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Hi Mate,Londonguy79 wrote:So I also went to the Croydon PEO today (Wed 28th March 2012) for ILR.
My story is I am Australian and my wife is from the Czech Republic. We met in Australia. She went back to the Czech Republic so I decided to move to London under a two year working holiday visa. We dated for five years and then got married in Prague in Sep 2010.
I arrived Aug 2005. I was on the working holiday visa for one year then swapped to a work permit. I was on that for one year then swapped to Tier 1 for 4 years.
Because my wife is Czech over the 5 year period my whole days out of the UK totalled 275. This is because when we were dating I would travel to Prague most weekends from London and also for our wedding and xmas holidays. My longest consecutive period out of the UK was 31 days.
They have deferred the decision on my ILR because the lady said I am "way over" my allowed days outside of the UK. I thought having a Czech wife would be a good enough reason but it doesnt look like it.
So now I have to play the waiting game for them to send my passport back to me with a decision.
Does anyone know how long this might take? Do I now go behind all the postal ILR applications? Or will it be quicker because I was PEO?
On my days outside of the UK I did a very nice excel spreadsheets with dates and also the pages for stamp in stamp out and stamp back into the UK. One thing I thought of I used the IRIS system to enter the UK a few times maybe they need to confirm that so they are sure of the days away.
The letter they gave me does not request anything it just says the following:
**********
Dear Mr ...
I am writing to acknowledge receipt of your application.
Your application is valid but there are further enquiries that need to be made on your case and as such your application as been passed to a team where these enquiries can be made. In light of this we are keeping all of the documents submitted with your original application which will be held until a final decision is made"
************
Do you think this is bad news? Or is there a chance it might be approved? I have lived in London for seven years I have made a life here with my wife and I want to stay. I also work hard and honestly. I do not understand why does the UK government care where I spend my weekends? Just because my wife is Czech and we travel there often means I cant stay in the UK? Its ridiculous!!
If they deny my ILR. What can I do? Appeal? I think I can also go down the route of getting a visa from my czech wife correct?
Sorry for all the questions. I am just frustrated with the system.
Thoughts?
Londonguy.
Did you provide any Cover letter explaining absences?Londonguy79 wrote:Hi Jaskiratbaweja.. I thought so.. So whats your gut feeing for my case?
jaskiratbaweja, Thanks for the link but where does it says it is applicable for Tier 1 General the 180 days was for Tier 1 (Investors or Entrepreneurs) therefore can you please direct me to the right piece of information for Tier 1 and how many days allowed within 5 years and las 12 months.jaskiratbaweja wrote:It is probably a typo. The absence limit is 180 days in 5 years. Defined in the
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary
However it says Holidays consistent with Paid Leave and Short business trips may be disregarded.
One interpretation of the modernised guidelines is if you did not take paid annual leave for your weekend holiday, then it cannot be discounted.PortOut wrote:
Hi Mate,
I have bad news. It is highly unlikey (based on my recent experience with my wife 2 weeks ago)
Yes, the UK does care where you spend weekends.
We are an Australian couple living in London for over 5 years. My wife went in to get her ILR after having done the Life in the UK test.
We have gone home to OZ for xmas twice and travel a lot for holidays, so her day count was 230. Note - no 90 day absences and she was continuously employed for the whole time and as she is on an Ancestral Visa the paperwork is relatively straightforward.
She was refused at the PEO for exceeding the day count despite her work writing a letter stating she has been employed the whole time.
Ridiculous.
Or as my wife said: "So all the poor people out the front who don't have enough money to go on annual vacations are fine to get ILR because they are broke??"
Great move UK...
Clearly, weekends out of the country are not using paid leave, as people are not paid for the weekend, but why on earth the UK cares what you do on your weekend is beyond me (so trips to Brighton are fine, but to Calais are not).parasiteslost wrote:One interpretation of the modernised guidelines is if you did not take paid annual leave for your weekend holiday, then it cannot be discounted.PortOut wrote:
Hi Mate,
I have bad news. It is highly unlikey (based on my recent experience with my wife 2 weeks ago)
Yes, the UK does care where you spend weekends.
We are an Australian couple living in London for over 5 years. My wife went in to get her ILR after having done the Life in the UK test.
We have gone home to OZ for xmas twice and travel a lot for holidays, so her day count was 230. Note - no 90 day absences and she was continuously employed for the whole time and as she is on an Ancestral Visa the paperwork is relatively straightforward.
She was refused at the PEO for exceeding the day count despite her work writing a letter stating she has been employed the whole time.
Ridiculous.
Or as my wife said: "So all the poor people out the front who don't have enough money to go on annual vacations are fine to get ILR because they are broke??"
Great move UK...
A letter just saying that you were continuously employed for the whole time is insufficient and will not convince the case worker. The letter needs to state specifically that the absences outside the UK were part of paid annual leave.
Hi: we're not going to bother reapplying as her ancestral visa can be extended for an indefinite number of 5 year periods and her day count won't change any time soon (she just got new ancestral visa issued instead of the ILR)Londonguy79 wrote:Hi guys thanks for the replies..
Mandy I cant really find any official info about the absences I only found info on this website. Is it 180 in 6months? Do you have a link for that info? Mine was 275 over 5 years but in the past 12 months ive been out for 62 days...
Portout - Oh that is bad news. Are you going to bother applying? So now does that mean your both going to have to go home? Or will you apply for another T1 extension? I think the same thing will happen to me. My biggest consecutive period was 32days back in Brisbane. See the Home office should understand most Aussies want to travel so going to Europe on the weekends is the best part of living in the UK. Then whenever we go back to Australia its always normally for 3 weeks otherwise its not worth it! But like you said instead we get penalised for it. So now if they reject my application I guess we will have to move back to Australia the UK will loose everything I bring to the economy here. But I guess out of 60 million people it does not matter.
Lets see what happens.
Thanks for your reply.
This is out of order. The guidelines clearly states:PortOut wrote:
Clearly, weekends out of the country are not using paid leave, as people are not paid for the weekend, but why on earth the UK cares what you do on your weekend is beyond me (so trips to Brighton are fine, but to Calais are not).
They also made it clear that Paid annual leave is now counted towards your 180 days (despite guidelines suggesting it is not to be counted), which would suggest they are reinterpreting the rules to make it harder.
They also disregarded a letter from my employer about my wife taking paid leave to travel with me for work.
Code: Select all
When assessing if an applicant has met the criteria for five years continuous residence in the UK, short absences abroad may be disregarded, provided the applicant has clearly continued to be based in the UK. For example:
• holidays (consistent with annual paid leave)
• short business trips (consistent with maintaining employment or self-employment in the UK).
Are weekends paid leave? I suspect not but it may be worth getting specialist immigration advice. It does seem a bit daft that regularly going away for the weekend should impact your situation but this may be the way they interpret the law.jaskiratbaweja wrote:It is probably a typo. The absence limit is 180 days in 5 years. Defined in the
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary
However it says Holidays consistent with Paid Leave and Short business trips may be disregarded.
And where does it say it is impossible?manda_alba wrote:
However, from UKBA guidance online nowhere does it say another Tier 1 extension is possible.
Londonguy79 wrote:Hi,
I am currently on a Tier One visa which expires April 30th. I applied for EEA2 in Jan.
I think my Tier one will expire before I get my EEA2 back. I am now a little worried if my EEA2 is denied can I then try to extend my Tier one? Or wont I be able to because my Tier one has expired?
Also my friends EEA2 was denied. UKBA has kept her passport. How quickly do you have to leave the country?
Cheers,
Londonguy.