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Sometimes I do think there should be a drama queen test for prospective immigrants.I DO BELIEVE YOU TRY TO HELP PEOPLE WHICH KIND OF YOU BUT NEXT TIME BE SURE YOU KNOW THE RIGHT THING BECAUSE IT COULD RESULT OF CATASTROPHY!
:- I shall come up with a simple illustration as to how wrong that is! Take someone settled in the UK earning ... well let's say £50000 pa ... and who has a child from a former relationship living with them ... and claims Child Benefit and Tax Credits because of that child .... so whilst both Child Benefit and Tax Credits are within the definition of Public Funds, it is nevertheless quite clear that the UK settled person can ensure that a visa applicant will not need to claim certain Public Funds.I HAD AN INTERVIEW WITH VICE COUNSIL OF THE BRITISH EMBASSY AND HE EXPLAINED TO ME THAT IF THE SPONSOR IS GETTING PUBLIC FUNDS MEANS HE OR SHE CAN T SUPPORT THE HUSBAND OR WIFE!
Also for the benefit of those dealing with visa applications outside the UK, Chapter 9 of the DSPs ..... click here .... and then go to 9.2, part of which reads :-Cases where money from public funds is being received by an individual’s partner do not count as “recourse to public funds” – for example, where child benefit is being received by a British citizen married to an individual subject to immigration control. In such cases, the individual receiving the money is entitled to do so. Their partner’s immigration status makes no difference to this.
In some exceptional cases, the relevant benefits, tax credits or housing legislation allows individuals subject to immigration control to claim certain public funds in their own right. Paragraph 6B of the Rules provides that, where these exceptional circumstances apply, the individual concerned should not be treated as having recourse to public funds.
So again I have no apologies to make about my earlier comments. Apologies now sought also from "a leading legal firm" and a "British Embassy"! Only joking!There is no objection to the British citizen/settled sponsor receiving any public funds to which he is entitled in his own right. The important factor to consider is whether there will be a need for the sponsor to claim additional public funds to support the applicant. The fact that an applicant may not be eligible to claim public funds is not in itself sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the Rules.
If the sponsor is in receipt of public funds, it does not mean that they will be unable to support the applicant, although clearly a person who is heavily dependent on the state because they don't have sufficient means of their own will find it difficult to support another person for any length of time. The question to be considered is whether additional recourse to public funds will be necessary if the applicant is granted leave to enter.