Online immigration training and accredited Continuing Professional development (CPD): Online course British Citizenship - a Dream for Many! CPD 7 hours.
For our colleagues Immigration
Advisers and Solicitors. Our online training course is accepted by The OISC and
SRA, CPD ref number EJE/14IM.
British Citizenship - a Dream for Many! 7 hours CPD credit.
This course includes the requirements for the 4 main groups of applicants: spouses/civil partners of British citizens, European/EEA nationals, their family members and ‘everyone else’. Plus new English language rules from 28.10.2013, criminality rules from 13.12.2012.
British Citizenship - a Dream for Many! 7 hours CPD credit.
This course includes the requirements for the 4 main groups of applicants: spouses/civil partners of British citizens, European/EEA nationals, their family members and ‘everyone else’. Plus new English language rules from 28.10.2013, criminality rules from 13.12.2012.
Download from our
website, study in your own time on any computer, iPad or iPhone, complete the
test and we will award your CPD hours and send you a certificate. Visit website
now to download or to read a detailed table of contents, objectives and
extracts:
This online training course
is offered by our company, 1st 4Immigration Ltd, which is a practicing
immigration company, registered by The OISC at a highly respectable Level 2,
based in the City of London. We’ve had almost 100% success rate in 2013 and
100% rate in 2012!
1st 4Immigration Ltd, OISC no F200800152, SRA ref EJE/14IM.68 King William Street, City of London, London, EC4N 7DZ.
www.1st4immigration.com and www.1st4immigration.com/training
CONTENTS:
INTRODUCTION
PART 1 – NATURALISATION
PART 1 – NATURALISATION
4 types of rules - 4 groups: Spouses and civil
partner of British citizens, EEA nationals, family members of EEA nationals and
'Everyone else'.
SECTION 1: We start from the most common group – ‘Everybody else’.
ELIGIBILITY
CONDITIONS:
Condition 1: No ILR – No Citizenship! | Common mistake: ‘skipping’ an ILR | TIP -The
main challenge on the way to Citizenship is to qualify and secure an ILR
| Example: A client asks “I have an Entrepreneur visa, when can I apply
for a British passport?” |
Condition 2: Having an ILR for at least 12 months | CASE STUDY: Canadian
national holds and ILR and is married to another Canadian national who holds a
Spouse visa | TIP - Spouses and civil partners of the UK citizens don’t need to
wait for 12 months after an ILR.
Condition 3: Five years of continuous legal residency in
the UK and being present in the UK on a day 5 years before receipt of
application by the UKBA | 3.1) Legal residency | Exemption from immigration
control | Being in any place of detention or prison | Illegal residency | 28
days of overstaying is not ‘overstaying’. | 3.2) Continuous residency |
CASE STUDY – from Tier 1 General straight to Citizenship? | 3.3) Being present
in the UK on a day 5 years before receipt of application by the UKBA
Condition 4:
Good character | 4.1)
Paying taxes | TIP – Unemployed clients | CASE STUDY – Chinese national who
doesn’t have a job | 4.2) Criminal convictions, civil judgments, driving
offences, fines, fixed penalty notices, cautions | Before 13 December 2012 -
Spent and Unspent criminal convictions | From 13 December 2012 - Criminal
convictions | TIP – applicant’s offence may have happened after he obtained an
ILR | Table of offences and impact on applications | TIP – changes under 4. in
the above table (non-custodial sentence) actually means ‘good’ news for many |
Single conviction for a minor offence | Driving offences: drink-driving,
driving without insurance, driving whilst using a mobile phone and similar |
Fixed Penalty Notices | Fines | More than one sentence | TIP – It is the prison
sentence that counts, not the time served | TIP - Suspended sentence |
TIP – Admonished sentence (in Scotland) | Charged with offence and awaiting
trial or sentencing | Terrorism | CASE STUDY – Russian national with a ‘spent’ drink-driving
offence | 4.3) Bankruptcy.
Condition 5: English language and Knowledge of Life in the UK (KOLL) | Examples of applicants
who still need to meet English and/or Life in the UK requirements, even though
they did not need it for Settlement | And those who are exempt altogether | 2
ways of meting this condition | Life in the UK Test | TIP -Life in the UK
Test does not have expiry date | On a humorous note | English language
requirement – new from 28 October 2013.
Condition 6:
Absences from the UK (rules are not the same as for an ILR!) | Date of Application (and
how far back absences are counted) | Basic rules on absences | Differences from
the ILR rules (and will be confusing for your clients) | Exceptions when more
absences are allowed during the 5 years | Exceptions when more absences are
allowed during the last 12 months | CASE STUDY – Indian executive with frequent
global travel | TIP – last 5 years before Date of Application are assessed |
Why is it important? Because you will have clients who get an ILR and then take
up a lucrative job offer abroad | What’s the solution? | TIP – absences while
application is being considered |
FLOWCHARTS: common paths to Citizenship, various examples - 9
scenarios
FOR ALL 4
GROUPS - MAKING AN APPLICATION:
Do we need to send original
passports? | ID document used for a Life in The UK Test | Referees | Who can be a
Referee? | TIP – Can a representative of the applicant act a Referee? | Common
question – “I don’t have anyone who’ve known me for 3 years and who is British or
a professional” | Full List of Acceptable Professional Persons | Processing
time | CASE STUDY - a Greek doctor | CASE STUDY - Lithuanian national who was a
worker and a student | Is same-day service available?
THE OUTCOME:
Citizenship ceremonies |
TIP - Date of ceremony | TIP -This is where he/she becomes a British Citizen!
Not when he/she gets a British passport
‘British by
descent’ and ‘British otherwise than by descent’ – the difference | British
‘otherwise than by descent’ | Who is British otherwise than by descent? Common
examples | ‘British by descent’ | Who is British by descent? Common examples.
SECTION 2:
Spouses and Civil Partners of British citizens.
ELIGIBILITY CONDITIONS, WHICH ARE THE SAME AS 'EVERYBODY ELSE' generally
but some details are different.
Condition 1: No ILR – No Citizenship!
Condition 2: Good
character.
Condition 3: English language and Knowledge of Life in the UK.
ELIGIBILITY
CONDITIONS, WHICH ARE UNIQUE TO SPOUSES AND CIVIL PARTNERS OF BRITISH CITIZENS:Condition 3: English language and Knowledge of Life in the UK.
Condition 4: Three (3) years of legal continuous residency in the UK| Anomaly in this requirement | Before 9 July 2012 |
Transitional arrangements | From 9 July 2012 | Even more common mistake – skipping an ILR or skipping extension application | The right route now is | Alternative right routes.
Condition 5:waiting 12
months after an ILR (not actually applicable).
Condition 6:Absences from the UK | Basic rules |
Exceptions when more absences are allowed during the 3 years | Exceptions when
more absences are allowed during the last 12 months.
FLOWCHARTS: common paths to Citizenship for Spouses and Civil Partners
of British citizens - 8 scenarios
SECTION 3: European
(EEA) nationals
Rules are the same as for
‘everybody else’ but applied differently | Who are EEA nationals? | TIP - EEA
is not the same as Schengen area | How to count residency | Most EEA nationals
– from 30 April 2006 | You can count residency of the following nationals from
1 May 2004 | You can count residency of the following nationals from 1 January
2007 | European citizens often don’t have visa stamps in their passports (they
don’t have to) | A growing number of Greeks and Italians are applying for
British Citizenship.
General
rules:
Condition 1: 5 years of
residency in the UK
Condition 2: Good character and criminality |
‘Criminality’ rarely prevents from Permanent Residency under the EU law… | …
but does apply under the British Nationality law.
Condition 3: English
language and Knowledge of Life in the UK | EU/EEA citizens don’t have to meet
this rule for Permanent Residency… | … but have to meet for Citizenship:
Condition 4: Absences from the UK | Absences are
not the same as for Permanent Residency | Exceptions.
Condition 5: No permanent
residency status – No citizenship! | Same condition but with a difference | So,
how does one get an ILR if one doesn’t get any visa stamps? | Examples of
exercising Treaty rights | Worker | Self-employed person | Student |
Self-sufficient | Jobseeker | Worker or Self-employed person who has ceased
activity due to Retirement | Worker or Self-employed person who has ceased
activity due to a work accident | Exercising Treaty rights in the UK
continuously qualifies an EU citizen for Permanent Residency (with a ‘visa
stamp’ or without) | Not ‘continuous residency’ but ‘continuous exercising of
Treaty rights’ | Date when this point has been reached | TIP - Date of issue on
the visa document is not relevant.
BULGARIAN AND
ROMANIAN (EU2) NATIONALS
TIP - Romanian/ Bulgarian
nationals do have restrictions on working in UK but not on qualifying for an
ILR | EU2 nationals who had UK visas before Bulgaria/Romania joined the EU in
2007 | CASE STUDY - Romanian national who has been working since 2004 | Summary
of restrictions and documents for EU2 nationals | Restrictions in place from 1
January 2007 – 31 December 2013 | What about when restrictions on workers are
lifted?
EASTERN
EUROPEAN (A8) NATIONALS
Again the same rights but
again with a difference | Unique rule for the A8 nationals - Workers
Registration Scheme | WRS was relevant for an A8 national for the first 12
months of working in the UK | What counted as ‘continuous 12 months’? | WRS was
stopped in May 2011 but is still important for your applications | What if an
A8 applicant didn’t register under WRS? | CASE STUDY – Hungarian national who
has never registered under WRS.
Condition 6: waiting for 12 months after permanent
residency | If your client does not have a Permanent Residency document | If
your client has a Permanent Residency document
EUROPEAN NATIONALS WHO ARE ALSO MARRIED OR CIVIL PARTNERS
OF BRITISH CITIZENS
CASE STUDY – dual Dutch/Brazilian national who is a
civil partner of a UK nationalSECTION 4: FAMILY MEMBERS OF EUROPEAN (EEA) NATIONALS.
European family members of European nationals, such as ‘Polish married Polish’ | Non-EEA family members of EEA nationals, such as ‘Canadian married to German’ | TIP - Direct and extended family members, why does it matter?
DIRECT non-EEA family members of EEA nationals
| This is what most non-EU nationals have | And this is what the law
allows | Date on a 'visa stamp' does not matter | Example 1: a Canadian meets a
German while both are in the UK and a German is working | Example 2: German
national is working in the UK and he meets his partner in Canada | Example 3:
German national and his Canadian spouse are both living in Canada | CASE STUDY
– Russian national married to a Belgian | But bear in mind those who retained
residency rights | And bear in mind Surinder Singh route | Spouses and civil
partners of the UK citizens under Surinder Singh route | Other family members
of the UK citizens under Surinder Singh route.
EXTENDED non-EEA family
members of EEA nationals | Here dates on ‘visa stamps’ matter!
PART 2: REGISTRATION OF CHILDREN UNDER 18
y.o.
SECTION 1: IMPORTANT DATES AND ACTS TO REMEMBER.
British Nationality Act 1981 | From 1 July
2006.
SECTION 2: CHILDREN BORN IN
THE UK.
1) If child's mother is British | 2) If child’s
father is British | 3) If child's parent (one or both) is not British but has
permanent residency in the UK | 4) If the child's parents hold a limited leave
to remain, ie Tier 1, Tier 2, Work Permit, Ancestral visas etc | 5) If the
child's parents are European citizens | 6) Children who spent the first 10
years of their life in the UK.
7) Difference between 'British by
birth' and 'not British
but can be registered as British'?
SECTION 3:
CHILD BORN OUTSIDE THE UK TO NON-BRITISH PARENTS AND WHOSE PARENTS IMMIGRATED
TO THE UK.
Example 1: Indian family
who came to the UK together | Example 2: Indian national came to work while his
family joined much later | Example 3: Russian step-child of a UK citizen.
SECTION 4: CHILD BORN
OUTSIDE THE UK TO BRITISH PARENT(S)
Example 1: British parent
was born in the UK but his child was born outside the UK | It is possible that
both parents are British but only one can pass nationality | Example 2 |
Example 3.
PART 3:
REGISTRATION FOR ADULTS
SECTION 1: People born
before 1983 to British mothers
Those born before 1983 to a British mother can now
register as British.... | ... but only if all other requirements have been met
also | CASE STUDY – South African national on Ancestral visa but who is
eligible for a UKM application.
Our website: www.1st4immigration.com/training
or course page: http://www.1st4immigration.com/training/british-citizenship-a-dream-for-many-cpd.php