Wednesday 14 April 2010

Eleventh hour reprieve

There’s never a dull moment in my life at the minute.

So far this year I’ve booked a holiday to India, cancelled it, bought a car, driven it into a Mercedes, taken my parents on a road trip around Western Australia and nearly been deported. And it’s still only April.

Apart from the road trip (more on which later) I’ve mainly been preoccupied with the struggles of getting a new Aussie visa. For the last two years I’ve been on a working holiday visa and it was due to end this month. Once your second year as a backpacker is finished, it's all over, the eternal goon cask has run dry, and you have to go home. But the adventure can't finish. I won't let it.

After checking out all avenues, such as returning as an international student (hideously expensive) or applying for permanent residency (only open to certain skill types and takes years to be approved) I was advised to try a 487 regional migrant visa. This would allow me not only to stay, but to eventually be eligible for permanent residency. It sounded like a win-win.

First there was the little matter of passing the skills assessment. Sending off the Vetassess paperwork was one of the most complicated things I’ve ever had to do. I had to gather copies of my passport, degree certificate, contracts of employment, old payslips from the early 2000s, a photo of me holding today's newspaper, proof I owned at least three stubby holders… not an easy task considering most of this stuff had to be extracted from my old bedroom and posted to me by my folks in the UK.

It cost $555 just to send off for the assessment. If I passed, I would then have to pay $265 for a medical, $200 for state sponsorship and a whopping $2,525 for the 487 visa itself. This means the total costs would exceed $3,500 (£2,100) and I still wouldn’t be guaranteed a ‘yes’ from immigration at the end. It’s no lie to say that the buggers charge an arm and a leg, and I was taking one hell of a gamble throwing myself with gusto into this, using what money I had.

I finally got the paperwork together and sent off for my skills assessment in early February. It was then subject to a lengthy delay after the perpetually useless shower of bastards known as "Australia Post" managed to take a whole week to deliver my overnight express delivery parcel to Melbourne.

Once it got there I had to sit and wait patiently for 6 to 8 weeks while my assessment was considered. I was still confident of getting the results before my visa expired on 15th April. Even a few days' leeway would give me enough time to apply to immigration and be granted a bridging visa to stay.

By Easter I was getting a bit worried that I’d not heard anything back from Vetassess. Repeated phone calls to them yielded me the same solitary sentence of information: “it’s with the assessors and they’re looking at it now.” Had I missed out paperwork? Did they want to see my A-level certificates? No-one was telling me anything.

I’d already made big commitments on the assumption I’d get this visa – I bought the car and signed a new contract with work stretching till the end of June. The immigration laws are really strict and you face strict penalties for overstaying. I'd have to leave on the 15th without that bridging visa, even if I subsequently passed my skills assessment, regardless of my employment. Not knowing what hemisphere I’d be living in in a couple of weeks started to feel strangely liberating.

I finally got the skills assessment back last Thursday, on 8th April, and as I impatiently scrolled down the fax I saw the telltale words, “ASSESSMENT OUTCOME: NEGATIVE”. Oh shit. How had I failed?

Apparently my work history wasn’t up to scratch – I’d done too much IT work to be considered as a business information professional, but not enough to be classed as an IT professional. Bullshit. They could have told me that earlier! I had no time left to lodge an appeal, which would cost another $330 anyway. There was now no way I could apply for the visa.

My dream of staying in Australia was in ruins. I was left to break the news to my work and to my friends that I'd have to leave very soon. Then I had to think about selling my car, guitars and computer, packing my bags and booking a plane ticket home. All in less than a week. I tried to keep calm, but wondered what the hell would I do back in England?

On Thursday evening I switched on my computer to start arranging all this, and hit yet another stumbling block. After months of working fine, Windows suddenly deactivated itself and was refusing to start up. Now I had no access to a computer and couldn’t do a thing. Really all I wanted was to pour myself a cold beer and chat to my mates on Skype. It seemed like God was not only laughing at me but sodomising me with a ginormous comedy dildo.

The next morning I turned up at work, after a miserable evening stewing in my own company, and talked through the situation with my boss. He was gutted I had to leave so suddenly. His issue was that they hadn’t been able to recruit somebody else with my computer skills after my first spell working there. Luckily, we suddenly realised, there was a way out of our problem.

The 457 long-stay business visa is often seen as the holy grail of backpackers; you're allowed to stay for a long time, with few of the attendant costs or hassles of applying for your own visa. Often this can lead to permanent residency. I phoned the immigration department and they confirmed that, yes, I would be eligible to apply for a 457, and yes, there was still time for us to lodge the sponsorship paperwork. Sponsorship would allow me to stay until at least the end of my contract in July and give me time to plan my next move.

Before the day was out we had completed all three stages of the application and submitted them on the immigration website. Cost to my work: $415, cost to me: a quite palatable $260. And with one last click of the mouse, the application was lodged, and I was legally able to stay in the country on a bridging visa. I made sure I reached profound levels of drunkenness that evening to celebrate.

With six days left to go, it was not so much an 11th hour reprieve as an 11th hour and 59th minute reprieve! Some people say computers are the future... maybe mine had known I was staying all along when it refused to start up.