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Old 3rd July 2009, 04:51 PM
frenchie frenchie is offline
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Originally from france. Expat in usa.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bevdeforges View Post
Wow, you are a treasure trove of information! Thanks again.

It looks to me like they are trying to reduce the work load for the fonctionnaires (quel surprise!) for those folks who are only in France for a year or less. Used to be quite a bother to send short term folks to the préfecture for their cartes de séjour when they were only going to be staying six months. Half the time, they moved on before the cards were ready.

It also sounds like they've kind of gotten tired of this "contrat d'accueil et d'integration" stuff, too. More and more of the folks coming through say they were never asked to sign anything, and that they would actually like to get the free French lessons.

Guess we'll have to wait until Service-public updates their information on the website (I'm betting it won't be until after La Rentrée) to see what the details are. But the fees for the carte de séjour are pretty steep, last I heard. (I decided that, rather than renew my carte de residente, I was just going to take French nationality - much cheaper in the long run!)

But I will definitely be sending folks toward this thread to take advantage of the very useful links you've provided!
Cheers,
Bev

PS, I've also made this thread "sticky" - at least for a little while so it will catch people's attention when they are looking for information.
I am glad I can be of some help. If I found any more interesting facts in my net browsing , I'll make sure to make a notion.

For anyone moving to France with their French spouse, be aware that naturalization is an option if you have been married long enough. There is no requirement to live on French soil if your French spouse is registered with the local consulate for the 4 years. If the spouse wasn't registered, the eligibility is moved up to 5 years. Most people are not aware of that, not even people working for the honorary Consul. It is an option and like Bev said, it is a way cheaper option in the long run. I recommend working on your french though, it is always a bonus point at the interview to show that yes you want to be French! If you need more info, I can always point you to the right direction.

Sorry for the tangent!
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