From the BBC:
“Brexit: EU citizens given
28-day deadline to apply to stay in UK”
Immigration enforcement officials
will begin giving EU citizens who live in the UK a 28-day warning to apply to
remain, the government says. But the Home Office will allow people indefinite
time to complete an application for settled status if they have a reasonable
excuse for delay. There is a week to go until the deadline for applications. Some
5.6 million European Economic Area (EEA) citizens and their dependents have
applied for settled status. But there are around 400,000 cases outstanding, and
the government's helpline is receiving thousands of calls a day. After the 2016
Brexit referendum, which took place precisely five years ago, settled status
was introduced for citizens of the EU and EEA living in the UK. It allows them
to retain the same rights of residence, travel, employment and access to
healthcare and benefits.
The countries whose nationals
have made the highest numbers of applications are Poland (975,000) and Romania
(918,000). Immigration minister Kevin Foster said anyone whose application was
not concluded by next week's deadline would not lose out, as their rights were
protected in law. He added that immigration enforcement officials would begin
issuing 28-day notices to people, advising them to apply for settled status. Migrants'
groups had voiced concern that children would be among those who had not
applied. But Mr Foster said there would be an indefinite period where people
who had not applied would be allowed to do so, if they had reasonable grounds. He
gave the example of students who might discover when applying to university for
the first time that they do not have settled status. Asked whether the new
immigration system had made it difficult to attract EU workers, he said that
"in the first instance" employers should be looking to recruit from
the UK market. "We're giving people access on a global basis to skills
that take time to train, but for jobs that take less time to train for, we do
believe it's right we encourage employers to look in the first instance to
offer rewarding and good packages to domestic workers," he told the BBC. EU
nationals living in the UK have until 30 June to apply to stay in the UK.
They can apply for:
Settled status - on offer
to anyone who can prove that they had been in the UK continuously for five
years or more before 31 December 2020. As of 31 May, it has been granted to
2.75 million people.
Pre-settled status - on
offer to anyone who had been in the UK for less than five years by the end of
2020. As of 31 May, it has been granted to 2.28 million. They can apply for
settled status in future, but there is no guarantee they will get it.
'Changed guidance' Maike
Bohn, co-founder of the EU citizens' campaign group the3million, said:
"It's good that people can apply late, but the crux is they're unlawful as
they haven't put an application in. "Those eligible and not
applying on time become unlawful and risk losing work, housing, access to free
health care and so much more." Mr Foster said existing benefit
claimants would not have their payments stopped immediately if they had not
been granted settled status. But he said no-one could begin a benefit
claim, job, or tenancy in England without settled status. He also said
the Home Office had "changed guidance" to border officials after
reports that some EU citizens had been detained for long periods at the border
last month. Speaking to the House of Lords European Affairs Committee on
Tuesday, he said: "I want to get as many people through the door before
the 30th [of June] as possible." The EEA is made up of the 27 EU
states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway.
Analysis box by Mark Easton,
home editor No-one knows how many EU citizens living in the UK have yet to
apply for settled status, allowing them to remain here legally after next
week's deadline. The European Union suspects there could be tens of
thousands of people, many of them vulnerable, who will not have submitted their
application in time. Older people and children in care are of particular
concern, and the EU is urging the Home Office to guarantee the rights of late
applicants. The UK government says it will take a "compassionate
and flexible" approach, giving people who have 'reasonable grounds' for
missing the deadline, 28 days to apply. No action will be taken against
them once an application has been submitted. The EU, however, says
Britain's compliant or hostile environment towards migrants gives them cause
for concern.
^ British Citizens in the EU and
the EU Citizens in the UK knew this day was coming so it shouldn’t be that much
of a surprise. Of course what the British do to the EU citizens in the UK the
EU will do to the British Citizens in the EU. ^
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