Law /
Does anyone have experience of getting a karta pobytu from Krakow? [13]
I too have tried getting a karta pobytu. But the experience left me in a state of total nervous exhaustion up to the point where I said...Oh, dear me, except the 'f' letter was used.
And now the story....
I bought a flat in 2002 in Krakow and was told that I needed to be registered (zameldowanie). (This is where it all went wrong-I was told duff info). I live in UK permanently.
I am on a British passport, so I could only get the 3 month zameld. It meant that for a few years I had to make sure that every 3 months I turned up to renew the 3 month zameld. However, doing it for the umpteenth time, last time, some job's worth told me that they couldn't do it anymore, as the 3 months zamel. no longer existed and I had to register for the 5 year one. From Urzad Miasta I went to St. Sebastian St, where I was told that I needed 'insurance'. This is where it became laughable. I told the girl, that never in a million years would I use the Polish Health Service, as I would go private anyway, bo no, it wouldn't do. I did not realize at the time, that UK NHS card would have done for that-thank you for that.
Story continues...I walked out...and told them to stick it. As I live in the UK I did not see why I should be zameld. in Poland anyway, as the longest I ever spend in 2 weeks 5 times a year in my flat. And that was another thing..even when I was doing the 3 months zamel. I had to prove that I am the owner and I am the tenant of the flat, therefore I had to give myself permission to live there. Laughable, I know.
However, now that I have calmed down, after the last experience about a year ago...I have not given up and will try again.
And don't even get me started on trying to get proof my my Polish nationality.
I was born in Poland of Polish parents and Polish grandparents. I have my Polish birth certificate, my Polish christening form, my exam results from school (I attended for a few years) and the woman told me that these facts did not mean that they would recognise my Polish nationality...When I said I was born in Krakow, she said that she wasn't exactly sure if she could accept that Krakow was in Poland. I left without saying a word and got drunk that night.