Victorian Government Agent Alert
News just in:
October 2014 Edition
Welcome to the Victorian Government's Agent Alert for migration agents and representatives.
...Breaking Australian immigration news brought to you by Migration Alliance and associated bloggers. Please email help@migrationalliance.com.au
News just in:
Welcome to the Victorian Government's Agent Alert for migration agents and representatives.
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WHAT EVERY SIGNIFICANT INVESTOR VISA APPLICANT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT AUSTRALIAN DIVORCE AND FAMILY LAW
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In sharp contrast to this is the processing times for the family stream visas. The case in point is the Partner Temporary visa which has a similar service standard of 75% finalisations in 6 months. However, DIBP has achieved this only in about 1 in 5 cases with most being finalised in 12 months. RMAs have complained that DIBP has intentionally done this in order to spread out grants over the year and that some delays are due to applicants lodging applications without professional guidance due to the high deparmental application charges.
The sc457 Visa grants has seen a dramatic drop across the states. In 2013–14 the 457 primary visa grants for Western Australia (down 41.3 per cent to 8605) and Queensland (down 31 per cent to 7547) both fell. DIBP explained that this is in line with the slowing-down of the mining industry. The 457 primary visa grants for New South Wales (down 18.5 per cent to 19,693) and Victoria (down 14.8 per cent to 12,261) also fell.
The top three source countries for the 457 visa in 2013–14 were India with 23.3 per cent grants, followed by the UK (18.3 per cent) and the Republic of Ireland (7.2 per cent). These were the same top three source countries in 2012–13.
...Here is a tip sheet for migration agents in regard to the re-opening of applications tomorrow. We encourage agents to read this in conjunction with the Essential Information document.
useful-information-for-migration-agents-nsw-nomination-190-visa.pdf
Stephen Dinham, professor of education at the University of Melbourne, told the paper that non-traditional colleges were turning out graduates, particularly in early childhood and primary, worsening the glut of university-trained teachers.
He said the dozen or so different routes into early childhood teaching, from a minimum-level TAFE diploma up to a master's in education from a university, made understanding the sector more complex than primary and secondary schools.
Unions on the other hand have blamed the need for foreign staff on the "inadequate" pay in the female-dominated early childhood sector.
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