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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> SH (A2 nationals-worker authorisation exemption) Bulgaria [2009] UKAIT 00020 (27 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2009/00020.html Cite as: [2009] UKAIT 00020, [2009] UKAIT 20 |
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SH (A2 nationals-worker authorisation exemption) Bulgaria [2009] UKAIT 00020
Date of hearing: 15 January 2009
Date Determination notified: 27 May 2009
SH |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
(i) The exemption afforded by the Accession (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006 to A2 nationals (nationals of Bulgaria and Romania) legally working in the United Kingdom at the date of accession (1 January 2007) and for an uninterrupted period of 12 months is not contrary to either the relevant Accession Treaty provisions or to the general EU principle of proportionality.
(ii) The decision in EA (EEA: 3 months residence) Bulgaria [2008] UKAIT 00017 is confirmed. Its reasoning is consistent with that applied by the House of Lords in the recent case of Zalewska v Department for Social Development [2008] UKHL 67.
(iii) Albeit as illustrated by the instant case and that of the appellant in EA, the terms of the exemption can result in hard cases, that does not suffice to show they are contrary to Community law.
(iv) For A2 nationals who find themselves just short of being able to meet the requirement of 12 months lawful employment there are no relevant Home Office policy concessions.
"Bulgarian nationals legally working in a present Member State at the date of accession and admitted to the labour market of that Member State for an uninterrupted period of 12 months or longer will enjoy access to the labour market of that Member State but not to the labour market of other Member States applying national measures".
....
Bulgarian nationals legally working in a present Member State at the date of accession, or during a period when national measures are applied, and who were admitted to the labour market of that Member State for a period of less than 12 months shall not enjoy those rights."
"9.— (2) For the purpose of these Regulations, an accession worker authorisation document is—
(a) a passport or other travel document endorsed before 1st January 2007 to show that the holder has leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom under the 1971 Act, subject to a condition restricting his employment in the United Kingdom to a particular employer or category of employment;
....
(3) But a document shall cease to be treated as an accession worker authorisation document under paragraph (2)—
(a) in the case of a document mentioned in paragraph (2)(a), at the end of the period for which leave to enter or remain is given;…."
"(3) A national of Bulgaria or Romania is not an accession State national subject to worker authorisation if he was legally working in the United Kingdom on 31 December 2006 and had been legally working in the United Kingdom without interruption throughout the period of 12 months ending on that date;
(4) A national of Bulgaria or Romania who legally works in the United Kingdom without interruption for a period of 12 months falling partly or wholly after 31st December 2006 shall cease to be an accession State national subject to worker authorisation at the end of that period of 12 months".
"(a) a person working in the United Kingdom during a period falling before 1st January 2007 was working legally in the United Kingdom during that period if –
(i) he had leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom under the 1971 Act for that period, that leave allowed him to work in the United Kingdom, and he was working in accordance with any condition on that leave restricting his employment; or
(ia)- (ii) [do not apply]
(b) a person working in the United Kingdom on or after 1st January 2007 is legally working during any period in which he—
(i) [does not apply]
(ii) holds an accession worker authorisation document and is working in accordance with the conditions set out in that document;…."
"The appellant in this case was required to show that he had been working legally in the UK for a period of 12 months. In order to work legally the appellant had to be working under the authority of a work permit. In this case the appellant's work permit was granted on 10 February 2006 for 12 months, his visa was granted on 16 February 2006 until 16 February 2007. The appellant could only work legally up until 10 February 2007.
The appellant's work employment contract shows that his employment started on 18 February 2006. He could not work legally for a year as his work permit only lasted until 10 February 2007. The appellant's work permit was valid from its issuance and this is the point at which time would begin to run. Therefore, the appellant's work permit did run out on 10 February 2007 and the Judge's error on this point resulted in him erroneously finding that the appellant had completed 12 month's legal work."
"It is accepted that the guidance does not specifically deal with applicants who fall short of the legal requirements marginally because they did not travel/begin work on the day in the UK on the date that entry clearance was issued. However, applicants in this position have the option to ask their employer to apply for a work permit extension which could form the basis of an in-country accession worker card application; there is nothing to stop an A2 national making a pre-emptive application so that an accession worker card can be issued before the entry clearance expires. Alternatively a work permit could have been sought from another employer and the same process followed by [the] applicant; EEA applications are non-chargeable and A2 nationals naturally cannot be removed. An A2 national has avenues open through which to address the issue."
"Admitted to the labour market…"
Lawful employment
"But the rights conferred on Polish workers by article 7 were to depend on their compliance with the national measures. It is those measures that determine their eligibility to obtain access to the national labour market on which the rights given by article 7 in their turn depend. The reference to Polish nationals "admitted to the labour market of a present member state" in the third paragraph of paragraph 2 of Part 2 of Annex XII is a reference to Polish nationals who have been admitted to it under the national measures regulating access."
"So long as the requirements of the national rules are satisfied an A8 national is entitled to the benefit of article 7(2) of the Regulation because he is a person who is admitted to the labour market, but not otherwise. Conversely an A8 state national is not admitted to the labour market if he does not comply with national measures…"
"Although his permission to work, if he otherwise met the requirements of UK immigration law, expired two days later, he had no leave to enter the United Kingdom after 12 April 2007. It would appear to follow from that, taken by itself, that the appellant's last two days of his twelve months' work, upon which he relies, were not days on which he was working legally here: they were days on which he was working here in accordance with a work permit, but contrary to the provisions of immigration law, because he had no extant leave."
"Unfortunately for the appellant those Regulations exactly confirm the position argued by Mr. Tarlow [the Presenting Officer]. At the end of the period of validity of the visa the appellant ceased to have leave to enter under the Leave to Enter and Remain Order. On that date, which was 12 April 2007, the document on which he relied for the purposes of the Accession Regulations ceased to be an accession worker authorisation document. The last two days of the work, which he undertook under his work permit, were therefore days on which, according to the very Regulations on which he relies for the relief he seeks, his work was not legal work and he accordingly cannot bring himself within the provisions of reg 2(4). "
"We do not find the decision in this case easy, not only because neither party has been able to give us a great deal of assistance with the detailed law, but also because it may seem hard that a decision depends on two days. There is no doubt, however, that the structure of immigration law does require that presence be lawful presence, and unlawful presence (that is to say presence after expiry of existing leave, or presence without leave) has the character of unlawful presence however short it is".
Proportionality
7. Persons exercising Community rights and nationals of member States
(1) A person shall not under the principal Act [1971 Act] require leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom in any case in which he is entitled to do so by virtue of an enforceable Community right or of any provision made under section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972.
…"
"Approvals under the work permit arrangements are generally only given for skilled jobs and where suitably qualified resident labour is unavailable to fill the vacancy. However, the work permit arrangements also include the Sectors Based Scheme under which a quota of permits may be issued for lower skilled jobs in the food processing industry…"
The IJ materially erred in law.
The decision I substitute is to dismiss the appellant's appeal.
Signed
Senior Immigration Judge Storey