The Australian horticulture sector has been crying out for a special visa type for years to address labour shortages on farms across Australia. Now, as another fruit-picking season approaches without a new migration category, Nationals minister David Littleproud insists his party hasn't abandoned a dedicated agriculture visa.
Littleproud met with fruit growers in northern Victoria earlier in the week, with two farmers saying they desperately needed an agriculture visa to address staff shortages. "We're still working towards that. The prime minister himself at NFF (National Farmers' Federation) congress last year committed to working towards a mechanism," the former agriculture minister told AAP.
But since that commitment, Scott Morrison has argued the government's changes to migration programs are doing the same job as a dedicated visa category.
Littleproud, now in charge of water and drought, said the government's most important responsibility was to keep Australians safe: "You don't tinker with an immigration system until you've got the framework. There is a lot of work happening behind the scenes around not just ag visas, but regional skills and the shortage we do have in some areas."
He said Morrison had been clear in making sure labour pressures were alleviated for producers from across the nation: "You've got to understand the fluidity of the need for labour, particularly in terms of when crops need to be picked. We're not walking away. We're trying to create mechanisms. What you call it - who cares? But what most people want is outcomes."
Source: au.news.yahoo.com