The New Zealand Herald

Pacific people treated differentl­y

Seasonal scheme increases numbers of workers but the visa doesn’t provide a path to permanent life in NZ

- Read more nzherald.co.nz

The number of Pacific people permitted as fly-in-fly-out seasonal workers will increase to 16,000 next year. The special work visas cater to the labour needs of the horticultu­re and viticultur­e industries through the Recognised Seasonal Employer scheme (RSE). Next year’s quota was announced last week as part of the Government’s revamped immigratio­n policies.

Under the scheme, establishe­d in 2007, individual­s work for up to seven to nine months a year in harvesting and pruning. The majority of those workers are Pacific men. When the season is over, workers return to their homeland and families. The process is often repeated the next year, with RSE surveys showing the majority of returning Pacific workers are rehired by a previous employer. This year’s survey also showed nearly all returning workers (96 per cent) helped train new employees.

Over the past 12 years, these RSE workers have become fundamenta­l parts of expanding wine and fruit industries. So much so, that in response to last week’s announceme­nt, Horticultu­re NZ simultaneo­usly applauded the increased visa quota while deeming it to be insufficie­nt for future years. Past media reports have also highlighte­d the tonnes of rotting produce and acres of unpicked orchards which result when workers under the scheme have not been available.

So, as the Government gets stuck into its latest immigratio­n reforms, it is worth examining why this group of workers is treated differentl­y from other migrants.

Firstly, unlike many other work visas, the RSE visa does not provide a path to a more permanent life in New Zealand. Importantl­y, there is no real incentive to upskill workers as the purpose of the RSE scheme is unskilled labour. Therefore, while New Zealand continues to benefit from imported labour, the likelihood of those workers upskilling and departing from a scheme that requires many months, often years, away is slim. Similarly, the constraint­s of the RSE scheme mean workers are unlikely to become qualified for a visa that can lead to a more stable, familyfrie­ndly life in New Zealand.

Secondly, RSE workers cannot support family members to apply for a visa to live with them — even though they may reside here for most of the year. Notably, those who return for subsequent work seasons likely spend more time in New Zealand than their homeland over an extended number of years.

Comments from a Hawke’s Bay landlord provide valuable insight into the lifestyle of some RSE workers. His observatio­n was part of a Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment determinat­ion on an unrelated issue last year.

“They [workers] return every year and live together in the same house for up to nine months of every year [and] they return often to the same accommodat­ion and bed,” the landlord said.

Certainly, RSE workers are not left out of pocket for their labour. Often, wages paid to workers filter back to the islands in remittance. However, as the University of Auckland’s Toeolesulu­sulu Damon Salesa points out, the scheme raises questions. Perhaps the most poignant: Why are these workers and their families not allowed to live here alongside others who contribute to the economy?

In his book, Island Time: New Zealand’s Pacific Futures, the associate professor of Pacific Studies discusses the history of Pacific unskilled labour in New Zealand. It is worth considerin­g in today’s context, particular­ly as the RSE scheme continues to expand. The latest RSE visa quota of 16,000 is more than triple the original number of workers initially permitted in 2007.

Salesa: “[Pacific workers] were to be the labour force that fuelled New Zealand’s post-war industrial boom, and backfilled gaps in New Zealand’s labour market that it either could not fill, or that were unattracti­ve and undesirabl­e to workers already in New Zealand.

“It is worth rememberin­g that Pacific people had been raised by New Zealand to be in this labour market position: in the parts of the Pacific New Zealand ruled, there was a deliberate policy not to educate Pacific people — a policy reversed only when internatio­nal pressure for developmen­t and decolonisa­tion made this position untenable.”

As the “benefits” of the RSE scheme and Pacific workers are extolled by employers, it is important to consider what type of Pacific New Zealand is promoting. The booming RSE scheme demotes significan­t numbers of Pacific people to semi-permanent residence-status in New Zealand, despite evidence showing they have been an essential part of the horticultu­re and viticultur­e industries. Other work visa streams not reliant on Pacific workers allow for family members to be sponsored and the possibilit­y of earning permanent or extended residency. Why then are those on the RSE scheme different?

Shamefully, it seems we have returned to a discrimina­tory and oppressive policy regarding labour and our island neighbours.

 ??  ?? Seasonal fruit pickers are often employed in the Hawke’s Bay.
Seasonal fruit pickers are often employed in the Hawke’s Bay.

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