Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Couple Whose Marriage Was Questioned By U.K. Authorities Now Living In Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Nov, 2015 01:09 PM
    A Canadian woman whose lengthy battle to obtain a British visa included government skepticism over the affection level of her decades-long marriage is living with her husband once again, but this time on her home soil.
     
    Maria Summers and her husband David had long-standing plans to spend their retirement years in David's home country — the United Kingdom. 
     
    The British Home Office thwarted those plans by rejecting Maria Summers's application for permanent residency on the grounds that her 45-year marriage was not genuine or affectionate.
     
    A tribunal later overturned that decision, only to reject her application a second time for financial reasons.
     
    Maria summers returned to Canada in August after several unsuccessful appeals, and David has since followed her back to their former hometown of Ottawa.
     
    They hope to return to the U.K., but David says his wife would be doing so under less than ideal circumstances.
     
    "The last letter that we received ... was that she should apply for a six-month visitor visa," David Summers wrote in an email to the Canadian Press. "Yes I know it's hard to believe that a Canadian citizen whose son and husband both carry a British passport would have to apply for a visa to visit England."
     
    David Summers, who underwent cancer surgery days before his wife returned to Canada, said he opted to rejoin her because of additional, unspecified health issues.
     
    In doing so, he said he was forced to leave his terminally ill mother in a nursing home. Her precarious health was one of the reasons the couple had originally opted to retire in the British town of Hereford where they jointly own a home, he said.
     
    His temporary return to Canada also means that his work as a municipal councillor must be done via email, he added.
     
    The Summers's visa saga began in 2014 when Maria applied for permanent residency status, which would have given her the same travel rights as David.
     
    The U.K. Border Agency rejected her initial application, explicitly questioning the affection level of her marriage in the process.
     
    "It is reasonable to expect that in a genuine subsisting, supportive and affectionate relationship, there would be evidence of regular contact, signs of companionship, emotional support, affection, and abiding interest in each other's welfare and well-being throughout the entire duration of your relationship," the rejection letter stated. "... I am therefore not satisfied that your relationship is genuine and subsisting or that you intend to live together permanently in the U.K."
     
    The couple appealed the ruling, submitting numerous photographs and other materials documenting their years together, but the visa request hit another brick wall.
     
    This time the British First Tier Tribunal acknowledged their marriage was genuine, but said Maria Summers fell less than $2,000 short of the minimum gross income requirement to stay in England.
     
    The couple took their fight public, appealing to the Queen and prompting a politician to raise the issue in parliament, but David Summers said all avenues for permanent residency have now been exhausted.
     
    The situation has prompted a decision that David Summers feels is ironic under the circumstances.
     
    "As long as mother is alive my wife and I have decided to keep two homes, even though the last visa refusal suggested we could not afford to live in England," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules
    An employer's cash shortage is no reason to short-change a wrongfully dismissed employee, Ontario's top court ruled Monday.

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules

    Calgary Man Says Giant Wave Knocked Over Tofino Whale-Watching Boat That Claimed Six Lives

    Dwayne Mazereeuw knew lives were in peril after a giant wave hit the Leviathan 11 and tossed him, his wife and 25 others into the chilling, rolling waters off the west coast of Vancouver Island.

    Calgary Man Says Giant Wave Knocked Over Tofino Whale-Watching Boat That Claimed Six Lives

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault
    Fifty-three-year-old Michael Dodd has been charged with sexual assault and sexual interference of a person under the age of 16.

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault

    City Of Burnaby Loses Trans Mountain Court Battle, Ordered To Pay Company's Costs

    City Of Burnaby Loses Trans Mountain Court Battle, Ordered To Pay Company's Costs
    The Metro Vancouver city has tried to hamper preliminary planning in advance of laying the 1,100-kilometre-long pipeline between Alberta and coastal B.C. through two separate bylaws.

    City Of Burnaby Loses Trans Mountain Court Battle, Ordered To Pay Company's Costs

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty
    Sid Frankel, one of the report's authors, says more children in Manitoba are slipping into poverty despite a provincial strategy introduced in 2009.

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report
    The report by the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS says opioids such as oxycodone are increasingly being overprescribed for patients who become dependent on the medication.

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report