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You appear to have no grounds to reside and work; that RC is not a visa. It seems it was out of date as soon as it was issued.koagiri02 wrote:hello everyone,
I am non-eea with resident card expiring next week and i need your urgent advice.
I got my RC as extended family member, my eea cousine is french and lives in manchester while i stay in london. my eea sponsor has not been working because she was having baving babies (2) in the last 5 yrs.
I non-eea have got a family of my own with 3 kids and partner, they all are british now (my kids and partner)
Can i still apply for PR with my eea sponsor (cousine)which am suppose to depend upon according to my RC.
i can furnish with more information if needed
thanks
Casa's source must be out of date. (Not being in breach of the immigration rules can sometimes substitute for having leave to remain, but it is not a universal principle.)Casa wrote:You can't apply for FLR as you aren't here under the UK Immigration Rules.
E-LTRP.2.1 is not a problem, for the OP has no leave to be in the UK! E-LTRP2.2(a) appears not to be an issue. E-LTR2.2(b) is more difficult. As far as I can tell, the OP appears to be here either in accordance with the EEA Regulations (but I think the OP is not), or in breach of the immigration laws (which I think is the case), and so the OP depends on EX.1.E-LTRP.2.1. The applicant must not be in the UK-
(a) as a visitor; or
(b) with valid leave granted for a period of 6 months or less, unless that leave is as a fiancé(e) or proposed civil partner, or was granted pending the outcome of family court or divorce proceedings
E-LTRP.2.2. The applicant must not be in the UK –
(a) on temporary admission or temporary release, unless:
(i) the Secretary of State is satisfied that the applicant arrived in the UK more than 6 months prior to the date of application; and
(ii) paragraph EX.1. applies; or
(b) in breach of immigration laws (disregarding any period of overstaying for a period of 28 days or less), unless paragraph EX.1. applies.
Those people may not have factored in UK immigration regulations.koagiri02 wrote:Thanks so very much for your responce
My partner has a serious health condition which warrant me to be the primary carer to my my kids and wife.
The social service,community health team,GP, children services, the children school all agreed in the child protection meeting that i should be the primary carer to my kids and wife and was adviced not to work. i have been doing that since 2012. what do you suggest i do thanks
You still seem to have the problem that you have no viable Union citizen sponsor.koagiri02 wrote:Yes my family was awarded DLA now PIP since 2013 it's been reviewed now. I do receive Carers allowance also.
Regulation 15A(4A) looks like the most applicable. The best relevant British citizen seems to be the OP's wife.noajthan wrote:Look into acquiring some sort of derivative right to remain.
He said he doesn't work.Richard W wrote:
It also has the benefit of making the OP's working lawful, whether or not he acquires a new RC. However, one must be applied for to keep his employer safe.
Forget your cousin, you are on your own now.noajthan wrote:You still seem to have the problem that you have no viable Union citizen sponsor.
And DLA is a complex area, suggest you contact the Aire Centre who have run some initiatives in this area, see:
http://www.airecentre.org/data/files/re ... s-2014.pdf