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https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/sep/01/home-office-makes-800-profit-on-some-visa-applications?CMP=fb_guBREAKI
Great News for European Nationals in the UK after Brexit. Call for more information: 07506262500
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-40957301
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/jun/26/eu-citizens-living-in-uk-must-apply-for-special-id-card-after-brexit?CMP=share_btn_fb
240 jobs available in Liverpool Visas and Immigration department for processing EU casework... This is hugely overdue – what on earth took the Home Office so long to get moving on this? However belated, though, it is good news. And the positions are reported to be permanent, perhaps suggesting some recognition by the Home Office of the massive increased demand that hard Brexit will impose on border officials. There are two types of job on offer. The first is Executive Officer Caseworker. There are 120 positions available, on a full-time 9am-5pm basis. The salary is between £23,330 and £26,831. According to the job description, workers will use Home Office guidance to consider immigration applications, make decisions on applications and record casework outcomes and decision letters on the immigration database. The roles will commence in July. UK Visas and Immigration is also looking for 120 Administrative Officers. The pay for this job, also involving casework, is £20.352 a year. Well spotted by Simon Kenny. Source: 240 Civil Service jobs available in Liverpool Visas and Immigration department – Liverpool Echo
Theresa May to trigger Article 50 on 29 March http://news.sky.com/story/theresa-may-to-trigger-article-50-on-29-march-10808696
Thousands of doctors trained in Europe 'may quit UK after Brexit'
https://t.co/hOO0Mipn1e
Shortage of judges hits immigration tribunals | Law Society Gazette... A rapid decline in the number of immigration tribunal judges could herald a crisis, despite the government’s insistence that there is sufficient capacity to deal with a growing backlog of work. Government figures show that in 2012 there were 347 fee-paid and 132 salaried judges in the first-tier tribunal. In 2016 there were only 242 fee-paid and 77 salaried. In the upper tribunal, a headcount of 40 fee-paid and 42 salaried judges in 2012 declined to 35 fee-paid and 42 salaried last year. Official figures show there were 62,903 outstanding cases in the first-tier tribunal at the end of the third quarter last year, up 20% on the same period in 2015. The age of a case at disposal was 48 weeks between July and September 2016, 15 weeks longer than the same period in 2015