Switzerland Makes Available an Additional 5,500 Work Permits

Switzerland will issue an additional 5,500 work permits in 2010 for individuals from countries outside the European Union and the European Free Trade Association, thereby doubling the number of available work permits to 11,000, according to Swissinfo. Work permit availability was halved in December 2009 amid fears of rising unemployment, but the government revised the policy upon observing that the economy is rebounding more quickly than anticipated.

Image credit: Fabio Fatuzzo

United Kingdom: New Identification Cards for British, Swiss and EEA Nationals

The United Kingdom’s Identity and Passport Service (IPS) has introduced two new voluntary identification cards: 

  • a national identification card for British nationals; and
  • an identification card for European Economic Area (EEA) and Swiss nationals.

The national identification card will only be issued to British citizens. Job applicants may present the card to employers for identification and work authorization verification purposes, in lieu of presenting either: (1) a passport, or (2) a birth certificate and a document containing a National Insurance number. Similarly, an identification card issued to EEA and Swiss nationals (and, in extraordinary cases, to British nationals) can be presented in lieu of a job applicant’s national passport or identity card.

However, some EEA nationals from the European Union’s 10 “accession states” have no automatic right to work in the UK and employers must also check whether those applicants:

  • have registered with the Home Office (Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia);
  • have been granted a work authorization (Bulgaria and Romania); or
  • are exempt from the accession regulations’ requirements.

The two IPS-issued cards are not the same as the compulsory identity card for foreign nationals (ICFN), which the UK Border Agency is introducing for a range of categories of migrants from outside the EEA. The ICFN can also be used as evidence of the holder's right (or lack of a right) to work in the UK.

Image credit: Zscout370

Switzerland: Work Permits Exhausted in Several Cantons

Work permit quotas for 2009 in the Swiss Cantons of Aargau, Geneva, Vaud, Zug, and Zurich have been exhausted. As a result, employers may not sponsor one-year work permits for non-European Union (EU) foreign nationals or nationals of EU countries on assignment in these Cantons until 2010.