Post
by kafuffle » Fri Nov 14, 2014 9:40 pm
I am feeling fairly comfortable about making an FLR (FP) application but would dearly appreciate it someone could take a minute to read my recap below and give an opinion please.
I have recapped my circumstances here so that you don't have to read through all four pages of this post.
November 27, 2009 – entered the UK from Canada as a visitor. Leave to Enter for 6 months, no work or recourse to public funds.
March, 2010 – married British husband
July (?), 2010 – received letter from Home Office. Told that I had no right to be in the UK and must leave or appeal. Reason: came as a visitor and HO believed marriage was not genuine and that I did not live at my husband's address.
August (?), 2010 – Appealed in First Tier Tribunal. Acknowledged stupidity and naivete. Had assumed permission to marry, congratulations letter from HO, biometrics and payment of £495 meant everything was okay. I did not know that visitors were allowed to marry but not stay with spouse. Should have checked the rules but didn't. Not an excuse, just the truth of it.
November, 2010 Tribunal ruled in my favour. Proved it was a genuine marriage and judge said no point in making two pensioners leave to start a new life in another country. Given 3 years Discretionary Leave until November, 2013
The following has nothing directly to do with immigration but does have bearing on my position now.
April 2011 – phone call from son in Canada telling me he has cancer. Returned to Canada May for visit two weeks (son is now in remission)
October 2012 – phone call from daughter in Canada telling me that her husband of 23 years had cheated with her best friend and she was in the midst of divorce battle. Returned to Canada to visit – two weeks
January, 2013 – husband suffered a massive stroke. Hospitalized for five months. During those five months I worked tirelessly to find accommodation suitable for a wheelchair as we lived two flights up with no lift. Also found out my husband had a mountain of debt and now had only State Pension. I had my Old Age Pension from Canada. Had to sell belongings to pay rent, Council Tax, utilities and debt. Also went to hospital to visit each day – two hour bus ride each way. Was becoming exhausted and depressed, little sleep.
During this time I tried to get Pension Credit for my husband as well as help with rent and council tax. Passport taken three times by DWP and twice by Council. Also perused by Citizen's Advice. Told by all three that I was not eligible for public funds. My husband was denied Pension Credit and Council refused housing and council tax help. Said as long as I lived at the premises, he would get nothing. I fought for NINo as advised. They sent back my payment and would not give me a NINo. Council demanded proof in the form of an airline ticket that I had left the premises. Only then would my 76 year old disabled husband get help.
I sent them the proof they demanded and left the country, my home and my husband and returned to Canada end of June, 2013. Immediately he received Pension Credit, housing and council tax exemption.
While there I came to this website and asked for help. Found out from Amber, to whom I will be ever grateful, that I had been eligible for public funds all along, that my residence permit had been misread by everyone I had asked help from. I should never have been forced to leave my home. So I sold the furniture and vehicle I had just purchased and returned home.
I had been emailing the MP for our area while still in Canada and with his help I finally received my NINo.
By this time we had secured a bungalow in a small village through the Seaside and Country Homes Scheme. So when I arrived home, I had to pack up and prepare to move, end of October, 2013. Our new home had been lived in for many years by a heavy smoker and needed paint and thorough cleaning. I did this.
I also filled out my FLM (O) application and sent it along with my passport to HO.
What I haven't mentioned and will not mention in detail is that my marriage was in serious trouble and had been from almost the beginning. This got worse after the stroke. Also I was exhausted and needed respite. I wasn't allowed it. In December of 2014, I asked for my passport so I could go back to Canada to rest and get well as I had no place to go here in England. My passport was returned and my FLR (O) application was discarded. I bought a ticket back to Canada. Before time to leave, I was told I could have respite after all. So I tore up my ticket and re-applied for FLR (O). Still needed respite, falling deeper into exhaustion and depression, unable to eat or sleep. Was denied it again. Asked for passport back once again. Again my application was discarded. This time I left, February, 2014.
Diagnosed with Adrenal Exhaustion. Under doctor's care for 9 months in Canada, I have recuperated as far as I ever will.
Returned to UK October as a 6 months visitor. Living apart from my husband, renting a room nearby. See him daily, take him for drives, day trips, shopping etc. There is no-one else to do this for him. Can't live at the bungalow as I can't get enough rest and quiet.
This is where I want to live, now and after my husband's death (prognosis, 2 years). So my question is, is it likely that an application – FLR (FP) – be likely to succeed. Extraordinary Circumstances, of course, being my husband's health and impossibility to emigrate and his need for my assistance.
I hope this recap will give someone reading it enough information to help me decide for certain if I should go this route. The £601 fee is all that I have left in the bank. Living off Pensions now and can't afford to waste a penny.
Thank you so much.