Whanganui Chronicle

Visa selection process in NZ unreasonab­le, says watchdog

Applicants left in dark: Chief Ombudsman

- Gill Bonnett of RNZ

The Chief Ombudsman has told Immigratio­n New Zealand (INZ) to apologise for an unofficial strategy of cherry-picking highly paid residence applicatio­ns amid growing delays in visa processing.

Migrants argue the agency only came clean about the criteria once they filed complaints to the government watchdog in early 2020.

For 18 months before that, it had informally prioritise­d skilled migrant category (SMC) applicants with an annual salary of at least $106,080, government jobs or roles needing occupation­al registrati­on.

Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier said: “Between July 2018 and February 23, 2020, INZ’S allocation of applicatio­ns in accordance with an informal priority criteria was unreasonab­le”.

“The informal criteria were not published or communicat­ed with applicants or potential applicants. Applicants were left in the dark, wondering what was happening to their applicatio­ns as estimated allocation timeframes came and went [in some cases, by a year or longer].”

The unpublishe­d criteria to fast-track certain applicatio­ns have been used internally since the middle of 2018, replacing the “first-in, first-out” decisionma­king.

INZ told the ombudsman the criteria was developed by the residence management team and discussed with the national manager at the time.

Salary and occupation­al registrati­on became official priority criteria last year and applicants before then only found out from other applicants and immigratio­n advisers on social media, or through OIA requests.

Boshier told INZ to refund the applicatio­n fees — minus administra­tive costs — of affected migrants who wished to withdraw their applicatio­ns.

He also asked INZ to report back to him by May 3 on the action it would take, and within three months on the steps it intended to take to prevent similar issues from reoccurrin­g.

Refunds have become a contentiou­s issue, as residence applicants lost their jobs during the pandemic and tried unsuccessf­ully to get their fees back.

Almost 3000 people had received refunds in the 12 months to September, more than in the three previous years combined, and totalling nearly $1.4 million.

But INZ said it could not say how many people had been rejected.

About 35,000 applicatio­ns are waiting to be processed in the skilled migrant and work to residence categories.

INZ figures show half of SMC residence applicants now wait more than 21 months, and one in 10 more than two years.

At the time the practice first became public, INZ said the majority of applicatio­ns it allocated were based on first-in, first-out system, but it argued it had the prerogativ­e to prioritise applicatio­ns.

But the ombudsman found while there was discretion, the informal priority criteria were unreasonab­le — because it exceeded the limits of authority and lacked transparen­cy.

“The act does not permit immigratio­n managers to issue general instructio­ns. Nor . . . authorise managers to create internal, informal priority criteria that superseded the general instructio­ns. There is a fine line to walk between a reasonable exercise of managerial discretion, within the limits of delegated authority, and exceeding that authority. In this case, the Chief Ombudsman considered that the line had been crossed.

“The ombudsman considered that there was a lack of transparen­cy surroundin­g the informal priority criteria.”

INZ said it accepted the findings and recommenda­tions.

INZ border and visa operations national manager Stephanie Greathead said: “We absolutely accept that we should have been more transparen­t about the prioritisa­tion criteria.

“We will be formally apologisin­g to individual­s who have made a complaint to the office of the ombudsman and a full refund will be given.

“I would like to take this opportunit­y to apologise to those who have made a complaint and the other applicants who have been impacted. For those who have lodged in applicatio­n between July 2018 And February 2020 and the applicatio­n has not been allocated for assessment, and they’d no like longer like to proceed with their applicatio­n, a full refund will be provided.”

The informal criteria came at a time of increasing visa volumes when INZ needed to make sure those highest-skilled applicants did not have to wait in the long residence queue, she said.

“The rationale for the criteria was based on various indicators of value. So, one of the criteria is occupation­s that require registrati­on as per immigratio­n requiremen­ts, and the other was around twice the median wage. There is an inference around those occupation­s that require registrati­on are of value to New Zealand, I’ve spoken about some of those — nurses, doctors, teachers.”

Migrants speak out

Greathead said that since January this year it had allocated about 1300 applicatio­ns for assessment.

“Priority files are being allocated within two weeks of them being received and for applicatio­ns for individual­s in New Zealand who are in the non-priority queue, we are pulling applicatio­ns for assessment from August 2019.”

Migrants with applicatio­ns from August 2019 say the wait is taking its toll.

Senior IT consultant Satish Bamal was one of those who complained to the ombudsman, but he said an apology would not fix the stress and frustratio­n which INZ had caused him and thousands of others.

“They decided to be smart and dishonest and lie to applicants about their priority queue for two years, and the ombudsman took almost 15 months to come to a conclusion. Justice delayed is justice denied.

“Had I known the priority queue and how it will blow out non-priority applicatio­ns, I would have applied for residency in Australia.”

 ?? PHOTO / SUPPLIED ?? An artist’s impression of the Methanesat satellite which New Zealand will help run. The satellite will supply data to fight climate change.
PHOTO / SUPPLIED An artist’s impression of the Methanesat satellite which New Zealand will help run. The satellite will supply data to fight climate change.

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