System Message:

Australian Immigration Daily News

Breaking Australian immigration news brought to you by Migration Alliance and associated bloggers. Please email help@migrationalliance.com.au

  • Home
    Home This is where you can find all the blog posts throughout the site.
  • Categories
    Categories Displays a list of categories from this blog.
  • Tags
    Tags Displays a list of tags that have been used in the blog.
  • Bloggers
    Bloggers Search for your favorite blogger from this site.
  • Team Blogs
    Team Blogs Find your favorite team blogs here.
  • Login
    Login Login form

Posted by on in General

by Michael Jeremy - Registered Migration Agent and Migration Lecturer

Last month, February, I attended the Watermelon Festival in Chinchilla in Southern Queensland. My mate Terry has a watermelon farm and my interest in melons over the decades made Melonfest Chinchilla impossible to resist.

My professional interest in agriculture and horticulture in Australia also made this part of Queensland a must visit. Despite issues with oversupply making previous seasons tough for watermelon growers, Melonfest 2015 was reported a great success, with commercial Sydney and Melbourne television stations covering the event live.

...
Continue reading Last modified on
Hits: 4633 1 Comment
Rate this blog entry:
0

Posted by on in General

Complaints have emerged that the Department of Immigration (DIBP) is recklessly dishing out wrong advice to callers on their helpline.

Faceless, unaccountable, just plainly wrong and recklessly dangerous. There is no other way to describe DIBPs Immigration Helpline. Or should we call it the "To-Hell-Line". The Migration Alliance has received complaints that DIBP's 131 881 helpline is dishing out bad advice to unwary visa applicants.

Callers who put down the phone after waiting 30 minutes may well be the lucky ones. It's like missing a doomed flight.

You have to wonder which is worse: advice from an unregistered practitioner or advice from DIBPs helpline? Or are they both about the same because they are often wrong and with no liability whatsoever.

RMAs (Registered Migration Agents) have complained that, everyday people call DIBPs 131 881 helpline with hope for some direction with their visa applications or status. Instead, they are misled with “wrong, incorrect, incomplete or half-baked immigration advice.”

...
Continue reading Last modified on
Hits: 6516 17 Comments
Rate this blog entry:
5

Posted by on in General

#boycott131881

I have just called the 131 881 DIBP number three times and asked the same question three times.   Given the number of times the DIBP have wasted my time with pointless requests since 2001 (when I became an agent), I believe that I am perfectly entitled to ring the 131881 DIBP number and ask a question to test their knowledge and service.  This was my question:

I am married but me and my husband have been separated for 2 years.  I have been living with my new British partner for 12 months.  He is on a 457.  Can I lodge a spouse visa now?

131881 staff member 1:  No you need to be divorced first.

...
Continue reading Last modified on
Hits: 26339 46 Comments
Rate this blog entry:
11

Posted by on in General

DIBP has made it illegal to offer commissions out of Training Benchmark A funds and is now conducting an audit of known training institutions allegedly misusing training funds. 

Late last year, Sydney TAFE was reportedly under investigation for alleged fraud in its use of millions of dollars from a training program for students on 457 visas. “Sydney Institute of TAFE generated $3.3 million last year from migration agents who were paid $380,000 in commissions for recruiting students on 457 visas” according to a report in The Sydney Morning Herald.

Convenor of Migration Alliance, Christopher Levingston says:

"It is understood that following the investigation Sydney TAFE was given a clean bill of health and that the allegations in the SMH article were without foundation.  It is understood that the allegations were made to the journalist by a former disgruntled TAFE employee.   As far as MA is aware any commissions paid to RMAs by Sydney TAFE did not come out of training benchmark payments made by employers.  'Commission payments' were made from other general funds held and maintained by Sydney TAFE".

The Migration Alliance then published on this blog that that a full audit of Training Benchmark A should be undertaken by the DIBP or some other body to ensure that the funds are spent properly and not left sitting in accounts or even worse being improperly misdirected.

That audit is now well underway. DIBP has confirmed that it is currently conducting an audit of known providers in response to recent allegations of misuse of funds contributed for the purpose of meeting the subclass 457 training benchmark requirements.

What exactly ‘known providers’ means is not explained but surely they must start out with those offering a ‘40% commission’.

DIBP also requires Benchmark A funds are directed to an ‘industry training fund’.  These are statutory authorities responsible for providing funding for training of eligible workers in certain industries. Therefore, no payments can be made to TAFEs, Universities or ‘recognised industry bodies’, where there are statutory industry fund operating in the same sector as the applicant. Contributions to private registered training organisations (RTOs) do not satisfy the requirements of Training Benchmark A.

DIBP has indicated that it is not concerned with the payment of commissions per se. Commissions just cannot be paid out from the funds received for the purposes of meeting the benchmark.

On a related issue, the Migration Alliance noted that the Victorian Training Market Half Year Report revealed that some TAFEs were at financial risk. Migration Alliance wrote to Senator Michaelia Cash, Assistant Minister, DIBP and Kim Vance, Director, Program Delivery DIBP with these facts and the concern that employers are being encouraged to send funds to institutions that may be at financial risk.

"As top any prohibition or threat to withdraw an approval of a Training Organisation by reason of the payment of a commission does not have any statutory basis and may well be a threat but nothing more". says Christopher Levingston.

 

Last modified on
Hits: 4382 1 Comment
Rate this blog entry:
0

Posted by on in General

MIGRATION ALLIANCE VIDEO RELEASE

The new Migration Alliance video is now live and will soon be uploaded to the homepage.  Watch it here:

Last modified on
Hits: 3764 0 Comments
Rate this blog entry:
7
Joomla SEF URLs by Artio

Immigration blog

Bizcover Banner
Migration Amendment for UK Armed Forces Personnel
The Migration Amendment (Status of Forces Agreemen...
Continue Reading...
Cancellation of Registration for Migration Agent for 5 years
The Office of the Migration Agents Registration Au...
Continue Reading...