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DebbieM
08-31-2007, 03:20 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6972076.stm

'Pom invasion' hitting Down Under
By Nick Bryant
BBC News


On the shores of Coogee beach in Sydney, British fitness expert Rob Derbyshire gently reminds his British client Judith that gain is normally accompanied by pain.

Test book speaks of 'immense pleasure' at beating England

Dashing up the beach together, they look like part of a "pom" invasion of Australia. And in many ways they are.

The number of British people emigrating to Australia has already increased from 8,749 in the year from 2001 to 2002 to 23,290 in 2005 to 2006.

And it has just become easier for Brits to make their homes Down Under.

Changes to the points system, which come into effect on 1 September, will award five valuable extra points for people who can pass a standard English language test, a Brit-friendly policy partly designed to lure more "poms" here.

'No looking back'

The Lucky Country is facing a chronic skills shortage, and wants Brits to make their home in this "help-wanted" nation.

For people like Rob, it should make the passage from Britain to Australia a whole lot easier. Despite being a fully qualified aircraft mechanic, the type of skill which Australia desperately needs, it required a four-year struggle to get permanent residency.

"It was very laborious, on and off, and back and forward to the immigration office. So it was a big relief when that magic piece of paper arrived in the mail one day telling me I was in. There's no looking back," he says.


Aboriginal protesters occupy Sydney Harbour's Cockatoo Island, 2000

Brad Ngata Hair Direction is one of Australia's leading salons - its mantelpiece almost buckles under the weight of all its trophies.

But when it advertised for qualified hairdressers, it received only three applicants. Brits, with scissors and dryers in hand, are helping to plug the shortfall.

"It's really easy to get work in Australia hairdressing, because we're really in demand," says Kelly Grant, who works alongside Brad Ngata.

"There's lots of job offers and lots of opportunities. My friends are always surprised to learn how easy it is to get jobs here."

To some, this Brit-friendly policy is happily reminiscent of the "£10 poms", the post-war government assisted scheme that helped more than a million Britons to migrate.


Bondi Beach is a great symbol of the Australian lifestyle

It was one of the best bargains going - a £10 fare for adult migrants, with children travelling free.

To others, the award of extra points to fluent English speakers is more sinister, with shades of the monocultural "white Australia policy", the umbrella term for a swathe of policies and laws engineered to limit non-white immigration which finally petered out in the early 1970s.

"I do see this as an attack on multiculturalism," complains Kate Gauthier, from the group A Just Australia.

"This particular policy is about monoculturalism rather than multiculturalism, which is disturbing because we have had a proud tradition of multiculturalism in this country and it's certainly a step back towards the white Australia policy. It's not all the way back, but it's going in that direction," she says.

Tougher tests

Australia claims to be the most successfully multicultural country in the world. According to the 2001 census, 23% of the population were born overseas, while 43% of the population were either born overseas or had at least one parent born overseas.

But gaining citizenship is just about to get tougher, and applicants will be soon required to take a test on the country's history and values.

To qualify, they will be asked 20 questions - drawn randomly from 200 - and be expected to answer 12 correctly.

It's not just about Don Bradman and beating the English cricket team

Kate Gauthier

Who was the first Australian prime minister? What is the floral emblem of Australia? You get the idea.

The idea is to balance ethnic diversity with social cohesion, and the country's immigration minister claims it will not discriminate against applicants with a non-Anglo background.

Ms Gauthier says: "If they don't pass they still remain a permanent resident of Australia and we would encourage them to go away, have a look at the resources, learn a bit more in the area where they might not have been strong in and come back and sit it again."


Australia's 3,000-km Great Barrier Reef can be seen from space

But she says the test is weighted against non-white applicants.

"All the questions on Australian culture are from a really Anglo-Saxon perspective. It's about mateship and cricket. Australian culture is about much more than that. It's not just about Don Bradman and beating the English cricket team."

The booklet designed to help applicants with the test does speak of Australia's "immense pleasure" at first beating the mother country in 1882.

For British applicants, Australia is about to become more welcoming - but is it at the cost of migrants from other countries?

Carol
08-31-2007, 03:25 PM
OK when we all going ???

Kriz1
08-31-2007, 03:25 PM
No thanks...they make it again seems so easy...then you go to a site with people who have moved there and see all the problems they are having getting work...a lot are only there a few months and go home broke...different problems than the US but in a lot of cases the same outcome...

kirtida8
08-31-2007, 03:27 PM
Definitely worth looking into if things here don't look to be getting any better. I know that it is supposed to be harder to get certified in some industries - but who knows? I am keeping all my options open - including Belize which I will qualify to retire to in a few months LOL

Carol
08-31-2007, 03:29 PM
Definitely worth looking into if things here don't look to be getting any better. I know that it is supposed to be harder to get certified in some industries - but who knows? I am keeping all my options open - including Belize which I will qualify to retire to in a few months LOL

Belize !!! so tell us about Belize ?? Can I come ?? LOL

Kriz1
08-31-2007, 03:35 PM
Definitely worth looking into if things here don't look to be getting any better. I know that it is supposed to be harder to get certified in some industries - but who knows? I am keeping all my options open - including Belize which I will qualify to retire to in a few months LOL

Read British ex pats....some really sad stories there....some good ones too....

lxh11
08-31-2007, 03:38 PM
I was in Belize last year. Rich or very poor, nothing in between. A big plus - Kentucky Fried Chicken pulled out of Belize cause no one bought their chicken - their own chicken fast food place are supposedly so much better.

Very beautiful tho - typical expat caribbean community.

Kriz1
08-31-2007, 03:40 PM
http://realestatebelize.com/

kirtida8
08-31-2007, 04:11 PM
Wow - I love the 50 acre parcel and its only $380000!! bargain.

Kriz1
08-31-2007, 04:26 PM
This looks nice to retire too...

http://realestatebelize.com/r70810.html

kirtida8
08-31-2007, 04:35 PM
Yes - but I prefer the other one, plenty of scope to turn it into a resort or getaway and so get an income. Plus I could pick my fill of mangoes whenever I wanted LOL

Kriz1
08-31-2007, 04:49 PM
I don't want to work if I can help it.....LOL!
I'm thinking more leaving the kids up here working for us...and us just sitting in the sun...:)

kirtida8
08-31-2007, 04:51 PM
I know what you mean Kriz1 - but I would only be able to do that for a short while before I was bored out of my mind. Too many years with my nose to the grindstone to know what to do with myself if I actually had more than a few days off LOL

Kriz1
08-31-2007, 04:59 PM
You find things to do...in fact I do more when I'm not working than when I am...hubby is always coming home to me repainting cutting down tree's..ripping up carpets and doing up the floors...this next few months before winter set in...and while its cool enough to do stuff is a nightmare...poor hubby I start things I can no longer finish....and he hates DIY that was always my job...:(

tracifrost
08-31-2007, 05:19 PM
my aunt and uncle moved to aussie, adelaide, in the 70's stayed there for 20 years, moved back to the UK. Couldnt settle, so have just recently moved back there again.
Property there is much cheaper, although they have said this time around, things generally are more expensive. As they moved back to the U.K for about 8-10 years or so.
i am only going by what my aunt tells me when she occasionally phones me and apparantly they are calling out for workers left, right and centre.
Not sure about other areas in Aussie, such as perth, Sydney etc. but they live in Adelaide(wrong spell).
It is a lot easier to get work over there also, and stay there!!!!!!
Ie, not half the problems we all get with renewals, employing etc etc here.
Its similar to a points type system, you can get work sponsorship and all sorts, or open up new offices (ie like the L1 here) and apparantly they are not half as hard on you there as they are here:)
Once you have had a business in operation and you can show, that you can support yourself and family. You are allowed to stay there!! simple as that.
I said to my aunt 'what as easy as that?'
but yes apparantly so?

peter gold
08-31-2007, 05:26 PM
yes but they are all descendants from our outcast criminals or aboriginals. Not like our septic tanks.

Kriz1
08-31-2007, 05:33 PM
And again it looks easy...but thats not always the truth for many people...