EXPECTED TO LEAVE THE EEA... The USA is not part of the EEA.Ayyubi72 wrote:Wow, human rights claim? What a wonderful idea (not). Imagine how the human rights claim will progress.wiggsy wrote:
But if you have a visa at the moment, do you have kids? It might be worth looking into an Article 8 claim...
....
Human rights claim, ha.
1) article 8 is just an alternative, you honestly would be better on EEA regs at present.kkiko77 wrote:
1) Wiggsy, I'm going to ignore the reply of Ayyubi72 to your message that IMO mocks your mention of an Article 8 claim to an unreasonably extreme degree. That's not because I think you have a point about the Article 8 claim -- you don't, in my case; not only do I not-have kids but also, I've historically had a substantial chunk of monetary wealth and a substantial lifestyle comfort that legitimately frames me as firmly 'middle class' or perhaps even petty-bourgie; I've only most recently started to run in to trouble with that -- but rather because I don't really give a rats mule about the playground antics currently going on in the UK press over the supposedly 'wide abuse' of Article 8 claims (or of the NHS, huge abuse because of that one black lady from Africa who came over and had her baby and then went home, or, of the enormous 0.8% disability-benefit fraud total, or, or, or). I didn't make this thread so that some could use it as a platform for a slide in to dearly beloved and/or xenophobic attacks. We have plenty of that already, thanks mostly to the slide to the hard-right initiated by Maggie Maggie Maggie and continuing under the ConDems.
2) It seems Jambo is saying that I would need an IRELAND EU4 Family residence card that I would obtain inside Ireland and use during the time I am still in Ireland alongside my wife. It amazes me that somehow such a residence card would be issued to me by the Irish authorities with enough speed for me to be able to use it (i.e. in under a few weeks' time). The Republic's authorities are just as bureaucratic as any other, so I really can't realistically see how I would be able to physically possess any actual identification card of Irish administrative origin within Ireland during 3 to 6 months (but probably no longer) inside Ireland before returning to the UK. I'm not really asking specifically about Ireland here but rather about the mere concept of remotely expecting that any government would move faster than molasses on matters like these. And presumably, if I can't evidence that I've had the Ireland residence card for the entire time that my wife has been working (with me alongside her) in Ireland, but rather that I've only had it for part of that time because the Irish administration was slow, then logically it would seem that would count against me in the grand scheme of this stuff.
3) It deeply disappoints me to hear that the 5 years start at the start of the Singh route but it doesn't surprise me. Actually, the prospect of throwing away the 3 years I've already spent here (those years are basically the only reason I've lost all my money!), is a major reason why I'm looking in to two options that are comparatively better for my situation, one being a Spouse Visa by reason of physical disability exemption from the £18,600 requirement, and the other being a possible switch to a T4 visa if any of the universities I'm currently applying to for my Master's degree, decide to accept me.
If even marginally possible-- and I don't see why it wouldn't be at least marginally possible-- I want to make sure the time I've already spent on T1E "counts". I want to ensure my current almost-three years in the UK under Tier 1 Entrepreneur doesn't end up as having been for nothing, because if that becomes the case, then I will have spent time founding and maintaining a business that drained me of all my money, for no significant end result as far as the Home Office is concerned -- and that's not really acceptable to me considering the amount I have spent is already in the upper-tens-of-thousands GBP.D4109125 wrote:If your spouse is receiving a qualifying benefit, then you will be exempt from the financial requirement, rather you just have to be able to adequately maintain and accommodate. The route to settlement as a spouse is still 5 years. Don't take what Ayyubi takes seriously, no one else does. If your spouse application fails in finance alone, your application will be stayed (on hold) due to a recent high court decision.