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I don't have any experience but I would hope that a letter from Romania stating she was covered by the Romanian Health services during that period would act similar to EHIC and would be accepted. The CSI requirement is vague and the HO can't ask for a specific cover to meet the requirement so hopefully that would do the job.airbender wrote: Any precedent or examples of what kind of letter from Romania would have worked?
Thanks for your help. We really need to be specific, what exact letter can we get from Romania (from something similar to GP?)Jambo wrote:I don't have any experience but I would hope that a letter from Romania stating she was covered by the Romanian Health services during that period would act similar to EHIC and would be accepted. The CSI requirement is vague and the HO can't ask for a specific cover to meet the requirement so hopefully that would do the job.airbender wrote: Any precedent or examples of what kind of letter from Romania would have worked?
As what I'm suggesting is basically backdating EHIC, I would assume it should come form the same authority that provides EHIC or some type of a health services authority (ministry of health?). Not a GP.airbender wrote:Thanks for your help. We really need to be specific, what exact letter can we get from Romania (from something similar to GP?)
The European Commission are in dispute with the UK over the CSI mainly because they see the NHS to be enough to be regarded as CSI which is required by the directive.also, I am just thinking if HO is not enforcing the change of registration certificate when someone *MAY* have moved categories, then how can they expect someone to comply with insurance requirement in the PAST?
Shouldn't they enforce it via Unis at the time of admission? This whole requirement seems very facing stupid. Sorry for my french!!
I suppose what you mean is that for the uni it is sufficient to check if the student is really an EEA national but it is no their task to check the full residence requirements. In the definition of the EEA regulations a "student" must also hold CSI. Otherwise that person would not be a qualified person.Jambo wrote:There is no point of enforcing it at uni because there is no requirement for EEA nationals to have CSI. It is only required if they want to benefit from the regulations in order for their residence time in the UK to be recognised for Permanent Residence.
I think what Jambo means is that it does not matter to many EU national students until they decide that the want to benefit from the regs; often to bring a third country family member into the UK, then the rules are enforced to the letter.sum1 wrote:I suppose what you mean is that for the uni it is sufficient to check if the student is really an EEA national but it is no their task to check the full residence requirements. In the definition of the EEA regulations a "student" must also hold CSI. Otherwise that person would not be a qualified person.Jambo wrote:There is no point of enforcing it at uni because there is no requirement for EEA nationals to have CSI. It is only required if they want to benefit from the regulations in order for their residence time in the UK to be recognised for Permanent Residence.
There is no third country family member angle involved. She just wants to apply for permanent residence and then nationality based on marriage with me (a BC).EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:I think what Jambo means is that it does not matter to many EU national students until they decide that the want to benefit from the regs; often to bring a third country family member into the UK, then the rules are enforced to the letter.sum1 wrote:I suppose what you mean is that for the uni it is sufficient to check if the student is really an EEA national but it is no their task to check the full residence requirements. In the definition of the EEA regulations a "student" must also hold CSI. Otherwise that person would not be a qualified person.Jambo wrote:There is no point of enforcing it at uni because there is no requirement for EEA nationals to have CSI. It is only required if they want to benefit from the regulations in order for their residence time in the UK to be recognised for Permanent Residence.
She never had any medical insurance in Romania either. We checked Romania's medical insurance angle, but cant find too much detail on that either.Obie wrote:I believe if she hold an EU medical insurance issued by Romania, then she should be fine. It is not strictly speaking correct that she has to hold CSI.
See hereairbender wrote:
The note about EU challenging UK for not considering NHS is interesting. Do we know when are we going to get any outcome on that?
If you carefully read the first post, she already applied for BC (and got refused) and she didn't have a registration certificate as a student.AndreeaS wrote:I would suggest you go for the PR certificate first (EEA3) - application is free and once granted, you don't risk losing the application fee for naturalisation and you have a much stronger case anyway.
In chapter 6 Annex B of the PR workcase guidance you will find CSI - transitional arrangements for students: “an application for permanent residence as a student will not be refused solely on the grounds that there is no evidence of comprehensive sickness insurance on the date of decision where: UKBA issued a registration certificate to the applicant on the basis of their residence in the UK as a student before 20th June 2011” (google it).
I've been in a somehow similar situation (by the way my husband found this exemption, no lawyer was able to help!!!) and I just got my PR certificate.
According to the caseworker instructions that is true, but I would be surprised that it is actually funded in law. As discussed, the EU is disputing the whole concept of CSI in the UK as flawed, and I tend to agree. In any case they cannot expect her to comply with regulations that were imposed after the period under dispute - I think the CSI rule only came into force with the new government. The transitional arrangements are meant as a "fig leave", but they are obviously phrased to narrowly.Jambo wrote:The transitional arrangements can't be used in her case unless her blue card was issued as a student so the CSI requirement won't be waived.
Thanks for clarifying that point, Jambo.Jambo wrote:This was an application for naturalisation. There is no legal right of appeal under British nationality law (although the case can be re-examined if a decision is proved to have been flawed).thsths wrote: If you application is refused, you always have a right of appeal.
Leaving the "what is CSI" dispute aside, the regulations since 2006 have always required CSI from students and this was part of the forms since 2008. The fact that it wasn't enforced before June 2011 doesn't make your stay legal if you didn't comply with the regulations. Police don't stop cars driving just a few miles over the limit. You are still breaking the law by doing so.thsths wrote:According to the caseworker instructions that is true, but I would be surprised that it is actually funded in law. As discussed, the EU is disputing the whole concept of CSI in the UK as flawed, and I tend to agree.
In any case they cannot expect her to comply with regulations that were imposed after the period under dispute - I think the CSI rule only came into force with the new government. The transitional arrangements are meant as a "fig leave", but they are obviously phrased to narrowly.
Interesting thoughts. I agree that CSI is in the directive and the corresponding regulations, but...Jambo wrote:Leaving the "what is CSI" dispute aside, the regulations since 2006 have always required CSI from students and this was part of the forms since 2008. The fact that it wasn't enforced before June 2011 doesn't make your stay legal if you didn't comply with the regulations. Police don't stop cars driving just a few miles over the limit. You are still breaking the law by doing so.thsths wrote:According to the caseworker instructions that is true, but I would be surprised that it is actually funded in law. As discussed, the EU is disputing the whole concept of CSI in the UK as flawed, and I tend to agree.
In any case they cannot expect her to comply with regulations that were imposed after the period under dispute - I think the CSI rule only came into force with the new government. The transitional arrangements are meant as a "fig leave", but they are obviously phrased to narrowly.
I don't think it has to do with the new government. This definitely doesn't help with their target of reducing immigration level. It just postpones EEA families becoming PR / BC.