Days since Brexit

Brexit sparks demand for immigration advice in Northern Ireland

BREXIT has sparked “panic” among migrants living in Northern Ireland according to grassroots groups working with families who are fearful for their future.

The Detail can reveal a spike in demand for immigration advice here since the UK’s decision to leave the European Union (EU) however there are concerns communities face a shortage of free specialist support.

Northern Ireland’s largest free advice provider, Citizens Advice, reported an 80 per cent rise in immigration queries between April 2015 to March 2016 and April 2016 to March 2017.

A spokesperson for the charity said: “We are concerned with the lack of provision of free specialist immigration advice in Northern Ireland and call on government to increase funding for such advice.”

The South Tyrone Empowerment Programme (STEP), a community development organisation based in Dungannon, received 62 immigration queries from residents living within its catchment area between August and December 2015 - when it began keeping electronic records – but 495 queries in 2016 when the Brexit referendum was held.

STEP solicitor Julia Walsh said: “What we saw was a lot of hysteria and a lot of panic, understandably, because of the narrative around the referendum, and the hostility, and the hostile way the campaign was run.

“People felt unwelcome and felt quite clearly concerned about their right and their permission to be here even though their legal status hadn’t changed whatsoever.”

Julia Walsh is an immigration solicitor with the South Tyrone Empowerment Programme which supports residents of Mid Ulster

Julia Walsh is an immigration solicitor with the South Tyrone Empowerment Programme which supports residents of Mid Ulster

There are 22 advice providers operating in 43 locations in Northern Ireland registered with the UK’s immigration advice watchdog, the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), but the organisations involved said there is limited access to free expert advice, especially for complex cases.

The future of migrant communities will become clear when a final Brexit agreement is brokered. A human rights law expert described the current treatment of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers as “one of the defining civil and human rights issues of our time”.

Professor Colin Harvey of Queen’s University Belfast said: “This is a worrying time for migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers. We have witnessed successive governments implementing ever more repressive measures. These have tended to focus on deterrence and deflection. Brexit has only added to an already troubling picture.

“This is a complex and difficult area of law, the level of complexity has itself been the subject of extensive and justified criticism. With that in mind, it is essential that people are able to access reliable and timely legal advice. This remains a real problem in Northern Ireland and one that is too often neglected.”

Meanwhile The Detail can also reveal that the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC) is investigating a Republic of Ireland company offering immigration advice in Northern Ireland despite its apparent failure to register with the OISC.

The probe was initiated after The Detail found a flyer in a south-Belfast laundrette calling on migrants to “Beat the Brexit deadline” and advertising immigration advice services.

Latest migrant population figures provided by the Department for the Economy estimates there were around 125,000 migrants aged 16 and over who were not born in the UK living in Northern Ireland by the end of March 2018. Of these, 83,000 were born in a country within the European Union, including the Republic of Ireland.

The Department for Communities, which provides funding for advice services, said: “Detailed immigration advice is a specialist category of advice and does not fall under the generalist advice services the department funds. Anyone providing it needs to have a specialist accreditation. However in the coming year the department will provide support through Welfare Reform Mitigations funding to support this community with the implementation of welfare reform.”

Citizens Advice is funded by all 11 councils and the Department for Communities to provide free basic immigration advice services in Northern Ireland.

Citizens Advice is funded by all 11 councils and the Department for Communities to provide free basic immigration advice services in Northern Ireland.

The Department for Communities has asked the not-for-profit Law Centre NI to develop new guidance for advice centres on immigration-related cases.

The Executive Office funded a project which resulted in the publication in February of a new set of best practice guidelines for immigration legal advisers in a bid to educate asylum-seekers and refugees of their rights.

The Executive Office also recently awarded a grant from its 2018/2019 Minority Ethnic Development Fund to the Law Centre NI to allow it to employ an immigration solicitor.

But campaigners said more needs to be done.

The Detail spoke with families whose lives have been put on hold while they await confirmation of their immigration status from government. One young woman described the stress of living in limbo.

She said: “It’s so difficult when you don’t have any documents with you. When you’re sick you want to see the doctor but you can’t because you don’t have the documents. You can only go to the drug store to buy medicine. That was a hard situation for me.”

We separately also spoke to experts on the wider issue of accessing immigration advice, without reference to any specific case.

Watch the video below to hear more.

DEMAND FOR IMMIGRATION ADVICE

The 2016 referendum which saw the UK vote to leave the European Union prompted a spike in demand for immigration advice services.

Citizens Advice, which is funded by all 11 councils across Northern Ireland and the Department for Communities to provide free advice services, received 873 enquiries relating to immigration issues in the 2015/2016 financial year which increased to 1,580 queries in 2016/2017.

The figures provided for 2017/2018 only go up to December last year by which time the organisation had received 943 immigration enquiries.

Citizens Advice Northern Ireland was not able to provide statistics for this year after a funding crisis - as revealed by The Detail in June - resulted in redundancies from its regional office.

The biggest increase in demand during the past three years was seen in the following categories:

  • Questions on nationality and citizenship increased sevenfold from 43 in 2015/2016 to 306 in 2016/2017
  • There were no queries about visitor visas before July 2016 - after which there were 50 over the next 12 months
  • The highest number of enquiries was in relation to families, dependents and partners with 976 queries recorded.

A spokesperson for Citizens Advice Northern Ireland said: “Citizens Advice provides information and advice on Brexit-related immigration enquiries in line with the latest Home Office guidelines. Our advisers will be able to assist with applications to the settlement scheme for EU citizens and family members when it opens later this year. They refer more complex enquiries to immigration specialists.”

Aggie Luczak, development officer and immigration adviser with the Belfast-based Migrant Centre NI, also called on Stormont to fund more centres so that more people can access advice free of charge as not everyone will be eligible for financial assistance with their legal bills.

She said: “There should be more free advice because most of the European and Eastern European citizens that we work with – and most of our clients will be working – are in low paid jobs or on benefits because of illness. Sometimes the rate the solicitors ask them to pay is beyond their financial capability.

“With Brexit, and with all the changes to the immigration legislation that will be coming, it will be important that people have immigration advice available because what we are seeing is that the Government wants everyone to register with the new temporary or settled status card system so all those European nationals living in Northern Ireland will have to go through that system.”

Using information released by the Department for Communities and the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), The Detail has compiled a list of immigration advice providers in Northern Ireland that are currently accredited with the UK regulator. See below for an interactive map showing where those centres are located and their level of advice.

Immigration adviser Aggie Luczak said she expects demand for advice to increase again when the UK Government’s settled status scheme, details of which were published in June, opens later this year.

Julia Walsh from the South Tyrone Empowerment Programme warned about the dangers of receiving incorrect immigration advice.

She said: “In relation to bad immigration advice, we do have experience of clients giving large sums of money over to both regulated and unregulated advisers who provide a very poor service. Clients are quite often unable to contact their advisers, have no clue whether an application has been submitted and are getting nothing in the way of client care.

“We’ve only tipped the surface of that, we haven't actually seen the full scale of it because we are only getting the clients that are at the end of their tether. There's a real concern about clients being exploited in that way.”

Mary Kerr is policy officer for the Northern Ireland Strategic Migration Partnership (NISMP) – a cross-party group of representatives from Stormont departments, political parties, public and third sector organisations which highlighted a number of challenges faced by asylum seekers accessing legal advice in a report published in 2016.

She said: “Migrants will be looking for advice for a whole range of issues. Some will feature immigration and some won’t. Most will be European national migrants. Once we know what the immigration rules will be there will be a massive demand for accredited advisers. At the moment there is a demand and we don’t have enough advisers and that’s going to increase post-Brexit.

“I think there needs to be a serious look at the numbers and the potential numbers of people in Northern Ireland who will require appropriate advice services. The advice services have to be prepared for that and be forward-thinking. They have to be featuring Brexit into their own work plans and think what type of advice people are going to be coming to them for. We’ve known about Brexit for over a year now so there’s really no excuse for not being prepared.”

  • Since our film was made the couples, who gave anonymous accounts of the stresses of the government's immigration process, have secured permission to live and work in Northern Ireland.


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BREXIT has sparked “panic” among migrants living in Northern Ireland according to grassroots groups working with families who are fearful for their future.

The Detail can reveal a spike in demand for immigration advice here since the UK’s decision to leave the European Union (EU) however there are concerns communities face a shortage of free specialist support.

Northern Ireland’s largest free advice provider, Citizens Advice, reported an 80 per cent rise in immigration queries between April 2015 to March 2016 and April 2016 to March 2017.

A spokesperson for the charity said: “We are concerned with the lack of provision of free specialist immigration advice in Northern Ireland and call on government to increase funding for such advice.”

The South Tyrone Empowerment Programme (STEP), a community development organisation based in Dungannon, received 62 immigration queries from residents living within its catchment area between August and December 2015 - when it began keeping electronic records – but 495 queries in 2016 when the Brexit referendum was held.

STEP solicitor Julia Walsh said: “What we saw was a lot of hysteria and a lot of panic, understandably, because of the narrative around the referendum, and the hostility, and the hostile way the campaign was run.

“People felt unwelcome and felt quite clearly concerned about their right and their permission to be here even though their legal status hadn’t changed whatsoever.”

Julia Walsh is an immigration solicitor with the South Tyrone Empowerment Programme which supports residents of Mid Ulster

Julia Walsh is an immigration solicitor with the South Tyrone Empowerment Programme which supports residents of Mid Ulster

There are 22 advice providers operating in 43 locations in Northern Ireland registered with the UK’s immigration advice watchdog, the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), but the organisations involved said there is limited access to free expert advice, especially for complex cases.

The future of migrant communities will become clear when a final Brexit agreement is brokered. A human rights law expert described the current treatment of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers as “one of the defining civil and human rights issues of our time”.

Professor Colin Harvey of Queen’s University Belfast said: “This is a worrying time for migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers. We have witnessed successive governments implementing ever more repressive measures. These have tended to focus on deterrence and deflection. Brexit has only added to an already troubling picture.

“This is a complex and difficult area of law, the level of complexity has itself been the subject of extensive and justified criticism. With that in mind, it is essential that people are able to access reliable and timely legal advice. This remains a real problem in Northern Ireland and one that is too often neglected.”

Meanwhile The Detail can also reveal that the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC) is investigating a Republic of Ireland company offering immigration advice in Northern Ireland despite its apparent failure to register with the OISC.

The probe was initiated after The Detail found a flyer in a south-Belfast laundrette calling on migrants to “Beat the Brexit deadline” and advertising immigration advice services.

Latest migrant population figures provided by the Department for the Economy estimates there were around 125,000 migrants aged 16 and over who were not born in the UK living in Northern Ireland by the end of March 2018. Of these, 83,000 were born in a country within the European Union, including the Republic of Ireland.

The Department for Communities, which provides funding for advice services, said: “Detailed immigration advice is a specialist category of advice and does not fall under the generalist advice services the department funds. Anyone providing it needs to have a specialist accreditation. However in the coming year the department will provide support through Welfare Reform Mitigations funding to support this community with the implementation of welfare reform.”

Citizens Advice is funded by all 11 councils and the Department for Communities to provide free basic immigration advice services in Northern Ireland.

Citizens Advice is funded by all 11 councils and the Department for Communities to provide free basic immigration advice services in Northern Ireland.

The Department for Communities has asked the not-for-profit Law Centre NI to develop new guidance for advice centres on immigration-related cases.

The Executive Office funded a project which resulted in the publication in February of a new set of best practice guidelines for immigration legal advisers in a bid to educate asylum-seekers and refugees of their rights.

The Executive Office also recently awarded a grant from its 2018/2019 Minority Ethnic Development Fund to the Law Centre NI to allow it to employ an immigration solicitor.

But campaigners said more needs to be done.

The Detail spoke with families whose lives have been put on hold while they await confirmation of their immigration status from government. One young woman described the stress of living in limbo.

She said: “It’s so difficult when you don’t have any documents with you. When you’re sick you want to see the doctor but you can’t because you don’t have the documents. You can only go to the drug store to buy medicine. That was a hard situation for me.”

We separately also spoke to experts on the wider issue of accessing immigration advice, without reference to any specific case.

Watch the video below to hear more.

Receive The Detail story alerts by email