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That's a little extreme.miko77 wrote:
When my wife says that we plan to move to the UK, but right now I am in Germany we should be fine, shouldn't we? Right now, we have the situation that whenever she enters I am flying with her, and leave the next day.
That's interesting.After 90 days, you either need to be working in the UK, or be considered self sufficient, or commuting back and forth to Germany but coming home to the UK at least once per week.
I don't think your situation is similar to the op's.simple_shoes wrote:Hi, my wife and I have a similar problem.
I am italian, my wife is russian, I have been working in UK for five years (no interruption)
she lived here with me and worked for 3 yrs with resident permit for non-EEA family member of an EEA citizen.
I now received a job offer to work as a contractor of a UK recruitment agency, to work for a French company.
Work will be performed at the company headquarters in France so I'm required to pay my income taxes there. Employment is temporary (~1yr) but it's very good money so if I accept I would commute on a weekly basis and
come back to the UK every weekend. My wife would remain here as she would like to keep her employment.
Our life is here, and at end of this job I will return working back to UK (where all our life, friends and investments are). Basically it would be as any 'normal' weekly commuter within the country.
What I can't understand is if there are any limitations to my wife's right to reside here if I start this contractor job in France and, if this is the case, how long can she continue to reside in the UK while I will commence the employment overseas.
I've called the home office help desk three times and, surprise surprise, I got three different answers :lol:
thanks!
Hi thanx for your reply.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:I don't think your situation is similar to the op's.simple_shoes wrote:Hi, my wife and I have a similar problem.
I am italian, my wife is russian, I have been working in UK for five years (no interruption)
she lived here with me and worked for 3 yrs with resident permit for non-EEA family member of an EEA citizen.
I now received a job offer to work as a contractor of a UK recruitment agency, to work for a French company.
Work will be performed at the company headquarters in France so I'm required to pay my income taxes there. Employment is temporary (~1yr) but it's very good money so if I accept I would commute on a weekly basis and
come back to the UK every weekend. My wife would remain here as she would like to keep her employment.
Our life is here, and at end of this job I will return working back to UK (where all our life, friends and investments are). Basically it would be as any 'normal' weekly commuter within the country.
What I can't understand is if there are any limitations to my wife's right to reside here if I start this contractor job in France and, if this is the case, how long can she continue to reside in the UK while I will commence the employment overseas.
I've called the home office help desk three times and, surprise surprise, I got three different answers
thanks!
You appear to have permanent residence. (Did you apply for confirmation of that EEA4?) if this is the case you can be out of the UK for up to two years without breaking your residence.
The fact that you plan to return weekly helps your situation. You would be what's considered to be a frontier worker.
What answers did HO give you?
Another thought, if your wife obtains a bio-metric Venezuelan passport she would no-longer be a 'visa-national' which may have advantages in itself.miko77 wrote:Hello,
I am still struggling with this requirement that the EEA national has to be in the UK, when a holder of an EEA family permit wants to enter the UK.
Basically here's the situation:
* My wife (Venezuelan) and I (German) used to live in the UK for more than four years
* Right now we live in Germany
* But my wife has been made a very good job offer, so we are thinking of moving back.
* Right now she's commuting, staying the week in the UK, and the weekends with me in Germany
* We successfully got her a EEA family permit
I now read the "Border Force Operations Manual Categories of Passenger: EEA Nationals & their Dependents", http://dl.dropbox.com/u/27885818/UK/Bor ... ndents.pdf
It says:
5.4: "When a person‟s admission is based on the EEA national being in the UK the onus is on the passenger to provide this evidence. It‟s reasonable to expect the family member to provide evidence on the day of arrival. If not, one further interview represents adequate opportunity. When considering the location of the EEA national ports must take account of the fact that an EEA national can be absent for up to 6 months per year without affecting the family members right of residence. Paragraph 6.5, below, explains."
and then
6.5: "Continuity of residence under the EEA Regulations for the family member of a qualified person is not affected by the EEA national being absent from the UK for periods which are under six months in any year, periods of absence on military service or any one absence not exceeding 12 months for an important reason such as pregnancy and childbirth, serious illness, study or vocational training or an overseas posting."
So, do I have to be in the UK or not??? I don't quite understand.
When my wife says that we plan to move to the UK, but right now I am in Germany we should be fine, shouldn't we? Right now, we have the situation that whenever she enters I am flying with her, and leave the next day.
Thanks!
Miko
Hi EUsmileWEallsmile,EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Your wife's residence is legal as long as yours is. In the situation you described, your won't lose your residence by taking up the job in France.
I found this document on the UKBA website, which looks like an operation manual for border agents http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=BinaryEUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Your wife's residence is legal as long as yours is. In the situation you described, your won't lose your residence by taking up the job in France.