Change of tune
I’m sorry to harp on about this and will return to some substantive legal blogging next week (there’s been a fairly lengthy change to the rules that I haven’t even looked at yet, for starters).
I can’t help noticing that UKBA have rather changed their tune, and certainly their tone, with the latest press release on fining employers. See my previous post on this for the rather rabid language previously being slavered by them. Now compare to the latest one:
Chief Immigration Officer Jack Davis, said:
‘We continue to offer advice to employers with foreign nationals among their staff and genuine employers have nothing to be concerned about by contacting us for help.
‘However, those who persist in using illegal labour to cut costs will be penalised and we will concentrate our efforts on them to reduce the incentive for illegal migration to this region.’
A tough new civil penalty system was brought in last year to provide a fast and effective way of tackling bosses who fail to carry out proper checks on workers from outside Europe. A fine of up to £10,000 per worker can be imposed for every illegal worker found at a business.
Not quite so strident now! One of the enormous ironies that seems to have escaped Chris Grayling and others (‘BS should be treated exactly the same as any other employer’ etc) is that she is the first private individual to be fined in this way. UKBA have never previously pursued this course, and I imagine probably will not in future. Although that won’t prevent Middle England as a whole from asking some awkward questions of those beneath their stairs. It’s going to be a tough time for foreign looking cleaners, I imagine.
2 Responses to Change of tune
@freemvntblog
- Legal update on EEA 'other family members': Advocate General opinion analysis: freemovement.org.uk/2012/05/18/adv… 1 hour ago
- Vintage Mash: May ‘thought illegal immigrants had tentacles’ thedailymash.co.uk/politics/polit… 13 hours ago
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- RT @Paul_Dillane: New UKBA Operational Guidance Note on DRC. Section on returns of particular interest - bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/do… 1 day ago
Immigration cases- R (on the application of SS)v London Borough of Croydon (AAJR) [2012] UKUT 139 (IAC) (16 May 2012) 16 May 2012
- R (on the application of ES) v London Borough of Hounslow (AAJR) [2012] UKUT 138 (IAC) (15 May 2012) 16 May 2012
- MK (documents - relocation) Iraq CG [2012] UKUT 126 (IAC) (25 April 2012) 14 May 2012
- Mumu (paragraph 320; Article 8; scope) Bangladesh [2012] UKUT 143 (IAC) (14 May 2012) 14 May 2012
- Ahmadi (s.47 decision: validity; Sapkota) Afghanistan [2012] UKUT 147 (IAC) (14 May 2012) 14 May 2012
- Buama (inter-country adoption - competent court) Ghana [2012] UKUT 146 (IAC) (14 May 2012) 14 May 2012
- Barnett and others (EEA Regulations: rights and documentation) Jamaica [2012] UKUT 142 (IAC) (14 May 2012) 14 May 2012
- LK (Somalia)), R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWHC 1229 (Admin) (10 May 2012) 10 May 2012
UK Border Agency- Removing full right of appeal for family visitors 10 May 2012
- Scrapping family visitor appeal rights will save millions 10 May 2012
- Service disruption at public enquiry offices 4 May 2012
- Child experts recruited to Family Returns Panel 25 April 2012
- Tier 2 certificates of sponsorship allocations for 2012/13 20 April 2012
Immigration news- Damian Green questioned by MPs over Heathrow delays: Politics live blog 18 May 2012
- In this week's New Statesman: European Crisis 17 May 2012
- New rules on overseas students 'will cost universities billions' 17 May 2012
- Dissenting Tories pushed out of backbench committee 17 May 2012
- Europe’s endgame 16 May 2012
Policy and research- Why asking the public to report irregular migrants to the UKBA is the wrong path to go down 17 May 2012
- "Home Office plans are too harsh" - Letter to the editor 16 May 2012
- Maps/Multimedia 16 May 2012
- Focus on Africa/Africans 16 May 2012
- Focus on Statelessness 15 May 2012
- The Free Movement blog is written mainly by barristers in the immigration team at Renaissance Chambers
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The distinct lack of hubris is too much to bear ;-)
Trouble is,what do you do when you find that Jeeves your mild mannered butler(or even your partner for that matter) is a law breaking hooligan from a far flung land.Do you ‘dob him in’,even though he’s become a good friend?.Or do you turn a blind eye and let him..er disappear out of sight and mind? There’s doesn’t seem to be anything in place to help out.Only the probability of being viewed with contempt, suspicion and hauled over the coals by the ubka,as the baroness has discovered.Seeing her plight won’t encourage much honesty i doubt.It’s all very well advising how to employ correctly,but for many that may be too late!