Nigerians, from next month, non-EU migrants in the UK earning less than £35,000 will be deported.
The
new Home Office policy, which comes into force on April 6, applies to
all overseas workers who have been in the UK for five years on a Tier 2
visa.
If they can’t prove that they’re earning more than £35,000, they will be denied settlement and will face deportation.
Teachers, IT professionals and journalists could all be badly affected.
A
petition launched at the beginning of the year called for the threshold
to be reconsidered – it gathered more than 100,000 signatures and was
debated in parliament last week.
So what’s actually changing?
To settle in the UK as a skilled worker, non-EU migrants need to have a Tier 2 visa. For this you need:
An offer for a job in the UK that pays at least £20,800
Have had at least £945 in your bank account for 90 days
A certificate of sponsorship from your employer (which can cost between £536 and £1,476)
To pay a £200 annual healthcare surcharge
To prove your English language proficiency
After
five years on this visa, skilled workers are able to apply for
‘indefinite leave to remain’ – and this is what is about to change.
From April, anyone applying for indefinite leave to remain will need to earn at least £35,000.
Nurses
are temporarily exempt from this threshold, along with PhD-level jobs
and any professions that have been on the official ‘shortage occupation
list’ while the person has been living here.
However, the earnings threshold could be applied to migrant nurses in the future.
Teachers
aren’t exempt (unless they are professors in certain disciplines). Even
David Cameron’s mum has lost her job because of Tory cuts
In
fact, the Home Office’s own analysis of the policy in 2012 revealed that
the new threshold would have a significant impact on teachers, IT
professionals and marketing managers.
What if I’ve been in the UK for more than five years?
Then
you won’t be deported – the new rule doesn’t apply to anyone who
entered the country on a Tier 2 visa on or before April 5 2011.
I’ve been here for a decade, will I be deported?
No
– as long as you’ve been living here for 10 continuous years, you can
apply for indefinite leave to remain with no salary threshold.
So
if you came here in 2006 as a student visa, then moved directly onto a
skilled workers’ visa, you can apply to settle here regardless of how
much you earn.
The only condition is that you can’t have left the UK for more than 180 days at a time, or 540 days in total.
I’m here on a marriage visa, will I have to leave?
No, the changes only apply to people on a Tier 2 visa.
http://metro.co.uk/2016/03/12/from-april-people-will-be-deported-for-earning-less-than-35000-5748436/
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