Immigration NZ

2022 - 5 - 11

NZ immigration NZ immigration

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Image courtesy of "1 News"

Major reforms to NZ immigration settings announced (1 News)

A streamlined Accredited Employer Work Visa system will be running from July 4 with changes to speed up the process.

"Migrants aren’t just economic units to support employers make a profit. However, a cloud of concern remains due to a track record of under delivering. "Labour has no credibility when it comes to actually delivering the skilled workers they promise. Instead, a lower wage threshold of $25 per hour will be required until April 2023. There will be exemptions for sectors including tourism and hospitality, with a threshold of $25 per hour until April next year. A 'Green List' is also being introduced for specific jobs with pathways to residency.

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Image courtesy of "Newshub"

New Zealand full border reopening date set, significant changes for ... (Newshub)

New Zealand's border will completely reopen from the end of July, including to cruise ships and international students, as the Prime Minister declares Aotearoa ...

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Image courtesy of "Stuff.co.nz"

Immigration overhaul: Government introduces 'fast-track' to ... (Stuff.co.nz)

Immediate residency offered to some skilled migrants, but others can work towards residence in a major rebalancing of the immigration system.

Minimum salary requirements apply where specified, and these will be indexed to the median wage and change over time. "Migrants aren't just economic units to support employers to make a profit. A separate list of occupations will see migrants able to get residence after two years. The list features 85 hard to fill roles, including construction, engineering, trades, health workers and tech. From September, residence can also be applied for directly from overseas. Some of the jobs included in the straight to residence pathway are electrical engineers, surveyors, industrial engineers, psychiatrists, general practice doctors, vets and tech managers. Over the past two years, over 190,000 New Zealanders have benefited from Government investment in trades training, including apprenticeships. “The cornerstone of our rebalance is the new green list which will incentivise and attract high skilled migrants to New Zealand, by providing a new streamlined pathway to residency for those globally hard to fill roles. You can see a full list at the end of this story. But these all need to be paid a minimum salary, which will be pegged to the median wage – with higher pay for some roles. Employers will not need to advertise locally for the jobs and the migrants will be eligible to immediately gain residence, rather than needing to work for a period of time before gaining residence. The changes include a new process for accredited employers to get skilled migrants into New Zealand and get them residency immediately.

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Image courtesy of "New Zealand Herald"

Govt pushes out 2021 residency visa processing by six months (New Zealand Herald)

National doubts Government claims it will be able to process the expected tens of thousands of visas resulting from today's border announcement, with the ...

She was critical that among all of the changes new workers would still not be able to enter the country until after July 4. Six months have passed, and INZ is only processing these at half the speed required to meet that target." It also included those earning twice the median wage. "This will particularly impact migrants from India and the Philippines who make up a large proportion of migrants earning less than double the median wage, which is the requirement for the Work to Residency Pathway for roles not on the 'Green List'. The Government today announced a raft of changes to immigration settings, including a simplified immigration process, and visa extensions for around 20,000 migrants already in New Zealand to ensure skilled workers remained in the country. National Party immigration spokeswoman Erica Stanford said the changes to immigration settings, including a pathway to residency for certain "high-skilled" workers, were simply a rehash of Labour's 2017 policies, and ignored the post-pandemic reality.

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Image courtesy of "Newsroom"

Not much for low-waged migrants in immigration reset (Newsroom)

The Government is selling it as the 'smart' option and the answer to the business communities prayers, but will the new immigration settings ingrain ...

This announcement fails to provide certainty for the types of job many low-income and essential workers who we congratulated throughout the pandemic.” Reader donations are critical to what we do. It’s a move Ardern called both a significant milestone and a chance to put immigration settings on a “more sustainable footing”. “What we know is the large majority of people earning less than 200 percent of median wage are people like from India and the Phillipines and the reality is by setting pathways to residency that are tied to wages, on top of the fact we know there is a wage gap, we are creating a white immigration policy - whether it is intentional or not,” Menéndez March said. These roles include health workers, tradespeople, engineers, teachers, dairy farm managers and tech sector specialists. The immigration settings change was packaged as a salve to one of the larger problems the Government is willing to admit exists around immigration - a heavy reliance on low-skilled migrant labour.

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Image courtesy of "RNZ"

New Zealand border reopening fully from end of July (RNZ)

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has confirmed the border will fully reopen from the end of July, including for cruise ships and international students.

"Our Covid response is actually a very good marketing thing for us around the world for international students. "For highly skilled workers in a global shortage it will ensure New Zealand is an attractive destination with fast-track pathways to residence and simplified application processes. The agreements would "in some cases" be temporary, he said. - Degree-level and other eligible international students' work rights last the same length as their studies. "We expect this change to impact about a quarter of migrant workers based on previous income information. A second work-to-residence pathway requires two years in the job before migrants become eligible for residency. "There's also a new immigration online platform which has come on board which we used for the second phase of the resident visa ... people will see a smarter and simpler immigration system, it will allow us to be dynamic in how we respond." Masters and PhD students will retain the right to work in New Zealand for up to three years after their studies "Each of these sectors will be provided limited exceptions to the median-wage requirement in exchange for ongoing improvements, and the length of these exceptions will be different for each sector." - Students will also not be able to apply for a second post-study visa in New Zealand Visas for some 20,000 migrants already in the country are also being extended, and there will be new restrictions on students being able to work. While the border is already open to New Zealand citizens and residents and visitors from visa-waiver countries, people from countries that need to get a visa to travel to New Zealand had been told it would be October before they could book flights.

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Image courtesy of "RNZ"

Immigration policy a 'two-tier' system that entrenches inequities ... (RNZ)

It sees New Zealand's border fully reopening at the end of July, with sector-specific agreements to support a shift away from lower-skilled migrant labour.

"Getting highly skilled migrants in the country will be important. This announcement will be well received by the tech industry." We talk about two things, we talk about skills shortages and we talk about getting back to growth mode for their businesses. There's going to be nervousness with a lot of long haul travel and we'll just have to see how the working holiday visa numbers actually play out." The reality is if you're one of 14 percent of New Zealanders born in a non-visa waiver country then your non-resident family can't visit this year." If we're really serious about enhancing workers' rights, an amnesty should have been part of the rebalance."

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Image courtesy of "Financial Times"

New Zealand to reopen borders and ease high-skilled immigration ... (Financial Times)

Jacinda Ardern lifts entry requirements early and launches fast-track residency for certain sectors.

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Image courtesy of "New Zealand Herald"

'Not the fix we need': Immigration adviser says new settings 'too ... (New Zealand Herald)

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on Wednesday announced the full border reopening had shifted from October to July 31, along with a raft of immigration changes, ...

Six months have passed, and INZ is only processing these at half the speed required to meet that target." Stanford said the changes to immigration settings, including a pathway to residency for certain "high-skilled" workers, were simply a rehash of Labour's 2017 policies, and ignored the post-pandemic reality. "Why are they singling out a small group? Changes to immigration settings included a simplified immigration process, and visa extensions for around 20,000 migrants already in New Zealand to ensure skilled workers remained in the country. Are midwives not as important as doctors?" This was part of what Immigration Minister Kris Faafoi said was a shift from pre-pandemic trends that relied on lower-skilled workers and resulted in the increased exploitation of migrants. The July timeframe also brings it in line with travellers under the Accredited Employer Work Visa, from July 4, while allowing time for Immigration NZ to prepare to process the visas, with resources already stretched and potentially impacting the processing of one-off residency applications. The new settings also included long-signalled changes to the international education sector, also fully reopening by July 31 but with measures to stop it being used as a "backdoor route to residency". He, along with the wider sector, had been anticipating a wider announcement on pathways to residency for the wider Skilled Migrant Category, such as a points-based system, which the Government had been working on since 2019. Malcolm Pacific Immigration chief executive David Cooper said the announcement only gave certainty to a "very small group", and meant New Zealand could continue missing out to countries with wider settings, such as Australia. An immigration adviser says a major Government policy announcement to attract highly-skilled workers is too narrow and "not the fix we need", warning the country will continue to miss out to the likes of Australia. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on Wednesday announced the full border reopening had shifted from October to July 31, along with a raft of immigration changes, including pathways to residency for highly skilled workers in global demand.

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Image courtesy of "RNZ"

Two-tier visa system a 'kick in the guts' (RNZ)

An organisation fighting for migrant workers' rights says a new scheme to attract overseas workers is unfair and elitist.

Meanwhile, Immigration NZ head Alison McDonald said the department was aiming to process the new visas in 20 working days. There is a second pathway requiring two years in the job before migrants become eligible for residency. "It seems like the more you earn, the higher privileges you already have, the higher rights you will get." "While the borders have been closed we have still been recruiting" - Immigration NZ head Alison McDonald "It seems like the more you earn, the higher privileges you already have, the higher rights you will get." "It kind of seems like the more you earn, the higher privileges you already have, the higher rights you will get," Kaloti told Morning Report.

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Image courtesy of "Stuff.co.nz"

Immigration is being reset back to where we started (Stuff.co.nz)

Linking employer visas to jobs will leave migrant workers with less power to leave exploitative employers, and more incentive to go along with arrangements ...

He says there is a racial element to this rule as well. But this flips in the other direction at lower salary levels. They just won’t be able to settle. Plus, there are still some announcements on the skilled migrant category to come. Only now there is a lot more doubt around whether the new system will actually be able to handle all of this. It is also telling that under the new system plenty of migrants on lower wages will be able to come here, and work at lower wages for a number of years. That deadline has now been extended by an extra six months. This is the kind of situation the Government had signalled it was trying to avoid. This is the “points-based” system where points are raised or lowered to allow more migrants a pathway to residency. McDowall is saying that because there is nothing in the reset of New Zealand’s immigration system on Wednesday that couldn’t have been achieved with tweaks or changes to the earlier rules and visa types. The old system ground to a halt before Covid-19 hit, a huge queue of residency applications formed because the Labour-NZ First coalition agreement couldn’t come to an agreement on a residency target. The old immigration rules had criteria around wage rates, it had blacklists of employers who weren’t able to hire migrant workers, there were checks on employers, and there were rules around who could or couldn’t get residency.

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