Sunday, July 26, 2009

Strategies to fast track skilled independent processing

Strategies for fast-tracking processing of non Critical Skills Shortage List Skilled Independent visa applications

by

Andrew Hackworthy B.Comm/LL.B (UNSW)

Australian Immigration Lawyer/Migration Agent Registration Number 9790738

http://www.australianvisas.com.au/

In December 2008, the Australian Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Senator Chris Evans, announced a range of changes to processing of General Skilled immigration visa applications. These changes came into effect on 1 January 2009.

These changes affect not only General Skilled migration applications lodged after this date but applications lodged before this date where the application has not yet been decided (General skilled migration applications that are currently being processed)

The initial changes provided Priority Processing to occur with preference given to: -

Employer-sponsored permanent migration applications, where skilled migrants are sponsored to go into jobs unable to be filled locally.

Applicants nominated by State and Territory governments,

Applicants who had nominated an occupation on a newly created Critical Skills Shortage List.

On 16 March 2009 the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship announced the following further changes:

-capping the 2008-09 General Skilled Migration (GSM) Program by reducing the number of GSM visas to be granted in 2008/2009 from 133,500 to 115,000 places

-removal of most Trades from the Critical Skills list


How will the changes affect General Skilled Migration applications currently being processed?

Basically if you don’t have an occupation on the revised Critical Skills Shortage List (see below) and are neither sponsored by a State or Territory government nor sponsored by your employer (under the Employer Nomination Scheme) your General Skilled Migration application will not be decided for a considerable period of time (possibly up to 3 to 4 years).

The following is a link to the Critical Skills Shortage List effective from 16 March 2009.

Most trades have now been removed from the list.

http://www.immi.gov.au/skilled/general-skilled-migration/pdf/critical-skills-list.pdf

For Computing professionals the following occupations are considered to be on the Critical Skills Shortage list:- Computing Professionals (not elsewhere classified) 2231-79 specialising in one of the following:-

CISSP, C++/C#/C, Data Warehousing, Java, J2EE, Linux, .Net technologies, Network Security/Firewall/Internet Security, Oracle, PeopleSoft, SAP, SIEBEL, Solaris or Unix

My General Skilled Migration application is currently awaiting decision and is based on an occupation that is not on the revised Critical Skills Shortage List above.

I can’t wait 3 to 4 years for my General Skilled Migration application to be decided. What can I do to ensure that the application is processed as soon as possible?

Either

(1) Search the various State/Territory governments lists of baseline occupations where the State or Territory indicates that it is willing to sponsor for a Skilled Permanent resident visa application (a sub-class 176 or sub-class 886 Skilled Sponsored application) then convince the relevant State or Territory government that you intend to live and work in that particular State or Territory for at least 2 years following grant of your Permanent Residence visa.

Sponsoring State/Territory governments will usually require you to show proof of having visited the particular state, proof of attending job interviews and having received job offers, details of relatives or friends who live in the sponsoring state and proof that you have made enquiries about accommodation in the sponsoring state before they will provide State government sponsorship.

State and Territory governments who may offer nomination are:

As part of providing Sponsorship some States/Territories will require you to agree to reside in the particular State or Territory for at least 2 years from grant of the Skilled–Sponsored (Permanent Residence) visa and may also require you to consent to monitoring every 6 months.

Or,

(2) An alternative to State /Territory Sponsorship where an applicant desires Priority Processing of their Skilled Permanent Residence application and has lodged a sub-class 175 Skilled-Independent visa application that is not yet decided is to obtain sponsorship by an Employer under the Employer Nomination Scheme. Where an applicant has already lodged a sub-class 175 Skilled Independent visa application that is undecided, where an applicant then lodges a sub-class 121 Employer Nomination Scheme (offshore) visa application based on a current approved employer nomination the Permanent Residence application will be processed as a Priority. The usual visa application charge for an ENS visa application will not apply. The only charge payable will be the filing fee on lodgment of the Employer Nomination Application by the Sponsoring Employer (currently $445).

It is a requirement for an ENS visa application relying on the above provision that the applicant holds a qualification equivalent to an Australian Qualifications Framework Diploma. The writer has lodged ENS visa applications where an Applicant has overseas qualifications and experience (assessed by Trades Recognition Australia) to be equivalent to Australian trade qualifications and the Departemtn of Immigration and Citizenship have accepted these trade qualifications as equivalent to an Australian Qualifications Framework Diploma.

Where the above strategy is successfully undertaken, the Employer Nomination Scheme visa application should be decided within approximately 3 months of lodgment (despite the nominated occupation not being on the minister’s Critical Skills Shortage list) and the time from lodgment until grant of Australian Permanent Residence visa reduced from 3-4 years to approximately 4 months.