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Visas
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Visa
Information_
- What
is my present status?
Your status is:
- lawful - if you
have a valid visa
- unlawful - if your
visa has expired.
- How
do I check if my visa is valid?
- You need to look
at two things:
Period of stay - stated on your visa as Holder(S)
Permitted To Remain In Australia For (period stated;
ie 03 months; 01 year) From Date Of (first entry or
each arrival) The "arrived" stamp showing
the date of your last entry. For instance, if
your visa says Permitted To Remain In Australia For
01 Year and you arrived less than one year ago, your
visa is valid and you have permission to stay until
the year is up.
- If, on the contrary,
you have stayed beyond the permitted period, you no
longer have a valid visa and your status in Australia
is that of unlawful non-citizen. You must make arrangements
to leave Australia without delay. If you do not, you
risk being taken to an Immigration detention centre
and held there while arrangements are made for your
removal from Australia.
- Note: If you have
lodged in Australia an application for another visa
and you have been granted a Bridging Visa, in the
period of stay your visa will read:
- "Holder(S)
permitted to remain in Australia until 28 days after
notification on primary decision or decision by a
review authority, or withdrawel of application in
respect of application reciept No.(Number)"
- When you receive
notification of the outcome of that visa application,
if the decision is unfavourable, your bridging visa
will remain valid for further 28 days, to give you
time to organise your departure or to seek a review
of the unfavourable decision. If you are unsure of
your status or whether a decision has been made on
your application, you should check with the DIMA office
that is handling your case.
- If you travelled
to Australia with an ETA, there is no visa shown in
your passport. Your visa is valid for three months
from the date of the arrival stamp in your passport.
Make sure that you leave Australia before the three
months are up.
- Can
I work in Australia?
- As a general rule,
only Australian citizens, Australian permanent residents
- ie, migrants who are not yet Australian citizens
- and New Zealand citizens who have entered Australia
on a valid passport, have unrestricted rights to employment
in Australia. Any other foreign national who wants
to work in Australia must have a temporary visa that
allows employment
- People working
illegally are subject to immediate removal from Australia.
Their visas can be cancelled and they can be precluded
from coming back to Australia for periods of up to
three years.
- From November 2000,
DIMA will issue written warnings to employers and
labour suppliers of illegal workers. When you apply
for a job, employers and labour suppliers will be
asking you to prove that you have the right to work
in Australia before they give you the job. Be prepared
to show them your passport and your valid visa stating
your work rights.
- When in doubt,
you or an employer can call the work rights information
line on 1800 040 070. You can also complete an 'Authority
to Obtain Details of Work Rights from DIMA' form.
With this form you give DIMA permission to disclose
to employers and labour suppliers information on your
work status. Completed forms can be faxed to 1800
505 550.
- What
do the conditions on my visa mean?
- Temporary visas
are granted subject to conditions. While some are
mandatory and appear on all the visas of a certain
class, for example the "no work" condition
on tourist visas, others may only apply in certain
circumstances. All conditions shown in the visa must
be observed.
- A list of the conditions
appearing on temporary visas can be found here. Check
the condition numbers on your visa against the explanations
on the list.
- I
am a visitor. What can I do?
- You Can _Shop until
you drop Help in the shop. Visit Uluru Lead the tour.
Visit your relatives and friends Help in their restaurant .
Do a scuba course Teach the course.Go to the opera
Sing the aria
Have plastic surgery (medical treatment visitor visa
only ) Perform the operation.
- You Cannot _
Remember: Visitors/tourists cannot do any work.
Work means any activity for which a person would normally
be paid, irrespective of whether you are paid or given
some other kind of reward.Working without permission
is an offence that attracts a fine of up to $10,000.A
breach of the NO WORK condition can result in your
visa being cancelled and your holiday being cut short.
- I
am an overseas student. What can I do?
- You Must You Must
Not
Remain for the first 12 months of your course or for
the duration of the course, if the course is of less
than 12 months, with the education provider with whom
you originally enrolled. Change education provider
within the first 12 months of any preliminary or principal
course for which you were originally enrolled, unless
the course is less than 12 months, in which case you
cannot change provider for the duration of the course.
Advise your education provider if you wish to change
after 12 months.
- Maintain enrolment
in a registered course, attend classes and have academic
results that satisfy your provider. Work if your visa
has the NO WORK condition.Notify changes of address
to DIMA if your visas granted before 1 November 2000.
Work for more than 20 hours per week during any week
your course is in session if your visa has the WORK
LIMITATION condition.
- Notify your education
provider of your address and any changes if your visa
was granted on or after 1 November 2000. Leave
Australia at the completion of your course or before
if you decide not to continue study. Remain in Australia
upon expiry of your visa or if you decide not to continue
your course. Maintain your overseas student health
cover during your stay in Australia as a student.
Let your overseas student health cover lapse.
- I
am an overseas student. I am still studying, but my
visa has expired. What do I do?
You must approach DIMA immediately to discuss your
eligibility to apply for a further student visa.
- I
am an overseas student. I changed course/institution.
What do I do now?
- If your visa is
subject to condition 8206, you are not permitted to
change institution/provider during the first 12 months
of your course without DIMA permission. You should
apply for a student visa with permission to change
provider on form 157C. You will need to give reasons
for changing your institution/provider and will be
permitted to change only if you can show exceptional
circumstances.
- If your visa was
granted on or after 1 November 2000 and you are undertaking
prerequisite studies you must complete that course
and 12 months of your principal course before being
permitted to change institution/provider. If your
principal course is for a period of less than 12 months
duration you cannot change provider prior to the end
of that course.
- If you have completed
the first year of your principal course you do not
have to have DIMA permission to change provider. You
should advise your old institution/provider and DIMA
that you are moving to a new institution/provider.
Otherwise your old institution/provider may report
you to DIMA as not satisfying course requirements
and your visa may be subject to cancellation action.
- I am an overseas
student. I finished my course/I stopped studying,
but I am still in Australia. _
You should depart Australia within one month of finishing
or stopping your course. If your visa is still valid
you have one month to depart or to enroll in another
course if you wish to continue studying in Australia.
If for some reason you cannot or may not want to depart
you must contact DIMA immediately to discuss your
personal circumstances. If your visa has expired you
are an unlawful non-citizen.
- I
have a temporary resident visa. I have changed my
employer or activity. What is my position now?
The work condition on your visa does not allow you
to change employer or activity without prior authority
from DIMA. If you are considering changing employer
or occupation or have changed employer or occupation
without DIMA's permission, you should contact DIMA
immediately as your visa could be subject to cancellation.
DIMA allows visa holders to change employer where
both the gaining and losing employers agree to the
change.
- I
have a four-year temporary resident visa but my employer
no longer needs me. What are my options?
- The work condition
on your visa does not allow you to change employer
or activity without prior authority from DIMA. If
your employment with your original employer has finished
earlier than the validity of your visa, you should
depart without delay. If you wish to continue to work
in Australia and you have another employer prepared
to sponsor you, you have 28 days from the end of your
previous employment to lodge a new visa application.
After the 28 days your visa may be cancelled and you
may be required to leave Australia immediately.
- I would like to
stay longer or live in Australia._
There are some options available to you if you want
to stay longer or remain permanently, but you have
to apply for a new visa. For information on the various
visa classes check the relevant titles shown on this
site or visit a DIMA office. Remember, don't let your
visa expire. Make your inquiry and lodge your new
visa application while your current visa is valid.
- What
happens if I don't observe a condition on my visa?
Failure to observe a visa condition can lead to cancellation
of your visa. Without a visa you have no right to
be in Australia. You have to leave immediately and
may be held in an immigration detention centre until
your departure. If you breach a visa work condition
you may be fined up to $10,000.
- What
happens if I a work without work rights?
If you work without work rights you commit an offence
against the Migration Act. Your visa can be cancelled,
you could be held in an Immigration Detention Centre
until your departure and could be fined up to $10,000
- My
visa has expired. What's going to happen to me now?
- At this point,
the news for you is not good. Under the Migration
Act 1958, if your visa expires while you are still
in Australia you become an "unlawful non-citizen".
The Act requires that you must be detained immediately
and removed from Australia as soon as practical.
- DIMA's Compliance
staff locate people who overstay their visas and become
"unlawful non-citizens" and ensure that
they depart Australia, if there is no legal reason
for them to remain.
- If you made an
oversight, as soon as you become aware that you are
an "unlawful non-citizen" you should make
immediate arrangements to depart and contact the Compliance
Section of the DIMA office closest to your location
with evidence of your departure booking.
- Depending on your
circumstance, a DIMA officer may decide to grant you
a bridging visa, rather than detain you. The bridging
visa will give you lawful status for a short time
and the opportunity to organise your personal affairs
before departing or to lodge an application for a
new visa, if you are eligible for one.
- What
happens if I stay on as an unlawful non-citizen?
- You have made
the wrong decision.
Your problem is not going to go away. Sooner or later
you will be caught. Under the law, when you are caught
you will be detained and removed. That means that
you can be held in an Immigration Detention Centre
until the day of your removal. Your departure will
take place under immigration supervision.
- If you approach
DIMA voluntarily to discuss your circumstances you
could be granted a bridging visa, but your chances
of being granted a bridging visa are much less favourable
if you are located by a DIMA compliance officer.
- As an unlawful
non-citizen you are not entitled to Medicare, social
security, education and most other services available
to lawful residents. You also have no right to employment.
- What
are the consequences of being an unlawful non-citizen?
- When you chose
to remain unlawfully in Australia you made a conscious
decision to commit an offence against the Australian
Migration Act.
- If you have overstayed
your visa by more than 28 days you are subject to
an 'exclusion period'. That means that you will not
be permitted to come back to Australia for a period
of up to three years.
- If you are detained
and removed at government expense you will be charged
these costs. If you have valuables and assets in Australia
these can be confiscated to recover the amount spent
for your detention and removal. If you are unable
to repay these costs before your removal, DIMA will
keep a record of your debt and, if in future, even
in 10 or 20 years time, you will not be allowed to
travel to Australia unless your repay the outstanding
debt.
- If you are an unlawful
non-citizen, it is in your best interest to contact
a Compliance Section in DIMA to discuss your personal
circumstances.
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