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That is impossible! Unless you are actually saying that both of you applied as individuals. Or maybe we just have a terminology problem here?I carelessly applied for Jobseeker's Allowance jointly.
There are two possible routes here, and I wonder whether you have considered both of them? When she applies for ILR your wife will need to submit either a pass certificate from the Citizenship Test, or alternatively a completion certificate from a combined ESOL/Citizenship course. Have you looked at that second option?She will not be applying this year for Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) as her English is not good enough.
Anyway, it looks like we will need to pay twice.John wrote:...but the cost will probably not be £335 per occasion, given that it is expected that applications fees from next month will be different. But new fee levels not yet announced.
I applied first and when my wife came over I applied to claim jointly. My allowance was duly increased.That is impossible! Unless you are actually saying that both of you applied as individuals. Or maybe we just have a terminology problem here?
Yes, I read about the second option in a Telegraph article from last year and have downloaded a teachers' pack. There seems to be lots of stuff online for teachers, but little about available courses.Have you looked at that second option?
You don't disclose any information about your location, which is your right, but in the absence of that information it is difficult to suggest where any local courses might be.There seems to be lots of stuff online for teachers, but little about available courses.
No, you did not apply to "claim jointly". You merely claimed for your wife as a dependant, which is rather different. Based upon what you have posted, your wife has not actually claimed JSA.I applied first and when my wife came over I applied to claim jointly. My allowance was duly increased.
Yes, you are right - she is a dependant; and yes, she is the only dependant. For visa purposes, does this count as using public funds?John wrote: Regarding JSA :-
No, you did not apply to "claim jointly". You merely claimed for your wife as a dependant, which is rather different. Based upon what you have posted, your wife has not actually claimed JSA.
So the question is, should you have claimed for your wife as a dependant? Before delving into the technical parts of that can I ask, is your wife the only dependant, or are there also a child(ren) living in your residence that you were also claiming as dependant(s)?
Alas, having been out of the country for 10 years, I was eligible only for the income-based JSA.John wrote:Sorry, about the JSA, I neglected to ask which of the two types of JSA you claimed? Did you claim contribution-based Jobseeker's Allowance, or alternatively was it income-based Jobseeker's Allowance?
Accordingly I don't think you should have claimed the extra I-B JSA, using your wife as a dependant. That is, no problem you claiming for yourself, but you should not have claimed the extra for your dependant.6A. For the purpose of these Rules, a person is not to be regarded as having (or potentially having) recourse to public funds merely because he is (or will be) reliant in whole or in part on public funds provided to his sponsor, unless, as a result of his presence in the United Kingdom, the sponsor is (or would be) entitled to increased or additional public funds.
No, the claim has not stopped. She has been claiming as a dependant for about 4 months. We would find it hard to live on my allowance alone.John wrote:Has the claim now stopped? If so, who long ago are we talking about? And for roughly how many weeks was the JSA claimed for?
Are you sure your wife just has a 2-year spouse visa? Or given the length of time the two of you had been married when the visa was granted, well exceeding four years, hasn't she got Indefinite Leave to Enter?his wife of ten years
Yes, you are right again, John.John wrote: Are you able to look at her visa to make sure what sort of visa she has?
Well, this is great news! (Of course, I will phone the HO to confirm that she does not need to renew her visa.)John wrote:Eamon, given that she already has ILE, and has clearly entered the UK before the date specified on that visa, she has not got to bother with FLR or with ILR! The date on the visa can now be ignored. The ILR effectively became ILR as soon as she entered the UK.
OK.John wrote:You were quite right about that! That is exactly what the date on the visa meant.I thought ILE meant she could enter UK anytime before the visa expired.
Yes! You are not the first to be confused by the date printed on an ILE visa ... and I am sure you will not be the last. That date merely represents the latest date that the ILE visa can be used for the first time to enter the UK. Now that your wife has done that, she really does have a visa without an expiry date.But just to be clear, do you mean that she can use this visa to enter UK again after July 2007