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Liana - Allan

Liana - Allan

Liana Allan is probably Australia's best known migration agent. Liana is the owner of Legal Training Australia Pty Ltd which is a professional development firm training Australian migration agents and owner of Visacorp Pty Ltd migration agency. Liana's main passion is serving the needs of the migration agent community and providing migrants with information that can truly assist them as they seek to create a new life in Australia. Liana plays netball twice a week and enjoys great food and the occasional glass of Shiraz. Liana lives in Sydney, Australia and has two children. Liana is married.

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Migration Alliance has received the following information from TRA:

From 1 July 2014, DIBP has introduced a requirement that skills assessments used to apply for certain skilled visas may not be older than three years from the date of issue.  This is to ensure that the skills held by an applicant are still current at the time of visa application. TRA is seeking further information from DIBP on its policy amendment, which is reflected in Schedules 2 and 13 of the Migration Regulations 1994, including an estimate of the numbers of clients it anticipates will be affected by the change.

TRA is currently examining, as a priority, the implications of the policy for those with a skills assessment issued more than three years ago. This is a complex process.  As you are aware, TRA has changed its programs over time to improve its assessment processes and evidence requirements to ensure it is assessing the skills of applicants against current industry standards (for example, in all our current programs, applicants need an AQF or comparable qualification at the required level in their occupation). Someone who met the criteria under an old program may not meet the criteria of the current program for a specified country and occupation.

TRA is unable simply to re-issue a skills assessment outcome letter with a revised date. To satisfy DIBP requirements, it must establish the currency of the skills held and as noted above, this can be more than just checking a person has recently worked in an occupation. TRA is currently looking at whether it can streamline processes for those with a TRA skills assessment that is no longer accepted by DIBP. When a policy response has been developed, this information will be posted on the TRA website. Until that time, visa applicants with a previous assessment that is no longer accepted by DIBP must apply for a new skills assessment under the program now applicable.

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Migration Alliance has made the following suppklementary submission today in relation to the Independent review of the Office of the MARA.

Migration Alliance further submission for the Independent Review of the Office of the MARA

Annexure A

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The following email was sent to an RMA today.  It is going to be so much fun determining which TRN corresponds to which client so that we can refund them $3.50.

Dear Sir/Madam,

 

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Stephanie Lu, RMA 9252100 has an office available at short notice. 

Stephanie is a semi-retired migration agent would like to have a fellow migration agent to share a well-established office located in the heart of the city, just opposite of Wynyard station. Please contact Stephanie if you are interested on 0409608168.

RMA-office-2.jpg

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The following email has been sent into NSW Trade and Investment Migration Policy this morning by me:

Hi Lindsey

RMAs are not satisfied with the response provided by NSW Government. 

Is the NSW Government  (Skilled) going to fix the botched application process that cost so many applicants the opportunity to apply?  By this I refer to the unannounced application window, huge technical problems resulting in many people getting half way through applications and then being blown out of the system by crashing servers, etc and then having no opportunity to start their failed application again, etc etc.

The huge demand for applicants was perfectly predictable given the many months of closed applications prior to that.  Lots of human cost to this mess, yet NSW officials seem relatively ok with their “new” system and are downplaying the major technical problems as glitches, etc.  In short, this was a disastrous rollout of a fatally flawed system that resulted in a great amount of frustration and disappointment from people who only wanted the opportunity to apply for sponsorship. 
 
And even if NSW Government spends millions of tax dollars to upgrade the servers and bandwidth, under the current plan what would that reduce the application window from an hour last time to – 10 minutes?

How are RMA’s supposed to ethically decide which of multiple sc190 sponsorship applications goes in first, and what of an RMA’s legal liability if they agree to lodge this type of application and are prevented from doing so by NSW’s technical problems and/or not having time in the tiny window of opportunity to get all of their clients’ applications lodged?

Some RMA’s are taking the view that it is not ethical to recommend NSW state sponsorship at this point, given the random nature of who was able to get through or not during the 14 July debacle given all the problems.
 
MA takes the lead on this issue and complaints are coming in that as usual the MIA has simply repeated the lame NSW response (that doesn’t address most of the important issues) without commentary.  Members of the MIA and MA have turned to Migration Alliance to contact the NSW Government in and ask the hard questions. 

Thank you for your time and I look forward to a response that I can send to all 5200 agents across the profession.
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