Tag Archives: EU Resolution Centre

Lack of appeal against rejection of late EUSS applications does not breach Withdrawal Agreement

Înalta Curte a dat încă o dată o aprobare pentru măsurile luate de Home Office de a închide accesul la aplicațiile întârziate frauduloase ( „fără merit și nefondate”) depuse de cei care blochează sistemul EUSS cu aplicații frauduloase repetate, care le-au permis să continue să locuiască și să muncească în UK de la o CoA la alta, deși știu că nu se califică în cadrul EUSS.

Acesta este textul complet al hotărârii: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/2817.html

Iar aici aveți un rezumat foarte bun de la FreeMovement:

“The High Court has dismissed a challenge to changes made to late applications to the EU Settlement Scheme which removed the right to appeal where it is not accepted that the applicant had a good reason for applying late (i.e. where the application is rejected as invalid, rather than being accepted as valid and then refused). The judicial review was brought by Here for Good, a charity providing free immigration advice on the EU Settlement Scheme. The case is R (Here for Good) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2024] EWHC 2817 (Admin).

Background

Evidence given by a Home Office official was that by January 2023 there were concerns that “spurious and unmeritorious” late applications were being made under Appendix EU. This was apparently so that people could get a certification of application which would then allow them to work and claim public funds pending the outcome of the application (in line with Article 18(3) of the Withdrawal Agreement). It was decided that a two stage approach was permitted under Article 18(1)(d) and so changes were made to Appendix EU from 9 August 2023.

Before the changes made on 9 August 2023, where an application was made after 30 June 2021 there was no requirement for there to be a “good reason” for the late application in order for an application to be valid. The need for there to have reasonable grounds for making a late application was instead found in the eligibility requirements.

This meant that applications would be accepted as valid if they met the other validity requirements, and if refused because it was not accepted that they had reasonable grounds for applying late, the applicant would be granted a right of appeal. From 9 August 2023, where an applicant could not satisfy a Home Office decision maker that there was a “good reason” for the late application, the application would be rejected as invalid, which is a decision that does not generate a right of appeal.

An invalidity decision can be subject to judicial review but this is limited to looking at whether there has been an error of law rather than the merits of the decision, which would include consideration of the facts as well as a proportionality assessment.

The judicial review

There were three grounds to the challenge. The first was that the failure to provide a right of appeal where a late application had been made was a breach of Article 18(1)(r) of the Withdrawal Agreement which says that:

the applicant shall have access to judicial and, where appropriate, administrative redress procedures in the host State against any decision refusing to grant the residence status. The redress procedures shall allow for an examination of the legality of the decision, as well as of the facts and circumstances on which the proposed decision is based. Such redress procedures shall ensure that the decision is not disproportionate.

This ground centred on whether or not a two stage approach was actually permitted under Article 18. The Home Secretary maintained that it was, “based upon the natural and clear meaning of the words in Article 18(1)(d) of the Withdrawal Agreement which plainly contemplate two discrete stages”. Article 18(1)(d) states:

where the deadline for submitting the application referred to in point (b) is not respected by the persons concerned, the competent authorities shall assess all the circumstances and reasons for not respecting the deadline and shall allow those persons to submit an application within a reasonable further period of time if there are reasonable grounds for the failure to respect the deadline

The second ground was that in the alternative, the failure to provide a right of appeal in these circumstances was a breach of Article 21 of the Withdrawal Agreement which provides for safeguards and a right of appeal. It was argued that a decision to reject a late application is a decision that restricts the applicant’s right of residence and so comes within the scope of Article 21. This was resisted by the Home Secretary on a similar basis to the first ground.

The third ground of challenge was that the failure to provide a late application with a right of appeal is a breach of Article 47 of the Charter of Fundamental Right of the European Union which provides for the right to an effective remedy and to a fair trial. The claimant argued that Article 4(3) of the Withdrawal Agreement allowed reliance on EU law:

on the basis that the situation of a person who comes within the personal scope of the Withdrawal Agreement (irrespective of whether they have made a late application for residence status) is not a purely domestic law situation but one which falls within the scope of EU law.

The Home Secretary’s position was that the Charter was not engaged “because the question does not involve concepts or provisions of EU law in the interpretation or application of these provisions of the Withdrawal Agreement”. This was because Article 18(1) had introduced a completely new process that did not exist under EU law and was different to the EU law principles of free movement.

The High Court’s decision

The High Court agreed with the Home Secretary that a literal reading of Article 18 allows for the two stage approach introduced into the immigration rules on 9 August 2023. The conclusion was that:

A person who is outside the deadline for making an application under the conditions of the new scheme is not an applicant until they have been permitted to make their application and therefore the procedural safeguards under Article 18(1)(r) are not available to them.

The second ground of challenge was also rejected, with the court saying that the existence of an application is needed in order to rely on Article 21. As the validity decision is made before an application is accepted, Article 21 therefore cannot apply.

On the third ground, the court distinguished this situation from that of the cases the parties sought to rely on (CG (C-709/20) by the claimant and AT v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2024] KB 633[2023] EWCA Civ 1307 by the defendant). The High Court said that “it is of significance to note the important distinction” as CG and AT had made timely applications, been granted pre-settled status and had rights of residence under Article 13 of the Withdrawal Agreement, which was not the case here.

The court said that instead:

this case is concerned with the circumstances of a person who has no such status and who requires permission to make an application for the new residence status which is a creature of the Withdrawal Agreement under Article 18 and unrelated to EU law provisions relating to the rights of citizens.

The court also rejected this ground of challenge saying that it could not accept that the Charter applied in these circumstances, or that it was a breach to fail to provide a right of appeal.

Conclusion

Ultimately this entire situation seems to all come down to Home Office delays – the only reason it was ever possible for a person to “abuse” the certificate of application system is because applications were not being dealt with in a timely manner. We wait to see if this case will proceed any further, in the meantime the remedy for those who have a late application rejected remains judicial review.”

BY Sonia Leneganhttps://freemovement.org.uk/

Informații pentru deținătorii de rezidență și pentru aplicanți

Acest ghid este destinat cetățenilor europeni și membrilor familiilor acestora, care locuiesc în UK și care au obținut statutus de rezidență EUSS sau așteaptă rezultatul unei aplicații depuse înainte de termenul limită de 30 iunie 2021.

Pentru cetățenii care erau rezidenți în UK până la 31 decembrie 2020, termenul limită pentru a aplica la rezidență a fost 30 iunie 2021.

Dacă sunteți din UE, Elveția, Norvegia, Islanda sau Liechtenstein, sau sunteti un membru al familiei cuiva care este, sau care era rezident în UK până la 31 decembrie 2020, și nu ați depus o cerere în cadrul EUSS până la termenul limită de 30 iunie 2021 și nu dețineți Indefinite Leave to Enter sau Indefinite Leave to Remain sau o viză validă pentru UK, atunci drepturile dvs. inclusiv dreptul de a locui, lucra, studia și accesa beneficii și servicii în UK, nu sunt protejate. Încă puteți aplica dacă puteți demonstra că există motive întemeiate pentru întârzierea depunerii cererii. Există orientări disponibile pentru aplicațiile întârziate pe GOV.UK.

Începând cu 1 iulie 2021, cetățenii din UE, Elveția, Norvegia, Islanda sau Liechtenstein și membrii familiilor lor trebuie să demonstreze dreptul lor de a fi în UK printr-un statut valid de imigrare. Puteți obține acest statut prin schema de rezidență EUSS(dacă vă încadrați) sau în cadrul sistemului de imigrație bazat pe puncte(vize).

Cetățenii din UE, Elveția, Norvegia, Islanda sau Liechtenstein se pot aștepta să li se ceară să își arate statusul digital de imigrare pentru a dovedi dreptul lor de a lucra sau de a închiria proprietăți în Anglia. Alte departamente, cum ar fi HMRC, DWP și NHS, vor avea acces automat pentru a verifica eligibilitatea unei persoane pentru asistență medicală gratuită, beneficii și acces la fonduri publice.

Cum să accesați și să vă actualizați statutul digital de imigrare Puteți vizualiza online statusul, prin serviciul view and prove your immigration status. Persoanele cu pre-settled sau settled în cadrul EUSS ar trebui să se asigure că își actualizează contul online cu toate documentele de călătorie valide (cum ar fi pașapoarte sau cărți de identitate naționale) pe care le dețin și intenționează să le folosească pentru călătorii, pentru a evita întârzierile inutile la frontieră.

Aplicațiile în așteptare: Oricine a depus o aplicație în cadrul EUSS până la termenul limită de 30 iunie 2021 va avea drepturile protejate, în așteptarea rezultatului cererii sale. Solicitanților li se eliberează un certificat de aplicare, pe care se pot baza pentru a dovedi drepturile lor.

Certificatul de aplicare este accesibil pentru vizualizare online, prin serviciul view and prove your immigration status

Ca să călătoriți în și din UK: Dacă nu aveți status, vi se recomandă să nu călătoriți în și din Regatul Unit în așteptarea rezultatului aplicației dvs, inclusiv a oricărui apel.

Consultați următorul ghid pe GOV.UK pentru informații despre ceea ce veți avea nevoie pentru a intra în UK cu statut EUSS sau cu o aplicație în așteptare: Entering the UK under the EU Settlement Scheme and EU Settlement Scheme family permit – GOV.UK.

Trecerea de la pre-settled la settled: Dacă aveți pre-settled, puteți solicita trecerea la settled de îndată ce sunteți eligibil, adică după ce ați locuit în UK, Insulele Channel sau Insula Man timp de 5 ani consecutivi (cunoscut sub numele de ‘resedință continuă’). Nu este necesar să fi avut statut pre-settled timp de 5 ani înainte de a putea solicita trecerea la statutul settled. Consultați mai multe informații despre switching from pre-settled status to settled status.

Alăturarea membrilor de familie: Dacă sunteți membru de familie al unei persoane din UE, Elveția, Norvegia, Islanda sau Liechtenstein care era rezident în UK până la 31 decembrie 2020 și care are statut pre-settled sau settled, puteți aplica la EUSS pentru a vi se alătura în orice moment, în cazul în care relația de familie a fost formată până la 31 decembrie 2020 (cu excepția cazului în care un copil s-a născut sau a fost adoptat după această dată) și continuă să existe.

Puteți să aplicați la EUSS din afara UK sau poate fi necesar să solicitați un family permit pentru a veni în UK și apoi să aplicați la EUSS odată ajuns aici.

Pentru informații suplimentare, vă rugăm să consultați orientările publicate pe GOV.UK.

Pentru întrebări despre cererea dumneavoastră, puteți apela la Resolution Centre la numărul 0300 123 7379 din UK și 20:30 și sâmbătă până duminică, între orele 9:30 și 16:30).

Mituri demontate de Rob Mar

Rob Mar Eu Settlement and Pre Settlement scheme (Immigration) Administrator / 3 iulie 2024

” The following post was submitted earlier, however we declined posting it in its original form as it contains elements which might be misconstrued by others. We are also using this opportunity to teach all members of the group who are patient enough to read this long post about a couple of things and also to debunk a myth that keeps rearing its ugly head.

First, please read the post. Then take a minute to go through the commentary.

“Hi everyone – I wanted to share that I successfully received by ILR yesterday. I’m a non-EU family member, and switching from pre-settled to settled took 3 months.

I didn’t have the best experience with the EU Resolution Centre as I called them several times and they told me everything on my application was correct and this was roughly 6 weeks after applying. When I got my lawyer to contact them to try and expedite the process, she was able to get the information there was in fact a mistake on my application where I had accidentally filled out that I had a permanent resident card (I mistook that field for my BRC) and they had actually disregarded my application and weren’t looking at it. After rectifying the mistake it took another 6 weeks to get my final decision. Just wanted to share my experience in case it’s helpful to anyone else.”


First and most importantly: congratulations to the OP for having been granted Settled Status, despite the circuitous route it took him/her to get there.

Now:
1. The reoccurring myth: THE RESOLUTION CENTRE IS NOT STAFFED BY CASE WORKERS. YOU CANNOT AND YOU SHOULD NOT EXPECT TO BE GIVEN FEEDBACK (OF ANY KIND!!!!!!!!) ON YOUR APPLICATION WHEN YOU CALL THE EUSS RC. The only time when you call in and you can expect to glean anything new about your application is if your caseworker has already left some comments on your case file, which are meant to be passed onto you. However, IN MOST SUCH SITUATIONS, those comments will have already made it to you via email, SMS, or direct phone call from the caseworker himself/herself. It is only when they weren’t able to reach you (after repeated attempts) that your caseworker will leave a note with the Resolution Centre, as a last-ditch resort. So: just as the resolution centre can’t give you immigration advice, they also can’t give you feedback on an application that’s already been submitted. THAT IS NOT THEIR ROLE, AND IT WOULD BE INCREDIBLY IRRESPONSIBLE IF ONE OF THE EUSS RC CALL RESPONDERS WERE TO BREACH THAT RULE.

2. “When I got my lawyer to contact them to try and expedite the process” – in 99.99% of cases you are throwing your money out the window. We do not allow solicitors to pressure a caseworker to expedite an application, especially if it’s been fewer than 6 months since the application was submitted. After six months is a different story. But before the 6 months are up making formal representations on behalf of a client is, in most cases, A COMPLETE WASTE OF TIME AND MONEY. As you can see, OP, it was also a waste of time and money in your case, as you had to wait another 6 weeks after this solicitor took your money and scammed you into thinking she was actually expediting anything. She wasn’t.

3. ” they had actually disregarded my application and weren’t looking at it” – COMPLETELY UNTRUE. Again, you have been lied to by your solicitor. A caseworker IS NOT ALLOWED to disregard an application and “not look at it” just because it contains a mistake. That would be a serious dereliction of duty and a breach of code of conduct in and of itself. When a mistake is ascertained by the caseworker, there are investigations that are automatically started, to identify the source of the mistake or a potential explanation for the mistake. The case isn’t just put in a pile, on the side, and forgotten about. Yes, it will delay the decision making process (because of the aforementioned investigation, which in most cases also involves contacting the applicant), but THE APPLICATION WILL NOT BE COMPLETELY DISREGARDED.

4. We are DEFINITELY not discouraging applicants to use immigration advisors or immigration solicitors (please, qualified ones you can find on the OISC or SRA registers), however the best time to pay for such services, if you feel you need support, or if you have a complicated application, is at the time of applying. not six weeks later. Because then you might fall prey to unscrupulous professionals (or not-professionals) who will promise you that they can expedite your application and correct mistakes and you need to pay them to do that. And, as the OP demonstrated with his/her own case, nothing was expedited in the end by the solicitor.

Which brings us to the following very useful advice:

4a – how to check if you made a mistake in your application: log into your dashboard (here: https://user-auth.apply-to-visit-or-stay-in-the-uk.homeoffice.gov.uk/auth/ ), find the relevant application, click on the link for viewing/downloading it (not on the green button under it, that’s for uploading evidence), then navigate to the page where on the left side you see the “chapters/sections” of the application, and on the top right corner (if you are on a laptop screen) you will see the download option. Download it and save it. It will be a pdf document containing all the answers you have given when applying (well, most of the answers, not the security questions). OPEN IT, READ IT CAREFULLY, AND LOOK FOR ANY MISTAKES

4b – what to do if you discover a mistake: depending on how important the mistake is, you have two options… EITHER withdraw the application altogether (here: https://eu-settled-status-enquiries.service.gov.uk/start Start >> Option 3 >> Yes >> Fill in the withdrawal request, check it, and submit it) and reapply OR upload a note (using the aforementioned green button under your application) explaining the mistake and, with the note, any evidence that proves that your correction is indeed the truth.”