Procedure lapsed or withdrawn
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
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Opinion | AFET | TERRÓN I CUSÍ Anna (PSE) | |
Opinion | JURI | ||
Lead | LIBE | LEHNE Klaus-Heiner (PPE) |
Legal Basis EC before Amsterdam E 000
Activites
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2001/12/11
Additional information
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2001/12/11
End of procedure in Parliament
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1999/05/01
End of procedure in Parliament
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1999/02/10
Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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T4-0096/1999
summary
Under consultation procedure, the Parliament approved the proposal for a Council Act establishing the Convention on rules for the admission of third-coutry nationals to the Member States, subject to amendments in the following areas: - requiring the Commission to make new proposals dealing with admission and a statute for the rights and obligations of third-country nationals residing legally in a Member State, following the entry into force of the Treaty of Amsterdam; - deleting the Article referring to permitted absences for third country nationals (separate vote); - extending justification for renewing residence authorization when it expires to any reason covered by the proposed convention without qualification and not just the reason for which residence was initially authorized; - excepting those Member States, regions and economic sectors where a policy of quotas, or other measures to fulfil a demand for labour, are applied from the provision which grants third-country nationals admission to the EU to take up paid employment where a job vacancy cannot be filled in the short term; - requiring third country nationals to have obtained an offer of a work contract rather than the contract itself in order to gain admission; - allowing Member States to authorise seasonal workers to remain on their territory for longer than six months; - rewording the definition of "transfrontier workers" for the purposes of the proposed convention; - defining the term "independent economic activity"; - allowing Member States to require evidence that third-country nationals entering the EU to study have adequate financial means to support themselves and their studies as well as evidence of adequate health cover; - providing for the specific difficulties encountered by foreign students when stipulating that the period of residence shall be limited to the length of the course of study; - allowing Member States to permit third country nationals to enter their territory to prepare their application for studies; - extending the provisions for third-country nationals studying in the EU to apprentices; - allowing residence authorizations to be extended for less than one year; - granting residence to children of a resident or his or her spouse, regardless of whether one of them is de facto responsible for the children; - specifying that children must be unmarried at the time of application in order to qualify for admission for reasons of family reunification; - placing the burden of proof on the Member State, in cases where it refuses admission of a spouse or adopted child for family reunification because it has been found that the sole purpose of the marriage or adoption is to allow that person toi gain admission; - creating a new chapter on legal protection, allowing the right of appeal to persons who have been refused admission; - As regards questions of the Convention's interpretation, requiring national courts or tribunals against whose decisions there is no judicial remedy under national law to bring the matter before the Court of Justice; - Granting the Court of Justice the full legal power vested in it by the Treaty of Amsterdam in relation to the proposed convention, following the Treaty's entry into force; - ensuring uniform criteria for admission in the case of Member States wishing to negotiate more favourable entry of third country nationals from a specific State; - requiring the Member States to initiate the national procedure for the adoption of the proposed convention no later than 3 months (rather than 6) after the publication of the establishing act; - requiring a High Contracting Party to satisfy the constitutional requirements for the convention's adoption before its entry into force and providing that it will then apply in those country's who meet those requirements as soon as their constitutions will allow; - requiring amendments to the proposed convention to be made on the basis of the Treaty on European Union; - providing that if at the entry into force of the Amsterdam Treaty, a majority of Member States has not approved the Convention, it be replaced with a regulation; - requiring the Commission to propose a replacement measure within 3 years of the convention's entry into force; - requiring the President of the Commission to act as depositary of the proposed convention. The rapporteur was Klaus-Heiner Lehne (PPE,DE).�
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T4-0096/1999
summary
- 1999/02/09 Debate in Parliament
- 1999/01/26 Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
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1998/07/14
Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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COM(1997)0387
summary
PURPOSE: to lay down rules for the admission of third-country nationals for the purposes of employment, self-employed activity, study, non-gainful activity and family reunification.PROPOSED ACT: Council ActCONTENT: the draft Convention applies to third-country nationals who wish to reside in a Member State for longer than three months. It also covers refugees with the status of long-term residents under the terms of the Geneva Convention.The proposal does not seek to create automatic rights to admission: each Member State is free to decide each individual case. All initial applications for admission must be made outside the Union.Admission for the purposes of paid employment may be granted if a vacancy cannot be filled in the short term by a citizen of the Union, a third-country national, or a third-country national who is already a long-term resident. A work contract for at least one year's duration must be submitted on initial admission. Residence authorization may be renewed at a later date.The following persons are admissible:seasonal workers, for up to six months, preference being given to those who have previously performed seasonal work,transfrontier workers who are employed in a Member State and return to their place of origin each day or at least once a week,self-employed workers who have sufficient resources and whose economic activity may have a beneficial effect on the employment market. Initial residence authorization is granted for two years and may be renewed subsequently on certain conditions.students, for the period indicated in their enrolment application (should they wish to remain in the Member State in order to work there after completing their studies, they must first return to their country of origin and apply for admission for this new purpose), trainees, for an initial period of one year, if they hold a training agreement with an establishment or undertaking and furnish proof that they can support themselves and are covered by social security.Authorization may be extended if necessary, but not for the purpose of taking up employment.Pupils in primary and secondary education and apprentices are not covered by the Convention.The right to family reunification is granted to the spouse and children below the age of legal majority. In principle, family members qualifying for admission must wait six months before taking up employment. Lastly, the status of long-term resident may be granted to persons who have been legally resident in a Member State for at least five years, and provided that they hold an authorization which permits residence for a total period of ten years from their first admission. Long-term residents are afforded increased protection against expulsion. They enjoy the same treatment as citizens of the Union with regard to employment, trade union rights, the right of association, access to housing, and schooling.Any person recognized as a long-term resident in a Member State may apply for employment or to pursue a course of study in another Member State. After two years' residence in the new Member State, that person is recognized as a long-term resident.
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COM(1997)0387
summary
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1998/07/13
Debate in Parliament
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Debate in Parliament
summary
Following the request made by Mr Martin SCHULZ (PSE, DE), supported by the rapporteur, Mr Klaus-Heiner LEHNE (EPP, DE), the European Parliament referred back to committee the latter’s report on the rules for the admission of third country nationals into the Member States. This request was intended to allow a broader consensus to be achieved before the vote in plenary. The rapporteur, Mr LEHNE, particularly considered that the amendment adopted in committee regarding the authorisation of admission, for the purposes of family reunification, of partners of the same sex would result in extensive migratory movements. Likewise, he considered that giving third country nationals the right to vote in local elections was not acceptable as not all European Union nationals had this right. He believed that it was also not acceptable for third country nationals to have more rights than EU nationals. He also regretted that the committee had rejected his proposal to allow the expulsion of third country nationals who had received sentences of three years or more. In conclusion, having stressed that not all the amendments adopted in the Committee on Civil Liberties and Internal Affairs reflected his personal position, he called for and obtained the referral of this issue back to committee. He asked Parliament to show that it was serious on this issue, particularly given the codecision in this case following the Treaty of Amsterdam. He also asked the PSE Group to review its amendments. The Commission pointed out that family reunification was a fundamental right and that, if the EU wanted to meet its international obligations in this respect, it would have to find a solution. The Commission would therefore have to find some common ground on the definition of ‘family reunification’. In this respect, the Commission’s proposal allowed a significant step forward to be made.
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Debate in Parliament
summary
- 1998/06/30 Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
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1998/01/16
Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
Documents
- Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading/single reading: A4-0266/1998
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: COM(1997)0387
- Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading/single reading: A4-0045/1999
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T4-0096/1999
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