Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Dear Forumites,


Right to remain and right to work is obviously a big concern for many families in our area right now. And many people with big emotional and social (not to mention financial) investments in our community do not want to wait 2 years for ??? Boris or someone to sort out what their rights will be at the end of 2018.


Does anyone have a reliable rule of thumb guide to applying for citizenship? Chez nous we have a Swedish national who has lived and worked as a member of our family (paying taxes etc etc) for 5.5 years. Her work and importance to our family certainly makes her feel irreplaceable to us. She has (culturally non european) extensive wider family here in London but she is not married and has no children of her own. We also have a Swiss national (so non EU, but bilateral border arrangement) who has lived and worked here for more than 10 years, has British children here, (but is not married and is not cohabiting with a UK citizen or anything like that).


The details do not matter too much, but does anyone with expertise have any kind of gauge: easy, guaranteed, hard, not guaranteed?


Peoples' lives feel turned upside down and many feel so shunned and insecure. In our household it would be so good to have something solid for us all to look to personally.


Slightly ashamed that I do not know the answer to this question. But we never dreamed we would have to answer it when we started our family.


WM x

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/112012-citizenship-help/
Share on other sites

When I got my citizenship (admittedly about 10 years ago) it was granted based on 5 years residency. It looks like that is still the main criteria.


https://www.gov.uk/becoming-a-british-citizen


You might want to check the rules of their other country as well. Some countries have rules around dual nationalities, especially where it is not by birthright.


When I did it, it was incredibly easy - fill out a form, send it off with the necessary documentation and two weeks later I received my certificate through the post. That's changed now - you have to do the rather silly 'test' and go through the even more silly ceremony.

WM - a great post on the other thread


i am sorry that i don't have an answer to your question, but as i said before many in my immediate family are in exactly the same situation. this applies to loads more people, and will be a real issue for whoever takes over from Cameron (and Corbyn). Farage's wretched mob and their allies and supporters chose to paint them as scroungers and burdens, but they are irreplaceable within this country's economy for all sorts of reasons - this is the unpalatable (to them) truth that the Brexiters will have to face up to.


so any future plans for EU residents will have to factor these economic realities in.

we are going to go through hard times and we can ill afford to lose skilled and committed and well-integrated people. i expect that there will laso be a lot of legal challenge to any attempt to shift people, which will slow the process down.


i would say hang on and see what transpires, and don't lose heart! that's what we plan to do.

I'm looking into this too! There are two things listed, one is a certificate if you've lived here for at least 5 years, and then citizenship if you've lived here for 6 years.


Do we need to get the certificate thing first? Or can we go straight for the citizenship? I've checked the dual nationality aspect, and I'm eligible or that.


It's rather long winded!! :) thanks!!

WM, I just recently got my citizenship and it is pretty straight forward if you read the procedure via www.gov.uk. If you need to have some clarification or compare notes Im okay to chat and give you a good insight of what they need to provide and how to go with it. Just PM me. x

My experience of this was 5 years gets you indefinite leave to remain. One year after that you can get citizenship. You need 5 years of employment (years studying do not count).


You cannot skip straight to citizenship but indefinite leave to remain is more than secure enough from a right to live and work in the UK perspective.


Good luck with the specifics. My heart goes out to you and all others directly impacted.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • There's probably a bigger discussion on why we celebrate Christmas (pagan/religious festival) and why everything has to shut down.  I've enjoyed Xmas days in Spain, Mexico and France where some businesses and restaurants are open, and in a number of non-Christrian countries.  In both sets of occasions it has been festive, but not over the top and the Spanish seem to have a more relaxed attitude in a country where the church is probably more important than the UK.  A Lounge conversation.  I'll no doubt be popping into the Forest Hill Road supermarket on Xmas day for things we have forgotten, with many others in a similar situation who grew up in the Christian faith (I've long since been an atheist).   
    • Would anyone have ends of balls of wool, any colour, to mend an old blanket? Any colour? With thanks Mila
    • I’m not a Gail’s fan but there’s no reason a business shouldn’t open on Christmas Day. However, nobody should be compelled to work the day which, given the widespread coverage of Gail’s questionable employment practices, has to be a possibility here.  The only business I ever use on the 25th is maybe a pub and that’s a rarity these days but buses running would be very welcome for visiting etc. But the swings in the park should definitely remain chained up. Are parks even open on Christmas Day?
    • To be honest, pal, it's not good being a fan of a local business and then not go there. One on hand, the barber shop literally next door to Romeo Jones started serving coffee. The Crown and Greyhound and Rocca serve coffee. Redemption Coffee opened up not far away, and then also Megan's next door to that. DVillage was serving coffee (but wasn't very popular), as was Au Ciel (which is). Maybe also Heritage Cheese, I don't know. There's also Flotsam and Jetsam doing coffee and sandwiches at Dulwich Picture Gallery in the other direction. The whole of Dulwich Village serves coffee. And yet on the other hand, there are enough punters to support all good coffee shops. With the exception of Rocca and Megan's (which are both big spaces) and C&G (which does coffee like everything else - slow and with bad service), all these places regularly get queues out the door. Gail's often has big queues and yet very few people crossed the street to Romeo Jones (which was much better)... Half the staff at Gail's are perfectly fine and efficient. The other half are pretty offhand and rude. It's certainly not welcoming or friendly service. But they're certainly hard working, and no doubt raking the money in for Luke Johnson...
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...