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JoannaAch

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Posts posted by JoannaAch

  1. We had our 1 year old sitting on my lap duirng the speech, then I just held him for the pledge and took him with us to pick up the certificate and get the photo taken. Lots of families with small kids did the same.

     

    Also - we gave him a iPhone with Wiggles vidoes (muted) to keep him occupied during the very boring and long speeches.

  2. 14 hours ago, swordvish said:

    There is no test date available online before I move. 

    Yes I will call the Immigration number but I'm still keen for anyone to comment if they have any experience of this situation. 

     

    Thanks anyway Jimmy

    I wanted to change test location (just within Sydney as we moved to a different suburb since submitting application) and the guy on the phone said that they can only change test locations if someone moved to a different state, not within the same state. So definitely call the help line and they should be able to swap it for you.

  3. 3 hours ago, rammygirl said:

    Well we took ours and it wasn’t asked for they just wanted our birth ceros and passports and my marriage certificate as proof of name change.  Son wasn’t asked for his either. I guess some offices may be fussier than others.  Can you call the test centre and ask the question?

    We were only asked to show drivers license and passport.

    But when I called the call center before they advised to bring the originals of all documents that you submitted with the application - so might be good to get a new 1195 signed as suggested just in case...

  4. 1 hour ago, Animesh said:

    I just checked my immi account and the application status is still received.. I'm not sure what's happening there.. Maybe that's why I've been asked to get back to Australia in the next 28 days.. 

    I would guess so as your application can only by approved if you are in Australia. 

  5. 46 minutes ago, rammygirl said:

    You can check if you log into your immi account. They should also contact you. Not everyone gets approval straight away for some reason for some people it takes several months. Goodness knows why. 

    I logged online to check. For me it was right after the test. For my husband the status changed to Approved in the afternoon on the day of the test. You should also get a letter information that the application is approved.

     

    I guess in principle after you pass the test, your application (in most cases) is done and just waiting for formal approval. But sometimes it takes extra long and that delays your ceremony even further...

  6. 59 minutes ago, rammygirl said:

    Someone’s is having a laugh!  That just doesn’t make sense. What office did you request?

    We both requested Sydney CBD as we live 15min from there. It will take me extra time to get to Parramatta... it’s funny as the case officer must have specifically select for us to have the interviews at the same time - but missed the different location?

    I called to check if I can change the location for the test, but there is no option like that. The guy on the phone suggested we had different addresses when we applied, but that’s not the case (have been living together for 10 years).

    We’ll keep these appoinemts as they are, just to not delay this any further...

  7. On 18/01/2019 at 10:24, rammygirl said:

    Have you been on line to see if you can alter the appointment?  We moved ours to a more convenient time and chose appointments one after the other.  The agent spotted it and called us together to save time and we took the test sitting next to each other at the screens.

     

    Finally got the test appointment for my hubby. They gave him the same date and time for the test - but at a different office... His is in Sydney CBD and mine in Parramatta. 

    Both our timelines are:

    applied: 3 Feb 2018

    test: 31 Jan 2019

  8. 59 minutes ago, rammygirl said:

    Have you been on line to see if you can alter the appointment?  We moved ours to a more convenient time and chose appointments one after the other.  The agent spotted it and called us together to save time and we took the test sitting next to each other at the screens.

    Hi,

    I need to wait for my husbands appointment letter to arrive first... But that's a good idea if he gets it before my test, I will reschedule both of us for a later date.

  9. Both my and my husband applied on 3 Feb 2018 from Sydney. I got a test invite already, but nothing for him so far... It’s a pity as it would be easier to do it together with arranging day care drop off/ pick up. Especially that we need to travel all the way to Parramatta for the test.

     

    my timeline:

    applied: 3 Feb 2018

    test invite: 4 Jan 2019

    test: 31 Jan 2019

    Sydney Parramatta office (requested CBD as Parramatta is quite far away)

  10. 1 hour ago, Marisawright said:

    When you are granted the 190 visa, it's on the condition that you MUST work in the nominated state for the required period of time. By accepting the visa, you are accepting that condition.    If you activate the visa knowing you have no intention of working in that state, then you have accepted under false pretenses, which has the same effect as "making a false statement". 

     So, it would be very easy for them to justify cancellation if someone gets a 190 visa then goes straight to another state on arrival - their actions demonstrate that they obtained the 190 visa under false pretences.  

    The 190 visa does not have any conditions, so that's not exactly correct. The obligation comes into place with the agreement that you sign with the state where you certify that you "intend" to live in the sponsoring state. That is where I think it gets tricky - intend is a very vague term?

    Even though your example where someone never goes to sponsoring state is reasonable, I'm not sure if that is something that can be proved e.g. in court? What if that someone intended to live in the sponsoring state when signing the agreement, but changed their mind 2min or 2 months later? How do you prove that they never planed to go there?

    Just to clarify - I'm not actually encouraging people to ignore their obligation to the state that sponsored them, I just really don't like fear mongering. Might be related to being a scientist in a world running on fake news and anecdotal evidence...

  11. It would be quite interesting to know how the department can justify cancelling someones visa based on not meeting this obligation. How can they show that someone provided false information about the intention to move to sponsoring state? What if someone sent one job application or even just googled their sponsoring state - couldn't that be considered a genuine intention to move there? Intention is not really something that can be that well defined and can be very subjective in my opinion...

    Another thing would be the logistics of cancelling a visa of someone already in Australia. For example what about their children that are Australian citizens or loans/mortgage/other obligations that they took?

  12. Hi, I will  be having the same problem when my son is born in October. Have you tried submitting an application without the additional photo ID? On the actual paper form it is written:

    "1. Identity documents that show a:

    birth name and date of birth

    photograph and current name, if available."

    Based on that, if the other photo ID is not available (like in case of a newborn baby), it won't be required? At least that's what I think...

     

     

     
  13. Thanks Roberta2!

    The birth certificate seems to be very straightforward, my main worry is that they won't accept citizenship evidence application without "Another document showing a photograph and current name, for example a passport or a student card"... I guess most people arriving in Australia would have a second passport when applying for that document, which won't be the case for a newborn. I guess we just wait and hope that the rules are not ridiculous and take that into consideration... :) 

  14. Hi all,

    We are PR and are expecting a baby in October. As I need to get his passport ASAP to go on a family holiday, I started looking at the documents needed for the passport application.

    I have two questions regarding the form 119 Evidence of Australian citizenship and I would really appreciate if someone could help:

    1. In the "Identity documents checklist" for Children it lists "Another document showing a photograph and current name, for example a passport or a student card". However, a newborn won't have such a document yet - Should I just ignore it?

    2. In the "Citizenship details" section, question 12 is: Do you hold the citizenship of any other country?. Should I select "No" as he baby won't have any other passport at the time or "Yes" as the baby will have a right to citizenship in our country of birth?

     

    Thanks for any input in advance,

    Joanna

  15. How about Regulation 190.215 for starters.

     

     

    I am not saying that Immigration will definitely cancel all subclass 190 visa holders who do not remain in their sponsoring State.

     

    I am simply making people aware that the Migration Act has recently been strengthened in this regard and the question raised is not as simple any more. It will be up to the Minister as to how this section of the Act is applied in practice.

     

    Doesn't criteria 190.215 need to be true only at the time of the visa application? That is stated in 190.2 "All criteria must be satisfied at the time a decision is made on the application." Doesn't that mean that it does not apply for after the visa is granted?

  16. Although this statement was previously correct, it may no longer be the case.

     

    Recent changes to section 116 of the Migration Act allow the Minister to cancel a visa if the circumstances for granting a particular visa no longer exist.

     

    This may be a response to so many people not abiding by the "moral obligation" of their state sponsored visas.

     

    Hi,

    I'm not familiar with immigration law, but I can't see how not fulfilling the moral obligation to stay in the sponsoring state can be a reason to cancel visa under section 116a - circumstances to grant visa no longer exist? I would guess it relates more to, for example partner visas when the relationship breaks down or a business visa where the business no longer operates? And in general for temporary visas only? What circumstances/facts would no longer exist in case of 190 visas?

  17. Well done,

    We looked at DIY but it was so complicate (for me anyway), I didn't want to mess it up, so bottled it and went with a pet shipper in the end.. Going to cost around £6500 for our two small dogs by the time we get them at the other end, with the $3500 Australian quarantine fees, vets, pet shippers - external and internal.. Certainly worth looking at if you have the time and confidence to do it.. Best of luck.. :wink:

     

    I did most of the things myself for shipping my cat (like all the documents, applying for Import Permit, booking quarantine etc.) and only used a pet shipping company to book flights and manage that - and I only paid around $3500 for the flights (including transfers and crate). The rest I paid myself, which was also not too much (although the quarantine prices went up recently...).

  18. I think that if you are a citizen/PR you can buy anything you want in Australia as long as you don't need to borrow any money (I am not sure banks can borrow money to non-residents?). Only people on temporary visas need to get the FIRB approval and can only buy off-plan.

    I know a few people that bought houses before arriving after getting PR and they used buyers agent to check the property and organize eerything. They are usually very good, but can be also expensive (I heard they charge around 1-2% of the property value). From what I know - buyer's agent is basically a RE agent, only working on the behalf of the buyer and not the seller...

  19. Hi,

    I think for shared accommodation most of your calculations are okay. Rent, gas and electricity would be much higher in case of a normal apartment. The salaries you put there are very low (are these even above the national minimal wage?). What do you consider as "medical"? If your salary is very low, I think you are exempt from medicare levy. For groceries I would double that and if you like nice food and don't like Aldi, even triple it...

    108$ for "data night" would mean you only get one per month with drinks, or two if you don't buy drinks or go to byo restaurants.

  20. I am in the same boat..I have my BSc in Biochemistry and MSc in Biomedical technology and submitted my PhD thesis from Australian university. I had got the negative skill assessment through VETASSESS as I do not have any work experience and they did not count PhD as my work experience. Is there any way I can still apply for the skill assessment and then for PR? I am bit worried about getting the work sponsorship too. Your advice would be highly appreciated. Thanks.

     

    Hi,

    You will need 1 year work experience to get a positive skills assessment from Vetassess to apply for SS and visa 190. Have you considered applying for 485 post-grad visa? This will give you some time to get the required work experience. Although, I am not sure if that would be enough time to apply for 190...

    In my opinion, the easiest option would be to get some postdoctoral experience on 457 (most contracts are for 2 years) and after 1 year apply again for skills assessment. This will give you some extra time to apply for your visa later.

    You might also consider asking a migration agent for an initial advice - there might be some visa options that you haven't considered yet.

  21. You are just making this out to be a lot harder than it is.. it is easy to pay on a one off basis and you don't have to do it right there and then as you are driving through! Don't understand your question on the M5.

     

    It is also very easy to just put the tag on your windshield (it's free) and you don't have to think about it at all:) I tried calling ones and the first question they ask is which road you used. It was my first week in Sydney and I had no idea where that was - I was just following the navi...

     

    For M5 you can claim back whatever you paid if you are resident in NSW and own a private car. We go quite frequently south (like Wollongnong or National Park), so it's really great for us.

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