Herald on Sunday

Locked out of NZ, bleeding savings

Family in South Africa appeal for border timeline

- Ben Leahy

As Warren and Lisa Blunden flew out of New Zealand late last year they knew their family’s lives were about to change forever. What they didn’t count on was life around the globe also being upended.

The South African couple had just visited and fallen in love with New Zealand — now they planned a permanent move.

An experience­d plumber, Warren Blunden quickly found a job in Tauranga and secured a work visa.

He then signed the family to a Tauranga rental property beginning on March 20 this year, before buying a $55,000 Ford Ranger along with almost $5000 of plumbing tools.

Next the family wound up their old lives in South Africa, selling their house, cars and plumbing business and packing their belongings into a 6m container that shipped in early March. They also transferre­d 80 per cent of their savings to New Zealand and pulled their kids from school.

But while the family waited in Johannesbu­rg for visas for Lisa, Tyrell, 7, and Skyler, 4, before their planned flight to New Zealand on March 30, the world went into Covid19 meltdown and borders closed. The shocked family were suddenly locked out of New Zealand and launched on to an “emotional roller coaster” that has no end in sight.

“Our whole life is in New Zealand. We are left with nothing in South Africa,” Blunden told the Herald on Sunday.

The family are now among the many thousands of overseas work visa holders appealing for exemptions to be let into the country.

Some have been let in from foreign shores, like film crews working on sequels to Hollywood movie Avatar, America’s Cup crews and forensic pathologis­t Dr Judy Melinek, who landed in the country last week.

But as thousands of Kiwi citizens and residents also return home and the Covid-19 pandemic infects more people than ever around the world, Immigratio­n NZ officials are keeping the borders locked down.

An Immigratio­n NZ letter to the Blundens told them their case wasn’t exceptiona­l given the large numbers of other work visa holders trying to enter the country.

Authoritie­s said priority was given to applicants whose families were apart in different countries.

Blunden said he understood the pressures the Government faced but appealed for a timeline for when work visa holders would be allowed back. The uncertaint­y was putting “extreme stress” on his family, he said.

Their future and the tens of thousands of dollars spent committing to fresh lives in New Zealand hinged on Warren’s work visa. His Tauranga employer had agreed to wait a few weeks, but could not keep the job vacant for too long, Warren said.

In the meantime, the family were paying $630 a week on their Tauranga rental and $500 keeping their belongings in storage in New Zealand.

Back in South Africa, the family were now also paying rent on a onebedroom flat.

“How long can we go on paying these fees not knowing if we going to be able to enter the country, or will the job still be available?” Blunden said. If the job goes, “the whole plan falls through and we lose thousands”.

 ??  ?? Warren and Lisa Blunden, with Skyler, 4, and Tyrell, 7.
Warren and Lisa Blunden, with Skyler, 4, and Tyrell, 7.
 ??  ?? The household was packed up and sent to New Zealand.
The household was packed up and sent to New Zealand.

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