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Australian Immigration Daily News

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

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With over 25,000 small business clients BizCover is focussed solely on small  to medium business and have therefore developed a deep understanding of the needs of Australia’s small businesses.

Our Offer: BizCover offers Professional Indemnity specifically designed for Registered Migration Agents (RMAs) from AIG Australia.  BizCover has been working with Migration Alliance for over year 5 years with more than 1,500 RMA’s holding PI through BizCover. We have negotiated with our insurers to provide Registered Migration Agents with a policy that meets all the Office of the MARA requirements at market leading prices. Members of Migration Alliance receive a discount of over 20% off the premium. Policies can be bought online 24x7 or by calling our team on 1300 249 268. We can also provide RMAs with Public Liability, Office insurance and Cyber Insurance.

Claims: BizCover has a dedicated and experienced claims team used to dealing with claims from RMAs and other small business.

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This is the email being sent out by the Perth Parent visa centre (note no officer first or last name and no position number, just 'Admin'):

 

UNCLASSIFIED

As no mail could be delivered on 2nd June due to the public holiday in WA and as that mail would have been in the GPO before the repeal date any mail coming from the post office and delivered on the 3rd will be accepted as valid. Couriered applications will not be accepted as valid.

Admin
Parent Visa Centre
Department of Immigration and Border Protection

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The former Labour government’s overhauled business migration program saw a 90 percent fall in visa grants to business migrants due to unrealistic criteria. A joint parliamentary inquiry, essentially set up to study the failure of Business Innovation and Investment Program (BIIP),  and make recommendations,  has heard the program is “plagued by slow processing, unpredictable outcomes and selection criteria that deter good candidates in a search for ideal, younger migrants”.

The Australian reports that only 652 visas were granted over the first 21 months of the BIIP scheme, since its introduction in 2012.  That compares with 6790 in the final year of the system it ­replaced, the Business Skills ­Program. The department, in its submission to the inquiry, indicated the plunge in applicants “will make it increasingly difficult to maintain the number of business migrants as a proportion of the overall permanent migration program”.

“While there are sufficient ­applications under the previous business skills program to guarantee the 2013-14 program, the application rate may put the delivery of the 2014-15 program in question,” the submission read.

Sydney legal firm Immigration Solutions Lawyers, in its submission, blamed the “enormous decline” in applicants to “overly onerous” selection criteria that strive for an unrealistic ideal.

“A desirable candidate is someone between 35-39 years of age with a business turnover that is not under $1 million, with at least four years business experience and who has $1.3m in assets,” it read. “However, such a candidate would be unlikely to elect Australia due to heavy government regulation, taxation, and it being a relatively small market on the very outskirts of the Pacific Rim.”

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Migration Alliance has made the following submission to the Department of Immigration and Citizenship today after a recent security glitch in the VEVO system.  This glitch was spotted by Migration Alliance and led to VEVO being pulled offline for a period of time.  Previous articles on the problems with VEVO can be found here and here.
 
Dear XXXX [name witheld]
Following recent problems with VEVO which Migration Alliance brought to the DIBP's attention, it is my submission that VEVO needs an urgent security upgrade.
I have had a look around the world at alternative systems which allow employers to enrol to verify a person's work rights.  I believe the Australian system is a breach of privacy and is currently not safeguarding third-party information, not properly verifying enrolled organisations.
May I suggest that the DIBP move towards the model that is operating in the USA by the USA Citizenship and Immigration Services (UCIS) known as 'e-verify'.
For more information on the system please see:
http://www.uscis.gov/e-verify
For specific details on what employers are required to do in order to enrol in e-verify in the USA, please see the checklist:
http://www.uscis.gov/e-verify/getting-started/enrollment-checklist
The security of the USA e-verify system is strong, whilst the security on the Australian VEVO system, by comparison, is extremely weak.
I suggest that DIBP move towards the industry benchmark in this regard as currently VEVO is not 'best practice'.
Please could you pass this onto the relevant persons at the DIBP for their consideration?
Thank you.
 
 

 

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Let's start by looking at what Training Benchmark A and B are.

Training Benchmark A is a contribution of 2% of payroll expenditure (payroll is calculated on the previous 12 months operation) to an industry training fund for the training of Australian Citizens or Permanent Residents.  If there is no industry training fund then payment can be made into a recognised scholarship fund.

Training Benchmark B is evidence of spending 1% of payroll (payroll is calculated on the previous 12 months operation) on training for their employees who are Australian Citizens or Permanent Residents.  Training Providers prepare a training plan for the business to meet the training needs of that particular business.   This training plan needs to be attached to the documentation sent in to the DIBP for the purpose of demonstrating to the DIBP that the company has complied with it's training obligations.

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