The New Zealand Herald

High uni fees last straw for Kiwis

-

A Kiwi family of five which has lived in Australia for 10 years say Government proposals to raise university fees are the last straw.

Kell and Jeff Wadley, who live in the Gold Coast, said they had already been considerin­g a return to Christchur­ch, their old home town. The prospect of paying two or three times as much for their 17 year-old son Jordan’s law degree sealed the deal.

“Our mind’s made up,” Kell Wadley said. “We are heading back before Christmas. With the cost of university fees going up, it’s just unrealisti­c for us to stay here.”

They are among many Kiwis reconsider­ing their future in Australia after surprise changes to citizenshi­p rules and education costs.

The tuition fee increases vary depending on residency status. And the Australian Government says new access to student loans will open up tertiary education to more Kiwis. But the family said access to student support did not offset the high cost of studying law.

Like many Kiwis, they moved to Australia during the global financial crisis. Jeff Wadley, a dairy farm manager, earned more for a 38-hour week in the Gold Coast than a 100-hour week in Christchur­ch.

“When the going was good, it was grand,” he said. “But since the GFC they’ve just turned nasty — in politics, in the workplace, everywhere. I don’t know what they’ve got against Kiwis.”

An aged-care worker, Wadley does not earn the required A$53,000 ($57,000) to qualify for a special pathway to citizenshi­p announced last year. She was partly encouraged to return home by a settlement in New Zealand which will see her profession paid more.

“We’ve been living here 10 years, paid taxes, we’ve got a first home buyers’ grant and we do get some family assistance. But we came over here to have a better lifestyle for our kids and it’s just not realistic anymore.” — Isaac Davison

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand