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StatusOutcome 25 October 2019-4

Vasile Alin Dinescu has been granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK under the EU Settlement Scheme. This grants him settled status, meaning there is no time limit on how long he can stay. He can continue to work, use the NHS, access education and benefits as before. His status takes effect from the date of the letter and he should view and share details online rather than using the letter as proof.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
103 views5 pages

StatusOutcome 25 October 2019-4

Vasile Alin Dinescu has been granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK under the EU Settlement Scheme. This grants him settled status, meaning there is no time limit on how long he can stay. He can continue to work, use the NHS, access education and benefits as before. His status takes effect from the date of the letter and he should view and share details online rather than using the letter as proof.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 5

Tel 03001237379

Web http://www.gov.uk/ukvi

Our Ref 3434-5718-2403-1418


Date 25 October 2019

VASILE ALIN DINESCU

Dear VASILE ALIN DINESCU,


I am pleased to inform you that your application under the EU Settlement Scheme has
been successful and that you have been granted Indefinite Leave in the United
Kingdom, under Appendix EU to the Immigration Rules. This is also referred to as
settled status.
If you were within the UK on the date of your application, you have been granted
Indefinite Leave to Remain. If you were outside the UK on the date of your application,
you have been granted Indefinite Leave to Enter. This means that you have a secure
status under UK law and there is no time limit on how long you can stay in the UK.
You can continue (as set out later in this letter) to:

work in the UK
use the NHS
enrol in education or continue studying
access public funds such as benefits and pensions, if
you are eligible for them
travel in and out of the UK
Your status takes effect from the date of this letter, which can be found above.
This letter is your written notification of leave, which you may wish to keep for your
personal records, but it is not proof of your status and cannot be used to prove your
status to others. Instead, you can view and share details of your status with others using
the Home Office online status service 'View and Prove your Settled and Pre-Settled
Status': www.gov.uk/view-your-settled-status.
More information about using this online service to view your status and share it with
others is in the section below titled important information.
Next steps
Read the section below entitled important information to find out more about viewing
your status online and about your status and rights, including your right to work and to
access benefits and services.

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If you have any questions or would like to discuss this letter, details on contacting us can
be found on our website: https://eu-settled-status-enquiries.service.gov.uk. Yours
sincerely,
UKVI European Casework
On behalf of the Secretary of State

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Important information
Your status
As you now have settled status there is no time limit on how long you can stay in the UK.
Your settled status gives you the right to stay in the UK under UK immigration law. At the
same time, you can also continue to rely on any rights you have as an EEA or Swiss
citizen or family member of an EEA or Swiss citizen under EU law for as long as it
remains in force in the UK: www.gov.uk/right-to-reside.
Evidencing your status
This letter is not proof of your status in the UK and cannot be used to prove your status
with employers, landlords, or other organisations/agencies. Instead you can view and
share details of your status with others using the Home Office online status service 'View
and Prove your Settled and Pre-Settled Status': www.gov.uk/view-your-settled-status.
This is an instant online service accessible through a web-browser on a computer, tablet
or smart phone. You will be guided through a step by step process to view your online
status. If you need help accessing your status through the online status service
assistance is available through our Settlement Resolution Centre on 0300 123 7379, or
+44(0)203 080 0010 if you are outside the UK. Calls made to this number from within the
UK may cost up to 10p a minute from landline telephones and between 3p and 40p a
minute from mobile telephones depending on your provider.
To access your online status you will need the number of the identity document you used
in your application – therefore please make a note of this number for future reference.
If you renew or replace the identity document you used in your application, or you change
your name after making your application, you will need to tell us so that your status is up
to date and so that you can continue to access your status.
To maintain access to your online status and keep it up to date, you will also need to tell
us if you change your email or mobile phone number.
You can let us know about any changes using this link: www.gov.uk/update-eu-
settlement-scheme-details.
Work and access to benefits and services
As a person with settled status, there are no changes to the rights that you currently
enjoy. This means you may engage in business or an occupation, or be self-employed, as
long as you comply with any legal requirements for that activity. You do not need
permission from a Government department to take or change employment, but you will
still need to prove your rights to work in the UK to employers, just as you do now.
You do not need permission to enrol in education or continue studying.
You are entitled to NHS healthcare if you are ordinarily resident in the UK. In this context
ordinarily resident means living in the UK on a lawful, voluntary and properly settled basis
for the time being.
The status you have been granted entitles you to access benefits and services, provided
you meet the relevant eligibility requirements for the specific benefit or fund.

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Until at least 31 December 2020 you can continue to demonstrate your eligibility to work
and access benefits and services as you do now, using your valid passport or national ID
card. There is no requirement to demonstrate your settled status until at least 1 January
2021.
Alternatively, should you wish to, you can use the online status service to evidence your
right to work with employers or your eligibility to access benefits and services. In due
course you will also be able to use the online status service to evidence your right to rent
to landlords and letting agents.
The online status service is available at: www.gov.uk/view-your-settled-status. You will be
guided through a step by step process to view your status and then, should you wish to,
share it with someone else by generating a 'share code' to give to them. The person you
are sharing your status with will also need your date of birth.
More information about how to use the service is available at: www.gov.uk/view-your-
settled-status
Entering the UK
There will be no immediate changes when you come back into the UK after travelling
abroad. You should join the queue for EEA citizens and present your passport or national
identity card. However, you should be aware that if the UK leaves the EU without a deal,
EEA identity cards will no longer be valid for travel to the UK from a date to be notified in
2020. Further information will be published in good time for those who need to apply for a
passport here: www.gov.uk/uk-border-control. In addition, if the UK leaves without a deal
and you arrive at the UK border without your passport (or national identity card while they
remain valid for entry to the UK) Border Force officers will no longer be obliged to provide
you with every reasonable opportunity for your document to be brought to you, or to allow
you to prove your right of admission by other means. Further information will be published
here: www.gov.uk/guidance/visiting-the-uk-after-brexit.
Time outside the UK
If you leave the UK and return within five years, you can enter the UK and continue to live
here as a person with settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme. If you leave the
UK for more than five consecutive years your settled status will lapse and you will need to
make a new application under one of the routes which may be available to you to return to
the UK. In the application, you will need to meet the requirements of the Immigration
Rules in force at that time. The EU Settlement Scheme may no longer be available to you
if you make a further application after the deadline. If you are a Swiss citizen or the family
member of a Swiss citizen, you can only be absent for four consecutive years before your
settled status lapses.
Family members
As a person with settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme, your family members
may be able to join or remain with you in the UK under the EU Settlement Scheme. You
can find further information about this at www.gov.uk/settled-status-eu-citizens-
families/eligibility. Or you may be able to sponsor a family visa for them – you can find
further information about this at: www.gov.uk/uk-family-visa.
British citizenship

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If you would like to find out about becoming a British citizen, you can find information at:
www.gov.uk/becoming-a-british-citizen.
If a child is born to you in the UK while you have settled status, they will be a British
citizen automatically at birth. You can find further information about this at:
www.gov.uk/government/publications/children-nationality-policy-guidance.
Removal from the UK
Where a person who is not a British citizen commits a serious criminal offence,
consideration will be given to whether they should be permitted to continue living in the
UK.
Data protection
The Data Protection Act 2018 governs how we use personal data.
For details of how we will use your personal information and who we may share it with
please see our Privacy Notice for the Border, Immigration and Citizenship system at
www.gov.uk/government/publications/personal-information-use-in-borders-immigration-
and-citizenship.
This also explains your key rights under the Act, how you can access your personal
information and how to complain if you have concerns.
Further information
For further information or if you have any queries, our contact details are on our website:
https://eu-settled-status-enquiries.service.gov.uk

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