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This is complicated and not needed in this situation.Brigid from Ireland wrote:If the family has money, they should set up their own company in Ireland (best for a cousin to do this, not spouse or parent, for legal reasons). This option should come in at less than two thousand euro per year per person in total, including cost of employers prsi and all tax, if you know how to do the paperwork yourself.
Alternatively they can use a contracting company, but this is more expensive, as the contracting company takes a percentage.
Either way, get the company (their own company or a contracting company) to pay a wage of 300 euro/week to the EU citizen and/or to the spouse, if the spouse has the right to work in Ireland. Citizen and/or spouse could, for example, recieve pay for translating documents each week. This work can be done from any location. The key is that it is paid for through the Irish tax/revenue/prsi system. Then at the end of each year the employee has 52 payslips showing that he was employed each week by the company. The company could even send the employee abroad for several months each year. The payslip is proof of residence (both for immigration and if one needs to receive social welfare payments).
Under this system, the wife when pregnant gets her maternity benefit as she works, either worker if sick is covered for illness payments from welfare department.
This is the system that is used by many families who need to get rights for relatives. Employment is what confers rights, so they are employed by a family company. Not a company owned by a parent or spouse or child, but other more distant family member.
The MRC was wrong I think in this case.MrsKhan wrote:Thank you very much for your reply, you've been very helpful. I am especially relieved to hear that I will not need to be employed in order for him to get stamp 4. I am just curious as to where you heard this information though, as I was previously in contact with the Migrant Rights Centre, who were very helpful but also contradictory in what they said. They claimed that I would need to be in employment and that my husband would need a separate Irish visa to enter the country regardless of where he is travelling from. However, after my own research online and on various immigration boards I concluded that his EEA2 should work if we have full knowledge of our rights under EU law and proof of marriage. So it was the employment thing that I was most worried about.