Nelson Mail

Thousands want family to stay

- Tim Newman tim.newman@stuff.co.nz

A petition campaignin­g to grant residency to a Nelson volunteer firefighte­r has been presented to Parliament.

Nelson man Steve Webster and his family have been fighting for seven years to gain permanent residency after moving to New Zealand from Britain in 2012.

His plight gained national attention after he was photograph­ed helping to fight the Pigeon Valley wildfire in February.

Nelson MP Nick Smith presented the petition, which has more than 62,000 signatures, to Parliament on Tuesday.

In April, Immigratio­n Minister Iain Lees-Galloway granted the family 24-month work visas but said he was not prepared to grant them permanent residency. The youngest daughter returned to Britain in August, after being unable to secure a study visa.

Webster said the family hoped the Government might revisit the situation and show some compassion.

‘‘I’m just a guest in this country – it’s not my place to really criticise government or ministers or anything else. But I’d love to stay – we’ve invested everything in being here, and I feel we’ve done our best to integrate and be good citizens.’’

He said the family had been blown away by the amount of support they had received from people signing the petition, most of whom had been complete strangers.

Smith said the family needed the ‘‘stability and certainty of residency’’.

‘‘The family has been in New Zealand since 2012, are well settled, are making a positive contributi­on, and it is in both their and New Zealand’s best interests that they be allowed to stay permanentl­y.

The Websters arrived here on an entreprene­ur work visa, buying a florist business as part of the visa requiremen­ts.

‘‘The business was approved and we submitted a business plan – when we actually arrived, we found we’d been conned and the business was virtually bankrupt,’’ Webster said.

Instead of an initial aim to build the business up over three years, it took the Websters 18 months to get back to their envisaged starting point.

‘‘We pushed really hard to meet the targets we’d given to Immigratio­n, but in the end we were about six months short,’’ he said.

 ?? BRADEN FASTIER/STUFF ?? The petition to grant Steve Webster and his family residency was signed by more than 62,000 people.
BRADEN FASTIER/STUFF The petition to grant Steve Webster and his family residency was signed by more than 62,000 people.
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