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The Information Technology Contract and Recruitment Association has claimed Laborimmigration spokesman Tony Burke made a late pledge to address the problem thatflows from changes to 457 visa rules introduced on October 1.
Mr Burke stopped short of agreeing to dump the controversial changes, however,stating only that Labor may suspend the regulations while consultations with thecontract labour industry take place.
A spokeswoman for Mr Burke yesterday declined to comment on immigration mattersbefore Prime Minister-elect Kevin Rudd appoints his ministry later this week.
Association president Penny Coulter said Mr Burke committed to review the matterhimself should he be made immigration minister, or to brief the new minister.
She said Mr Burke indicated that fast-tracking of IT visas should be allowed,although companies found to be in breach of 457 visa rules would be barred fromusing any fast-track process.
The association has been pushing hard to overturn the last-minute 457 visaapplication changes since they were introduced by former Immigration Minister KevinAndrews on October 1.
The changes prevented labour hire firms from sponsoring 457 workers unless theyundertook to meet their expenses, keep on their books a percentage of local workerswho were receiving training, and invest at least 2 per cent of their gross wagesbill on training.
Before the regulations were introduced, ITCRA members were making 400 applications amonth to import technology professionals using 457 visas, but executive directorNorman Lacy said these had dropped to zero.
"There has been a massive impact because other countries have continued to recruitAustralian ICT professionals in comparable numbers. So there has continued to be anoutflow in the last seven weeks, but no inflow of ICT professionals in Australia."
Mr Lacy said the ITCRA tried to discuss the changes with the former minister, butits attempts fell on deaf ears.
"What we faced was someone who refused to even answer letters. You had to ring hisoffice to even discover whether or not your letter had been received.
"We didn't get any acknowledgement, didn't get any engagement and didn't get anycontact."
One of the most concerning parts of the whole ordeal was the "undemocratic" means bywhich the minister introduced the regulations, Mr Lacy said.
Mr Andrews first tried to introduce the bill in parliament, but it didn't getthrough. Then he made changes to the regulations using his powers in the ImmigrationAct, and did this just before the election was announced and parliamentaryproceedings would be frozen.
Mr Lacy questioned whether this was an appropriate use of the power granted to theminister under the Immigration Act.
"I doubt the intention of the act was to allow a change in policy about whichindustry it operated in. I think it was for emergency situations.
"These regulations were brought in surreptitiously and fundamentally circumventedthe democratic process. They dramatically changed the 457 visa regime."
-- Mahesh Sharma and Ben Woodhead, Australian IT
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