Weekend Times


The Times

Business News

Parents are waiting more than 30 years for an Australian visa. The new home affairs minister needs to act

  • Written by Peter Mares, Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, School of Media, Film and Journalism, Monash University

If overseas-born Australians want to sponsor a parent to join them permanently in Australia, they can go down one of two routes.

The expensive path is a contributory parent[1] or aged parent[2] visa with a price tag of close to $50,000 per person. The cheaper option is a standard parent[3] or aged parent[4] visa, which costs “only” $5,125, but takes much longer.

The government sets an annual cap of 8,500 parent visas, with about eight in ten granted to “contributory” applicants. This is 4,000 more places than the Coalition granted in its last year in office, but is still way too few to meet demand.

As a result, the logjam grows. On June 30 2023, Home Affairs had 140,615 parent visa applications on hand. A year later, it was 151,596.

A year ago, Home Affairs advised new applicants that a contributory parent visa “may take at least 12 years to process”. Now it says[5] the time frame is 14 years. This is ridiculous, but the wait for the cheaper, standard visa is beyond absurd — it’s now stretched to 31 years.

Many applicants will die before their cases are considered. They, and their Australian families, are condemned to live in limbo[6], clinging to forlorn hope.

“Providing an opportunity for people to apply for a visa that will probably never come seems both cruel and unnecessary,” said the expert panel[7] reviewing the migration system.

Overhauling the system

Early in its tenure, the government commissioned the panel[8] that found the migration system “not fit for purpose”.

A second report[9] by former Victorian police commissioner Christine Nixon revealed “grotesque” visa abuses.

Former Home Affairs minister Clare O’Neil declared[10] the system broken and unveiled[11] a new migration strategy[12] that aspired to wholesale reform instead of further tinkering.

She and then immigration minster Andrew Giles set in train significant work, including an overhaul[13] of the points system used to select permanent skilled migrants and a review[14] of settings intended to attract them to regional Australia.

But they prioritised fixing skilled migration ahead of addressing family migration, particularly the dysfunctional system of parent visas. It’s a long-term mess that keeps getting worse.

A blue building sign saying department of home affairs
The waitlist of parents visas has blown out to more than 150,000. Joel Carrett/AAP[15]

Political distractions

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke says[16] he was in almost constant briefings in the days after becoming home affairs minister, his focus on a pending High Court decision[17] that could again declare government policy unlawful.

The opposition hammered[18] the government over its handling of the November ruling[19] that indefinite immigration detention was unconstitutional. Burke doesn’t want to be caught out if the court upholds a challenge[20] to the legislation it passed in response.

Lawyers for stateless man known as YBFZ, argue[21] imposing curfews and ankle bracelets on all released detainees breaches the separation of powers between the executive and the judiciary.

But managing the political fallout from legal battles distracts from other profound problems in Australia’s migration system, including the tens of thousands awaiting parent visas.

What’s the solution?

As I wrote[22] previously, the expert panel suggested shifting to a lottery system as New Zealand[23] has in place. New Zealand grants 2,000 places annually to parents who entered its immigration processing queue before October 2022. Applications submitted after that date go into a pool with 500 spots up for grabs in a ballot. Once New Zealand clears its backlog, it can implement a lottery for all parent visas.

Australia could do something similar. It could grant 7,500 visas a year to parents waiting in the queue and offer 1000 by ballot. At that rate, though, it would still take two decades to clear the backlog.

Drawing names from a hat would at least remove the inequity of allowing those who can stump up $50,000 to jump forward in the visa line. But tens of thousands of families would still be denied a visa.

Canada[24] introduced to a lottery system in 2015 and its parent program offers 20,500 places.

The chances of winning remain slim — about one in seven. More than 100,000 applicants miss out and disappointed families will probably keep trying, year after year. They may not be stuck at the back of an endless queue, but they too are left hoping against hope for a visa that may never come.

An alternative is to scrap permanent parent migration altogether. Extended families could still come together using temporary parent visas[25]. While expensive and problematic[26], the temporary parent visa allows an initial stay of three to five years, time to be in Australia while grandchildren are very young or to provide support in times of need.

Scrapping permanent parent migration would be the honest approach, since neither Labor nor the Coalition will expand the parent visa program to meet demand. Skilled migration is their top priority. They see parents as a drain on the system, consuming more in services than they contribute through work and taxes.

Politics vs policy

But Labor and the Coalition know scrapping permanent parent migration would upset overseas-born voters in marginal seats. This is central to the parent conundrum[27]: the major parties’ immigration policies sit in tension with their electoral strategies.

Whatever government decides to do in the long-term, as a new minister, Burke has an opportunity to act decisively and stop the problem getting worse. He could freeze new applications for permanent parent visas pending a thorough review of the options while Home Affairs nibbles away at the backlog of 150,000 applications.

It is unconscionable to let the queue grow longer, fostering hope for a visa that will never come. Eventually hard decisions will have to be made.

Previous ministers have kicked this can down the road for more than a decade. Now it’s at Burke’s feet.

References

  1. ^ contributory parent (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  2. ^ aged parent (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  3. ^ parent (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  4. ^ aged parent (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  5. ^ says (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  6. ^ live in limbo (ozvisa4parents.au)
  7. ^ expert panel (www.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  8. ^ the panel (www.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  9. ^ report (www.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  10. ^ declared (minister.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  11. ^ unveiled (insidestory.org.au)
  12. ^ strategy (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  13. ^ overhaul (www.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  14. ^ review (www.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  15. ^ Joel Carrett/AAP (www.photos.aap.com.au)
  16. ^ says (www.tonyburke.com.au)
  17. ^ High Court decision (www.abc.net.au)
  18. ^ hammered (theconversation.com)
  19. ^ ruling (theconversation.com)
  20. ^ challenge (www.hcourt.gov.au)
  21. ^ argue (www.theguardian.com)
  22. ^ wrote (theconversation.com)
  23. ^ New Zealand (www.immigration.govt.nz)
  24. ^ Canada (www.canada.ca)
  25. ^ temporary parent visas (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  26. ^ expensive and problematic (insidestory.org.au)
  27. ^ the parent conundrum (scanloninstitute.org.au)

Authors: Peter Mares, Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, School of Media, Film and Journalism, Monash University

Read more https://theconversation.com/parents-are-waiting-more-than-30-years-for-an-australian-visa-the-new-home-affairs-minister-needs-to-act-236312

The Weekend Times Magazine

Elevating Events with Convenience and Style: Why Hiring a Coffee Cart is the Perfect Choice

The humble coffee break has transformed into a focal point of social connection, productivity, and hospitality. Whether it's a corporate function, wedding celebration, community festival, or pop-up market, the presence...

Swimming with whales: you must know the risks and when it’s best to keep your distance

Three people were injured last month in separate humpback whale encounters off the Western Australia coast. The incidents happened during snorkelling tours on Ningaloo Reef when swimmers came too close to...

Dentists in Sydney: Your Guide to Dental Care

Sydney, Australia is home to the absolute best dental experts in the country. With a different range of services and specialties, dental specialists in Sydney take care of different needs...

Rodent Control: Effective Strategies to Protect Your Home and Health

Rodent control is an essential part of maintaining a safe and healthy environment in both residential and commercial properties. Rodents, including rats and mice, are not only a nuisance but...

Should I get a COVID vaccine while I’m pregnant or breastfeeding?

From Monday, Australia’s front-line health workers, quarantine staff, border control officers, and workers and residents in aged-care homes will be offered the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine. Some of these workers will be...

Let's talk about nits!

My daughter struggled with nits for 8 years until I found this miracle cure Nits. The one-word granted to strike fear into mums everywhere … and have them immediately scratching their...

CHECK.CHECK.CHECK. The new ‘Slip, Slop, Slap,’ for a night out campaign

CHECK.CHECK.CHECK. The new ‘Slip, Slop, Slap,’ for a night out launched by the Night Time Industries Association A new campaign Check. Check. Check. encouraging punters to do their...

Baking Tools and Equipment Your Bakery Needs

It can be hard to resist the smell of fresh bread or devouring a freshly baked cake. Fortunately, some people have a knack for kneading dough and baking up a...

When AEC IT breaks, It Rarely Looks Like IT

AEC businesses rarely lose time to one dramatic outage. What hurts more are the small, repeat delays that show up right when pressure is highest. The drawing set stalls, the...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink online casinos australiasahabetonline casino australiamyhitbetjojobetMeritkingdeneme bonususbobetcasibomholiganbetjojobetjojobetjojobet