chrees wrote:Hi,
Could you please advise me if I could be eligible for a permanent residence card? I could not find an answer to my question on the forum.
I am an A8 EU national and I guess I have historically met the 5 year residency criterion (between 2004 and 2009). Since then I lived in other EU countries (visiting UK at least once a year) and moved back to UK in Sep 2015.
Here is more detail of my circumstances:
...
Now, my understanding is that I qualified for the right to reside permanently in the period of 2004-2009 and never lost it since I visited UK regularly. Could you pls confirm if I am right in my assumption and if I could apply for the permanent residency card?
Really appreciate you help here.
Thanks,
chrees
1. Year 1
Aug 2004 – Oct 2004 – I lived in London doing an unpaid internship in London (was not registered at WRS)
Not genuine & effective work; even if it was 'work' the lack of WRS negates it; did you have CSI? - if not you're not even 'self-sufficient'.
Oct 2004 – Jun 2005 – moved to Germany to study (I would hope this qualifies for the extraordinary 12 month exemption
No - as not yet exercising treaty rights in UK
Jul 2005 – moved back to London to take up a full time employment
This is just your grace period - no sign of treaty rights being exercised as a qualified person here; were you jobseeking? registered? got evidence?
2. Year 2-4
Aug 2005 – Jul 2008 – in full time employment in London (was WRS registered) ; left UK for no more than 5-6 weeks a year for holiday and business journeys
PR clock could have finally started - rock-solid documentary supporting evidence required; any absence over 6 months in 12 month period (based on anniversary of arrival in UK) breaks continuity of residence and resets PR clock back to zero.
3. Year 5
Aug 2008 – Feb 2009 – in full time employment in London
PR clock running - rock-solid documentary supporting evidence required; any absence over 6 months in 12 month period (based on anniversary of arrival in UK) breaks continuity of residence and resets PR clock back to zero.
Mar 2009 – Jul 2009 – did not live in the UK; I would hope this qualifies for the regular up to 6 months exemption
Count it around anniversary of arrival in UK
4. Jul 2009 – Aug 2015 – I lived in other EU countries visiting UK at least once a year
You have not yet acquired PR since Aug 2005; absence over 6 months in 12 month period (based on anniversary of arrival in UK) breaks continuity of residence and resets PR clock back to zero; all you did in this time was visit UK - no value in terms of PR.
5. Sep 2015 – moved back to the UK to take up a full time employment
Now you're talking: PR lock has restarted (counting from zero); - rock-solid documentary supporting evidence required.
Unfortunately you seem to be on a sticky wicket. I think you have blown it, there is no evidence that you ever acquired the holy grail of PR.
Even if you had there is no evidence you would have retained PR status during your long absence from UK.
See observations above.
In a nutshell, you seem to have started exercising treaty rights (as a worker) only in August 2005.
It appears your PR clock would have only started then.
If you changed employer in the first 12 months of work did you re-register for WRS
On my analysis of your stated facts, you had
not acquired PR in UK by the time you left to go abroad in early 2009.
Now you have returned to UK and started working since autumn 2015 your PR clock will have started up again (from zero).
Suggest keep your head down, keep working and don't leave UK again for a while.
You obviously now don't have time to acquire PR in the normal way;
you will have to rely on the British sense of fair play and any transitional arrangements that
may be put in place for those currently on an EU trajectory in UK.
At the very least, suggest applying for the optional RC to confirm your current status (if you don't already have one since arriving in UK last year).
Good luck.