Chapter 2 Purpose and content of the bills
Overview of the bills
2.1
The Migration (Visa Evidence) Charge Bill 2012 and Migration
(Visa Evidence) Charge (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2012
(hereafter, the Visa Evidence Charge Bills) will amend the Migration Act
1958 (the Migration Act) to:
n impose a visa
evidence charge to be payable for visa evidence requests by amendment of Migration
Act Section 71; and
n insert regulation
making powers (Migration Regulations 1994) for the calculation of specific charges
and their implementation.
2.2
The measures are to commence simultaneously on a day fixed by
Proclamation after the Acts have received Royal Assent, or six months after
that date.[1]
Purpose of the bills
2.3
The Visa Evidence Charge Bills are introduced to address inconsistencies
between the processes enabled by online visa validation and the Migration Act, which
currently requires the Department of Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC) to
supply hard copy visa evidence on the request of a visa holder.
2.4
Australia has a free electronic visa processing and validation service,
known as Visa Entitlement Verification Online or VEVO, under which a visa
holder and registered organisations, such as schools, employers and service
providers, may verify an individual’s visa status.[2]
2.5
However, section 70 of the Migration Act presently requires
that:
Subject to the regulations, if a non-citizen is granted a
visa, an officer is to give the non-citizen evidence of the visa.
2.6
In his second reading speech for the Migration (Visa Evidence) Charge
Bill 2012, the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship Mr Chris Bowen MP
advised that one third of visa holders request hardcopy evidence of their visa.
During 2011 this amounted to 1. 365 million requests, 455 000 onshore and 910 000
offshore.[3]
2.7
Further, the processing of these visa evidence requests is the highest
volume service conducted at immigration counters both in Australia and
overseas.[4] The request may be made
at the time of the visa being issued or later, and the visa evidence is issued
without cost to the visa holder.[5]
2.8
The Minister stated that the visa evidence charge is intended to
discourage reliance on visa labels by immigration clients and foreign
officials, and to promote the use of online visa validation under VEVO.[6]
2.9
The measures also advance the shift to a user pays model for visa
services, under Visa Pricing Transformation. They are part of DIAC’s broader
five-year Transformation Program which prioritises automation of immigration
services to increase global competitiveness.[7]
The Migration (Visa Evidence) Charge Bill 2012
2.10
The Migration (Visa Evidence) Charge Bill 2012 provides for the
imposition of a charge for requests for evidence of a visa, and for indexation
of that charge as follows:
n Clauses 3 and 4 provide
that visa evidence is payable in relation to a request made inside or outside
Australia (extra-territorial operation);
n Clause 5 provides basic
definitions for the Act;
n Clause 6 provides
that a visa evidence charge is payable under s.71 of the Migration Act, as
amended by the Migration (Visa Evidence) Charge (Consequential Amendments) Bill
2012 (detailed below); and
n Clause 7 sets a
maximum charge limit of $250 for a visa evidence request and a mechanism for annual
indexation of the visa evidence charge limit, to be based on the Consumer Price
Index, after 30 June 2013.
The Migration (Visa Evidence) Charge (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2012
2.11
The Migration (Visa Evidence) Charge (Consequential Amendments) Bill
2012 amends the Migration Act to implement the visa evidence charge. The legislation
will also enable calculation of different charges for different classes of visa
and for nil charges.
2.12
The Bill repeals current provisions and introduces two new sections,
s.70 and s.71, under Subdivision AE of Part 2 of the Migration Act.
2.13
Migration Act s.70 currently provides that a migration officer is to
give a non-citizen evidence of a visa on request. The new section will specify:
n that a non-citizen
who holds a visa, or certain other persons
(such as a parent or guardian), may request evidence of a visa (s.70(1));
n that the request must
be made in a prescribed way, lodged in the prescribed place and be accompanied
by the charge payable
(s. 70(2)); and
n that the request may
be withdrawn before the evidence is provided
(s.70 (3)).
2.14
Section 71 currently provides that evidence of a visa is to be given in
the prescribed way, depending on circumstances. The new section provides:
n that a person who
makes a request for evidence of a visa under s.70 is liable to pay a visa
evidence charge (s.71(1));
n that the amount
charged should not exceed the visa charge limit (s.71(2));
n that regulations be
made enabling different charges for different circumstances and visas, for nil
charges and for calculation of charges (s.71(3)).
2.15
Specifically, articles (a) to (f) of s.71(3) indicate that the regulations
may apply different charges, singly or in combination, to:
(a) specify a different amount of
visa evidence charge for
different prescribed forms of
evidence of a visa;
(b) specify a different amount of
visa evidence charge in relation to different classes of visas;
(c) specify a different amount of
visa evidence charge for different methods of payment of the charge;
(d) specify a different amount of
visa evidence charge where the person elects to have the request dealt with
expeditiously;
(e) specify a different amount of
visa evidence charge for requests made in different circumstances;
(f) specify circumstances in
which the amount of the visa evidence charge is nil…
2.16
New subsections 71A and 71B respectively provide that:
n visa evidence should be
issued in a timely manner on request (providing the request is not withdrawn
nor the visa out of date); and
n that regulations may
be made to address the particular circumstances of a request, the methods of
payment and for payments to be made on behalf of the Commonwealth and for remissions,
refunds or waivers, and exemptions from the payment.
2.17
Section 71B(2) further prescribes
that regulations may set the form of the evidence to be given, and that the Minister
be able to reject a specific passport or travel document for the purposes of
the legislation.