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twister292

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Posts posted by twister292

  1. The speed of the application is fairly irrelevant. You are still contacted by post regarding your interview and citizenship test date. Then the approval letter is also by post (assuming you pass). Then after that it's all in the hands of your local council for a ceremony date.

     

    So there is plenty of "waiting time".

     

    I got intimation of my test date via email.

  2. Unfortunate as it is, the Cap and Cease provisions have always been there in the Migration Act. They're not used too often, so little knowledge exists about them. They work by allowing the minister incumbent to limit the grants of a particular visa class in a year. If the visa class is already superseded, any applicants beyond the cap outstanding become void ab initio, and that's the "cease" part.

     

    Last Cap and Cease was done when the 885/886/175/176 family of visas was introduced. Some of the older offshore 136 visas were capped/ceased back then (2010 if I recall correctly).

     

    Minister Evans back then wanted cap and cease provisions by occupation...that legislation never passed because the parliament was prorogued for election before it could be tabled. SkillSelect was essentially a sideways move to implement that.

     

    Now that the SkillSelect family of visas are firmly in place, and the 885/886 visas are fully allocated, they've ejected the 175/176 remainder of the queue.

     

    In all honesty, I sympathise with the applicants, but in a way it should relieve them as well. Considering the capped applicants are all offshore, there's no repatriation cost, and they can make other decisions now. At least they have closure from DIBP and don't need to hang in limbo...moreover, the economy has deteriorated substantially, and considering the occupations removed from the SOL are low in demand as it is, the applicants would have a serious struggle on the plate on that front too...

     

    As for re-imbursing IELTS fees, DIBP can only repay to applicants what they have collected...anything on top would be a whole lot of red tape and would have regulatory hurdles as well.

  3. Longstanding applications that DIAC have dragged out to absurd lengths by ludicrous delays.

     

    Not just scrapped by the way: any fees have been pocketed and the applicants have been told the applications never existed!

     

    Correction; the applications are taken to have never been made, and the visa application charges will be refunded.

     

    It still leaves applicants out of pockets for other costs like medicals, skills assessments etc...

  4. hi there

    i am new here and just wanted to share the information regarding the immigration issues normally generated for pakistani citizens. I am sure most of the pakistanis have not made a good impression on ausies but i am here to say and maintain a positive difference with positive attitude.

     

    What utter and complete nonsense.

     

    Pakistanis form a small community in Australia but by and large they are positive contributors to the Australian society.

  5. Hi Twister, Do we have to sit in an interview as well while applying for passport?

     

    This guarantor thing is really needless at this stage, applicant already provided this information few months ago while applying for Citizen, Redundant step....

     

    Guarantor needs to sign your application and also backside of one of the 2 photos you provide.

     

    The "interview" for the passport is essentially the receiving officer running through the form section-by-section and confirming the details you entered, and cross-checking to ensure all attached documentation is valid and eligible.

     

    It's not an "interview" from an interrogation perspective.

  6. I got my passport as well in less than 2 weeks...

     

    I had my ceremony 8-July, applied for passport on 9th, and got it yesterday (standard/non-priority processing).

     

    Just like citizenship, the passport application also needs a guarantor to sign your application; he/she has to be an existing citizen who knows you for at least a year, and is either registered on the electoral roll or has an Australian passport.

  7. It seems that Melbourne CBD have a huge waiting time. Dont know why they cant arrange small and more frequent ceremonies. It would be best if they can arrange same day evening ceremonies in the DIBP office itself, this will save lot of money and effort for arranging ceremonies, and reduce the headache for applicants as well.

     

    Mine today is a small reserve ceremony, because my council has a too long waiting time.

  8. I got the letter at the 1st week of june.............!!! good luck to you as well...........i want to apply for the passports before the prices for em go up....! I heard we have a new P series passport that replaces the N and M series.............!! Enhanced security features and Updated.................!!

     

    P-series have a more vivid blue colour also.

     

    Fees havent gone up 1 July, as they went up a few months ago...$244 for 36 pages, $366 for 67 pages, and $108 if you want priority service.

     

    My ceremony is 8 July, Melbourne CBD

  9. The ceremony waiting times at councils can be very long...many have 6+ months of wait.

     

    At least in Melbourne, DIBP have arranged a number of "reserve" ceremonies in July in the Melbourne CBD to "help along" the councils...

  10. Your assessment is independent of the state nomination. If you have a positive skills assessment, you can go to any state for nomination. However, approving that nomination is completely up to the state you are applying to.

     

    If you can get a positive assessment in another occupation, and it is listed in the state's list, you can potentially apply again. A rejected state nomination wont preclude or exclude you from a different occupation.

  11. Date applied - 24/02/14

    City/Council area - Monash (VIC)

    Online / Paper - Online

    Date received the acknowledgement email - 27/02/14

    Date of the Citizenship Test - 14/03/14

    Date of ceremony - Still Waiting

    Type of ceremony (Urgent/Normal) - Normal

     

    The next ceremony in my council is 28 may and I'm hoping they'll slot me into that one...

  12. Mine was similar. Applied 24-Feb, got an email on 27-Feb saying the test date was 14-Mar. Sat the test, online tracking system was updated the same day to reflect "applicant approved". On 18-Mar received a letter (dated the same day as the test) notifying approval. Now just have to wait for the council to organise the ceremony. My council is Monash, and their next date is late May, so fingers crossed.

  13. I was advised by ALDI that if I 'paywave' with a debit card it counts as a credit transaction to which a surcharge applies, but id I insert the card no surcharge applies.

     

    My credit union started charging $2 a month for the 'new technology' on each of my debit cards, so I cancelled all except one card.

     

    Interestingly (in my experience) banks will crash a transaction if the wrong transaction type is selected, but the credit union will access the relevant account.

     

    Actually with most banks (3 that I've had experienced with), pressing SAV or CR on a debit card does the same thing, except for SAV routing the money through the Australia-wide eFTPOS network and CR using the Visa/Mastercard network.

     

    And yes, you're correct on the Paywave/Paypass transactions. They are routed through Visa/Mastercard, and the corresponding merchant fees apply which the retailer may pass back on to you.

     

    My banks don't charge extra for the newer cards, but their default fees are a lot higher than $2 a month (to the tune of $6ish but I have exemption due to a preferential arrangement between my workplace and the bank).

  14. Only if lodging a paper application, which are a threatened species.

     

    Although some people have had debit cards accepted for online payments, the DIBP state - Debit Cards in person.

     

    When I pay ALDI the surcharge for using a credit card is 1/2% and nil for a debit card. I wonder what surcharge the money grubbers will impose?

     

    I think we'll have to see what exactly they define as a "debit" card. If they mean EFTPOS-only cards (or the option of pressing "CHQ" or "SAV" on the terminal), then it's a complete money grab, because online transactions appear to the bank's system just as you would press "CR" on the EFTPOS machine at Woolies or Coles.

     

    If DIBP's payment gateway provider is smart enough to distinguish a Visa/MC debit from a proper Credit card (Woolies' EFTPOS machines do that, they disable the CR option on debit cards unless you do a "paypass"), there might be some respite. Otherwise, it's another 1-2% on top of the VACs which have already increased by ridiculous amounts...

     

    BPAY would be a good option, but that's only useful for onshore applicants...

     

    PS You can't beat Jetstar/Qantas for their CC payment surcharge...last time they wanted $7 on a $71 fare I booked from MEL to SYD...

  15. It will be credit card only - no fees can be charged if you use debit card.

     

    Not necessarily.

     

    If a card uses the Visa or MasterCard system to process the transaction, the bank charges are very similar. The only system in Australia which evades that is the eFTPOS system, which unfortunately cannot be used for online payments generally. eFTPOS-based transactions have a per-transaction charge rather than a percent charge on the total value.

     

    The online system for DIAC doesn't distinguish, for example, a Visa credit card from a Visa Debit, or Visa Electron for instance. It treats a debit mastercard the same way as a "normal" master-card.

     

    However, Australian banks do have the ability to detect whether a card is a domestic debit card or an international one.

     

    I think the only fee-free options left would be payments through local eFTPOS (bank) cards at DIAC offices or bank cheque/money order payments.

  16. The concern here, as rightly pointed out would be that once the 189 is lodged on-shore, the associated bridging visa that is issued is a BVA, which has a "no travel" condition on it. You will need to get a BVB before you travel (AU$125 IIRC) and return to AU within the validity period of the BVB if you intend to return before the 189 is granted.

     

    I would still seek advice from a registered agent on the issue to be sure.

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