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Immigration NZ moves to ease strain on medical centres that process medical certificates for migrants

Public Policy / news
Immigration NZ moves to ease strain on medical centres that process medical certificates for migrants
migrant construction workers

More than 15,000 migrants have so far been approved for New Zealand residency under a special class of visa introduced late last year.

The 2021 Resident Visa was introduced to assist migrants who were mostly on work visas to apply for residency if they had already been living in this country for at least three years on September 29 last year.

This could potentially fast track residency for up to 165,000 migrants already in NZ.

Applications for the new visa opened on December 1 last year and run until July 31 this year, with Immigration NZ receiving nearly 30,000 applications in December alone.

The rush of applications has caused problems for medical centres providing the medical certificates that must accompany visa applications.

Many were already being stretched by Covid-related work and some have struggled to cope with the sudden influx of migrants seeking medical certificates.

As a result, Immigration NZ says applicants no longer need to submit their medical certificates and other necessary documents with their applications.

They can now submit their application first and then submit the supporting documents later, when they are advised that their application is ready to be processed.

"This will help ease the demand that immigration panel physicians have been experiencing in recent weeks," Immigration NZ Head of Digital and Programmes Darren Calder said.

So far, about 7000 applications have been approved, resulting in more than 15,000 people including applicants' family members, becoming residents.

Another 2500 applications have been approved pending payment of the appropriate fees.

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8 Comments

With immigration grinding to a halt and migrants already here having a clear pathway to permanency, there could be no better time for implementing sweeping reforms to our broken migration policy.

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8

Good luck getting an answer out of the government about migration settings moving forward, on top of returning ex-pats.

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4

Don't "Ambush" them or they will just "reject the premise" and then turn on the sprinklers.

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5

Work visa numbers linked to building consent numbers?

https://thekaka.substack.com/p/dawn-chorus-migrant-quotas-linked?utm_source=url

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1

Well, we know what the settings will be if there's a change of government next time round - Luxon wants 50,000 p.a. pronto and Act is "the most immigration friendly party".

Time for TOP to start highlighting their sensible migration policy, there's votes to be had.

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3

NZ has many aspects of our immigration policy right.  Immigrants are of a range of ages, countries of origin and with a few exceptions a gender balance (an exception would be more Muslim males than females bringing in partners via arranged marriages). Most immigrants are middle-class.  It is unlikely that we will have Russian -v- Ukrainian immigrants fighting in our streets; not so sure about war between India & Pakistan or an invasion of Taiwan.

Immigration per capita ought to similar to other OECD countries and that would be about a third of our typical 50,000pa.  Whatever quota ought to be agreed so new infrastructure can be planned rationally. 

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1

We need more working people.

Act now, the rest of the world are already working on it.

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2

Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses... my rental portfolio awaits.

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5