Legal Issues

Australia Immigration urged to lift age restrictions on Working Holiday Visas

Australia ImmigrationQueensland Tourism Minister Desley Boyle, who sent the letter to bring order to immigration, believes that baby boomers around the world could be the answer to Queensland? S major skills crisis.

Currently, the Australian Working Holiday Visa is available for the 18 – to 30-year-old and valid for a period of twelve months.

But Ms Boyle said the Immigration Minister Chris Evans that overseas workers 30 years and older, in fact, Australia’s great untapped resource.

“The trade and industry in Queensland is constrained in terms of their growth by lack of skilled labor,” he said.

“Why should we allow Working Holiday Visas of 18 – to 30-year-old only? May be that some of us who are older, baby boomers, as may well be that opportunity.”

He explained that while Queensland’s low unemployment rate of 3.6% has its good points, is to restrict the growth of business, and is hoping that immigration will solve that.

“This is a bigger problem for Queensland, I suspect, (because) Queensland is booming more than other states,” he said.

Currently, the Australian state is in dire need for workers in the hospitality industry and in the health sector and other skilled workers.

Ms Boyle said he had not yet spoken with other states on the support of the measure, but added that Western Australia and regional areas of New South Wales also have their own skills shortage crisis.

She said before she takes the matter further in the first place, expect answers to the proposed business.

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UK immigration court victory for highly skilled migrants

In what is being hailed as a landmark ruling that will affect 44,000 doctors, engineers and professionals, highly skilled migrants have won a legal victory overturning strict new immigration rules.

The new stricter immigration rules came as Home Office estimates that previous standards were not sufficiently rigorous in the selection of migrants who were making the greatest economic contribution to the UK.

In short, it claimed that some people already in the program are not doing highly skilled work.

This sparked fears that thousands of migrants (including doctors) who went to work in the UK under the HSMP program was introduced in 2002 to attract highly qualified people for the UK and encouraged them to settle there, face the possibility of being forced to leave because I would have to apply under a new system more closely.

Critics argued that many of these migrants face the prospect of deportation with their families, despite having made their main home in Britain.

The HSMP Forum group that went to the courts, the unexpected changes called “unfair” and “a clear case of violation of legitimate expectations.”

Superior Court Judge Sir George Newman ruled that the government has acted “illegally” in exchange for the HSMP rules halfway, and that the original HSMP scheme should be honored.

Has been informed that the Ministry is considering an appeal against the sentence, and has also shown that only around 1370 people would have to leave the country under the new rules.

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