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I think No 1 is explaining no2 . They probably need further evidence you are exercising treaty rights.petra wrote:hi all
I had sent jointly my EEA1 and my non-eea husband's EEA2 applications to Ho last week but both are returned this morning.
Wants
1) More evidence of Self employment
2) Evidence of exercising Treaty right
I know the first one is understandable but what is meant by showing Evidence of exercising Treaty right?
Thanks
My short history a bit
I am From Czech Republic
Husband from Pakistan
We married in UK in 2005.
then We both were living in Czech until we came here about 2 months ago. we have two children. Husband has a 6 months Entry clearance Visa issued in Czech which is finishing this month..
About self employment I provided the following.Obie wrote:
I think No 1 is explaining no2 . They probably need further evidence you are exercising treaty rights.
What documents did you provide them initially?
I will write the exact context here once I get home.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:What exactly did home office say about your application and what exactly did they ask for?
It seems what you sent is decent. Do you have any clients? Any UK clients who would be willing to write you a letter of reference?
I think what you have provided should suffice.petra wrote: About self employment I provided the following.
I am qualified Tailor and I work from home.. what else I can provide
- Self employment confirmation letter from HMRC
Accountant Letter confirming me as client
Provided business Invoices issued to me by e.g. Makro etc.
Did not receive anything about National Insurance payment so wrote there "To Follow"
My bank 2 personal statements which is just started from April
everything came BACK with it i.e. bank statements, invoices, accountant lette and etc,..Obie wrote:I think what you have provided should suffice.petra wrote: About self employment I provided the following.
I am qualified Tailor and I work from home.. what else I can provide
- Self employment confirmation letter from HMRC
Accountant Letter confirming me as client
Provided business Invoices issued to me by e.g. Makro etc.
Did not receive anything about National Insurance payment so wrote there "To Follow"
My bank 2 personal statements which is just started from April
My suspicion is they might have lost them. Do you have a copy of those documents.
I think you should resend it to them and write a letter to them saying they should provide you list of document other than the ones you have already supplied that the need.
You should also add what directive suggested
I am an EU citizen. I am self employed in the UK and have been since arriving in the UK on DATE. As a self-employed person who is working in the UK, I am exercising my treaty rights under EU law, and as such my family and I have a right to be resident in the UK. I have enclosed all evidence that I have and I request and require that you proceed with processing my application and issue my confirmation and the Residence Card of my spouse as soon as possible and in no case longer than 6 months from the date of my original application.
I do not yet have evidence of National Insurance contributions, but this is not a specific required prerequisite under EU law for you to proceed with processing our applications. As you are aware, you are required to be flexible in processing applications from self-employed persons.
And don't worry about your husband's Family Permit 'finishing' on 20th July. It was just an Entry Clearance for him to enter the UK as a Family Member under EU rules. As long as he is your husband and you are exercising your treaty rights, he will not be an overstayer; even after expiry of the EEA FP! He has every right to be with you in the UK.petra wrote:
The husband Family Permit VISA is finishing 20th July
OhRozen wrote:And don't worry about your husband's Family Permit 'finishing' on 20th July. It was just an Entry Clearance for him to enter the UK as a Family Member under EU rules. As long as he is your husband and you are exercising your treaty rights, he will not be an overstayer; even after expiry of the EEA FP! He has every right to be with you in the UK.petra wrote:
The husband Family Permit VISA is finishing 20th July
Trust me, 100% SURE! So stop worrying about that particular aspect, and just concentrate on sorting out the evidence they want.petra wrote:OhRozen wrote:And don't worry about your husband's Family Permit 'finishing' on 20th July. It was just an Entry Clearance for him to enter the UK as a Family Member under EU rules. As long as he is your husband and you are exercising your treaty rights, he will not be an overstayer; even after expiry of the EEA FP! He has every right to be with you in the UK.petra wrote:
The husband Family Permit VISA is finishing 20th July
Are you sure?
anybody can please confirm.
Because this is the only thing worries me..
Yes, it's correct what Rozen says.petra wrote:anybody can please confirm.Rozen wrote:And don't worry about your husband's Family Permit 'finishing' on 20th July. It was just an Entry Clearance for him to enter the UK as a Family Member under EU rules. As long as he is your husband and you are exercising your treaty rights, he will not be an overstayer; even after expiry of the EEA FP! He has every right to be with you in the UK.
Family members who come to the United Kingdom with an EEA or Swiss national, but who are not themselves nationals of an EEA country or Switzerland, can apply for a residence card (with some exceptions - see 'Family member residence stamp' below). The residence card confirms their right of residence under European law.
A residence card is normally valid for five years, and takes the form of an endorsement that is placed in the holder's passport.
If you want to apply for a residence card, you must complete application form EEA2. You can download the form from the right side of this page.
For your application to be accepted, you must provide a valid passport and evidence that you are a family member of the EEA national. See section 9 of the EEA2 application form for details of the supporting evidence that you must provide.
Are you sure? From what I have read, they changed procedure on 1st June: http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... ns-june-09Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Note also that you do not need to send your original passports. You can send photocopies. Note in your letter that you will send the original passports when they are ready to issue the Residence Card.
I thought that was coming later. Good spot.sebhoff wrote:Are you sure? From what I have read, they changed procedure on 1st June: http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... ns-june-09
It seems to me that an application with certified copies instead of originals would (unfortunately) qualify for rejection of the application.
Ooo.. I would miss my passport. But then I do not also have an ID card.petra wrote:I do not need them for a while anyway.. :)
Is there a time limit for registering as self-employed?
There is no time limit to register. However, if you do not register within three months from the end of the month in which you first started your business, you will receive a penalty of £100 for late notification.
I think this has been discussed elsewhere already, but anyway: I see *absolutely* no advantage in the new process as the only thing they will do after checking things is putting your application onto the huge lets-collect-dust pile. If this process had been introduced to distinguish between patently obvious cases that can be decided within 5 minutes (and then *are* decided immediately) and others, I would greatly welcome the change. But of course this is not the case. So the only thing that changes is that more people will find themselves in a situation where they need to extract their passports from the claws of our beloved Home Office.Morpheo wrote: In a way, I think the new process is good because at least they make sure that everything is there before adding an application to the queue.