EU citizens offered financial incentives to leave
UK
European nationals added to voluntary returns scheme,
which can include flights and up to £2,000 for resettlement
Diane
Taylor
Tue 26 Jan
2021 14.32 GMT
EU citizens
are being offered financial incentives to leave the UK, the Guardian has
learned, months before the deadline to apply for settled status.
From 1
January EU citizens have quietly been added to the government’s voluntary
returns scheme where financial support is offered as an encouragement to return
to their country of origin.
Payments
can include flights and up to £2,000 resettlement money. The scheme is designed
to help some migrants in the UK to leave voluntarily.
People
working to help vulnerable EU citizens in the UK said the offer of money to
return home contradicted the government’s claim that it was doing everything it
could to encourage people to register for settled status. The deadline for
Europeans living in the UK to apply for the EU settlement scheme (EUSS) is 30
June.
Benjamin
Morgan, who runs the EU homeless rights project at the Public Interest Law
Centre, said: “It is clear from our casework that some of the most vulnerable
EU citizens are yet to resolve their status. Barriers to application and delays
in Home Office decision-making remain significant factors.
“This mixed
messaging around settled status on the one hand and voluntary returns on the
other, seriously undermines the government’s claim that the rights of
vulnerable Europeans will be protected after Brexit.”
A Home
Office spokesperson said: “Some people may choose not to obtain status under
EUSS and may not wish to remain in the UK after the deadline. That is why we
have written to stakeholders to inform them that EEA nationals who wish to
leave the UK may now be eligible for support to help them do so under the
voluntary returns scheme.”
The news
came as research from the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JWCI)
warned that thousands of European key workers risked losing their legal right
to remain in the UK.
The report,
titled When the Clapping Stops: EU Care Workers After Brexit, warns that
thousands of European citizens currently fulfilling key worker roles in the
care sector, as well as those working in construction, manufacturing and
agriculture, are at risk of losing their legal status and face removal from the
UK.
Of 295 care
workers surveyed by the charity, one in seven were unsure what EUSS was, one in
three had not heard about it before being in touch with JCWI, and one in three
did not know there was a deadline for the settlement scheme, nor when it was.
Most of the surveys were conducted between January and March last year.
“If even a
tiny fraction of the estimated EEA+ (EU, EEA and Swiss) residents are unable to
apply in time, tens of thousands will lose their status overnight,” the report
states.
“Without urgent
action, the care sector is likely to be devastated,” it adds.
The report
calls for the immediate lifting of the deadline for applying to the EUSS, for
European citizens to be automatically granted settled status, and for an end to
“hostile environment” policies.
It states
that workers in industries with poor conditions, low pay and insecure contracts
such as care, construction and agriculture are particularly at risk of slipping
through the cracks in the scheme. Those unable to apply on time will be subject
to measures including detention and removal and could be criminalised for
working, renting accommodation or driving a car.
Chai Patel,
of JCWI, said: “Our research scares me because the people we talked to were far
less vulnerable than other groups hidden in exploitative working conditions,
who no one has been able to reach to ask questions. Despite warnings from us
and many other experts, the Home Office is burying its head in the sand about
this just like they did with Windrush and making excuses instead of finding
solutions.”
JCWI is not
the only organisation to warn that some might slip through the net. The
Migration Observatory has expressed concern that some groups are at risk of
being unregistered by the 30 June deadline.
The
immigration minister, Kevin Foster, said the JCWI report presented “an
incredibly misleading picture of the EU settlement scheme” as it relied on “a
small survey of less than 300 people conducted a year ago”.
“Since then
millions of applications have been received by the scheme,” he said. “We have
now had almost 4.9m applications to the hugely successful EU settlement scheme.
There is now less than six months before the 30 June 2021 deadline and I would
encourage all those eligible to apply now to secure their rights under UK law.
A wide range of support is available online and over the telephone if you need
it and we are funding 72 organisations across the UK to ensure no one gets left
behind.”

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