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Friends, thanks for all your support. I have received my naturalization approval letter through this morning. Seems the call from case worker didnt deter my application time lines. I have included specific time lines with my application in the naturalization processing timelines only page.Ayyubi72 wrote:Its caseworker job to make whatever enquiries he wants to make. If he wants any information from your husband, then let him get this information. If he can't contact your husband by phone, then let him write to your husband. Why do you worry and take headache of a caseworker?masti11 wrote:Spouse Application for Naturalization
Date of application - 22/05/2103 (NCS)
I have put my contact number in the naturalization application form for my spouse and I have received a call from the case worker during my spouse naturalization application process and the case worker asked for my spouse contact details which i have duly provided.
Case worked called back again after sometime saying that my spouse is not lifting the phone and asked for alternate contact number. I have provided the number but the case worker didnt call again.
Its been 3 days since this has happened and we didnt receive any further communication in any form call or letter in post or email either. Dont know the reason behind the call as they didnt leave any message. Should i worry about this or is there a chance that it will delay the application process?? Is there anyway we couldnt get in touch with UKBA to find out the reason for calling us??
Any prior experiences like this are much appreciated?
If your application is correct, then you do not need to worry about internal UKBA matters. Its their headache, let them deal with it.
Hi Ayyubi72, thanks for your reply.Ayyubi72 wrote:Not really an immigration matter. Sort it out with hmrc. It does not sound right that you pay by cheque to hmrc and payment clears to hmrc and then hmrc says they havent got it.
I am sure you are not telling the truth. If tax has not been paid, hmrc sends you a proper letter, they don't just ring you and ask for money. If you don't pay after getting their letter, they regularly keep sending reminders. It seems you have defaulted on your tax payments and now just trying to find a way to get through your naturalisation.
Hi Ayyubi,Ayyubi72 wrote:Yes, you do not need to be employed, but on the other hand if you are actually employed then you are supposed to pay tax and NI and not work just cash in hand. Just an example to give you the idea what its about.
Since you run a limited company, you are expected to pay tax and ni due on the company. It seems you are not very familiar with tax and accounting matters and just blindly follow the accountant. Good idea will be to familiarize yourself with the basics of how it all works.
Same goes with council tax. You must pay council tax if you are liable to pay council tax. If you live with your uncle who pays his council tax, then you are not liable to pay for council tax.
If your uncle has a car, then its your uncle who is liable to insure the car, not you.
Same goes with absolutely everything in life.
You are not required to pay for something that you are not liable for.
*************************************************************Derivaz wrote:Hi! Guys
I'm new to this forum; I've joined it because it seems quite useful and based on people's experiences and data
This is my question: I'm a EU citizen and have been living and working full time in the UK for 10 years, so I'm thinking of applying for naturalisation; I've never had any conviction, fine, insolvency, I pay income tax and NI (through my employer) etc.... and I meet all the criteria, my only concern is that 3 years ago I was sharing a flat with the Landlord and the Council Tax wasn't in my name, I don't have the contract and couldn't get a hold of the landlord if I tried; do you think that if the home office checks my name against that address and it shows that the council tax bill wasn't in my name; that could be a problem?. It was paid by the landlord, it just wasn't in my name, because my agreement included everything in the rent. Has anyone been in the same situation?
Thanks in advance.
D.
Ha, I wish I could apply this sentence to my case We applied on 13/06 (joint EEA+non EEA fam.member application) and are still waiting. Both applications are straightforward. My name on the acknowledgement letter was written wrongly so I emailed them to raise my concerns. They emailed back (again addressing me with a wrong name!) after 4 working days saying that the name in their data base is correct and saying that application is still being dealt with and that they can't give us any updates. Is it so difficult to get four letters of a name correctly?!Astrid24 wrote:It's amazing how fast the June applications are being processed!
Yes, I agree, not in a hurry either but would be nice to get it sooner rather than later. Non-EEA national is from Serbia, and I've seen EEA/non-EEA joint applications including children being dealth with within 2-3 weeks. Why-oh-why can't we all have the same processing timeline? As I said our both applications are straightforward - we probably got assigned to a lazy officer that likes to hang on his fb page a lotDerivaz wrote:Hope you get your approval soon, mate; but if you submitted it in June it's only been a month; so you shouldn't worry
Also, joint applications might take longer; also depending on the nationality of the non-EEA person, but they replied to you, so that's a good sign
I'm not bothered about the length of the process; I'm not in a hurry, I just wouldn't like a letter to get lost and get my application refused because of that or miss the 3 month deadline for the ceremony, because the letter got lost and then have to re-apply, etc...
fingers crossed and good luck
D
I've called the council's BC Ceremony team. They have confirmed they accept the Residence Registration Card without any problems as it confirms my identity.Derivaz wrote:I'm not 100% sure, but I don't think the Permanent Residence or Residence card is considered a form of ID; every time I've asked, they've told me to bring my passport or National EAA ID; so in your case, I'd take your National ID as well; if you sent the passport, you should have a National ID and if you are EAA, that would be enough.
I'm not 100% sure, but my experience has been that only the passport or national ID are considered proof of ID; hope it helps.
I have just attended the ceremony yesterday, they dont ask for any ID apart from your Invitation letter.SerMCG wrote:I've called the council's BC Ceremony team. They have confirmed they accept the Residence Registration Card without any problems as it confirms my identity.Derivaz wrote:I'm not 100% sure, but I don't think the Permanent Residence or Residence card is considered a form of ID; every time I've asked, they've told me to bring my passport or National EAA ID; so in your case, I'd take your National ID as well; if you sent the passport, you should have a National ID and if you are EAA, that would be enough.
I'm not 100% sure, but my experience has been that only the passport or national ID are considered proof of ID; hope it helps.
I feel better now.