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"the man!"
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hey Ryan. quote: do I wait it out?
NO! quote: Go down to the Comisaria unbidden and see if it's there?
YES! go check personally. when i applied for my residency card years ago i was told the same thing, that they would send me a letter in 2 months telling me it was ready to pick up. when 3 months went by (i waited an extra month since this is spain) and i received no such letter, i called them and they said it was still not ready. 4 more calls every 2 months, still not ready they told me and then more calls, calls, calls... i finally got fed up and went to the comisaria to see what was going on. to my bewilderment, when i got to the counter they looked me up in a file and pulled out the residency card, EXPIRED!!! i shit you not! it had been sitting there for over a year (inital card was good for a year) even when they had told me over and over on the phone that it was not in yet. so, i had to re-apply and the second time i really kept on top of it so i got it in 2 months. i simply went 10 weeks after i applied and it was there despite the fact that no letter arrived (once again  ). saludos, jer...
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| Posts: 12231 | Location: ny, u.s.a. --> madrid, spain --> the plaza mayor ! | Registered: 30 June 1998 |    |
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Holy crap! I figured the same thing, "Well, this is Spain......"  I'll try going down there then. I think I have to have some sort of payment receipt though, and I don't. I'll just check if it's there I guess and see what they say. Thanks!
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| Posts: 36 | Location: Madrid by way of Los Angeles & Seattle | Registered: 20 May 2004 |    |
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Mariposita - do you still have to go to the bank for an ingreso that you then take there to pick it up? I think I'll wait till the end of the month, as you said, but when I do go down there, it'd be nice to have whatever I need to get it in case it's there. I'd prefer not to go more than once. =) quote: umm, you don't need a visa to get the residency card?
Well, I'm getting the student residency card, but I already have a visa, it just expired. They gave me the visa to start 1 October and end 1 January.
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| Posts: 36 | Location: Madrid by way of Los Angeles & Seattle | Registered: 20 May 2004 |    |
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I never got my letter either. Most people I know never got their letter. I applied for my card two years ago but only bothered to get it last month. The queue (line for you yanks) has become obscene in recent months as the Bulgarians and Romanians all want their cards. I arrived at 9am (the earliest I could do it as I had to take the train from Salamanca) and had to queue for 3 hours. There was an official coming out telling certain people to jump the queue, but I wasn't allowed. I don't know how he decides. Once I got to the front of the queue, the girl told me to go pay the 6.55€ or whatever it was at a bank and come back. I dreaded another queue, but I just had to tell the guy on the door I had gone out to pay and he let me pass. Now, if you can get the form from somewhere else and pay it, you MIGHT be able to convince the guy on the door that you've just popped out after already having queued for three hours and jump the queue. I just don't know where to get the form from. Damian Damian
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| Posts: 345 | Location: a town in La Mancha I'd prefer not to recall | Registered: 22 February 2004 |    |
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You can download all of the forms online. If you search on this site under "cheapest way to study" I think the links to the "modelos" are there. You can also get the forms from the people who stand at the gate and won't let you in.
If you go in the morning and they give you the form for the ingreso (a long shot, since your card would have to be ready), you could also run out and make the payment and come back if you had to. Once you wait in line and go in, they will let you back in without having to wait in line again.
Oh, and make sure to bring a copy of every page in your passport that has a stamp. That's a new rule that they instated this year. If you need to make copies, there's a copy shop one block away in the basement of the apartment building in the block just south of the comisaría (on the left side of Pardiñas).
Yes, Ryan, as I remember, the letter comes with the form that you take to the bank to pay the 5,30 Euros (I think that's the amount), so it's better to wait for the letter, if you can. I would only give it another week or two, though. Also, you are perfectly legal while all of this is "en trámite."
Damian--I think you are referring to a different kind of residency card. Non-"comunitario" students go through an entirely different process, so they aren't really affected by the whole amplification-of-the-EU thing. We have always gotten our letters for the student residency/estancia--a total of 7 or 8 letters by now--usually about two weeks before the actual day when you are allowed to pick up the card.
Ryan's case is probably taking so long because of the Christmas holidays and also because it is his first application (it's a bit simpler to renew). Mine took extra long because I applied for it before August this year.
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| Posts: 1070 | Location: Madrid | Registered: 10 December 2002 |    |
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I applied for it because I was sick of numpties in Video Clubs etc saying that i need a DNI and that my passport "no vale". The reason I had to get it was that I applied for a bank account without a DNI. Now, apparently (according to Santander) if you have a 'no residente' account but you have a DNI (whether you are in possession of it or not) you are classed as 'residente'. And they block your account. Bam! No warning, no explanation. Santander hasn't heard of a "computer network" yet and as I am in Salamanca but opened my account in San Pedro, my bank here had no idea why my account was closed and couldn't get hold of San Pedro (the number on their system was out of date). When I finally got hold of San Pedro, I discovered that the only way to unblock my account was to get my DNI. I said "apparently" because I have a friend in exactly the same situation as me (DNI waiting for them in Madrid, opened a "no residente" account years ago) and her account hasn't been blocked. But Santander say it's a police matter and they can't do anything about it. To top it all off, they lost one of the two cheques I was cashing. Santander = bad in my opinion. I mean really, in this day and age, why aren't they hooked up to a central computer? Damian
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| Posts: 345 | Location: a town in La Mancha I'd prefer not to recall | Registered: 22 February 2004 |    |
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I just have a question about this process. After reading the insightful posts, my question is the following: Which is worse, lack of information (or in other words conflicting information) or standing line, or both? Thanks, Shawn
"Wanna fly, you got to give up the shit that weighs you down" - SONG OF SOLOMON, Toni Morrison
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| Posts: 1255 | Location: Richmond, VA but in MADRID now | Registered: 10 February 2002 |    |
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"the man!"
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quote: Which is worse, lack of information (or in other words conflicting information) or standing line, or both?
all of the above. saludos, jer...
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| Posts: 12231 | Location: ny, u.s.a. --> madrid, spain --> the plaza mayor ! | Registered: 30 June 1998 |    |
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