Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Anybody thinking of becoming a Permanent Resident of Australia to join WAPOL ?
Can I join an Australian police force or work in the public sector as an Australian PR? Some public sector jobs across Australia, including in the police forces, are open to both citizens and PRs. The majority of State/Territory government jobs are open to permanent residents (it depends on the state, NSW government jobs are mostly open to permanent residents) unless special circumstances apply. The Commonwealth (federal) government normally requires Australian citizenship, however if you are a permanent resident eligible for citizenship you can sometimes be engaged on a probationary basis. As of late South Africa and Switzerland officers seem to be doing just that. |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Originally Posted by Slippery Pete
(Post 11539843)
Anybody thinking of becoming a Permanent Resident of Australia to join WAPOL ?
FAQ's about Australia As of late South Africa and Switzerland officers seem to be doing just that. |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Originally Posted by Dorothy
(Post 11539911)
How do you propose people become permanent residents of Australia? Without qualifying for a visa then thinking of joining WAPOL is moot.
Marrying an Aussie is one way of course, or if someone is working in another field and then plans to become a cop once they get here, but the hurdle most face is that policing skills are not on the skills lists. |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Originally Posted by Pollyana
(Post 11539916)
Thats what i was thinking too, police officer is not on the skills list therefore most serving officers are unable to get PR.
Marrying an Aussie is one way of course, or if someone is working in another field and then plans to become a cop once they get here, but the hurdle most face is that policing skills are not on the skills lists. No state is sponsoring the occupation which leaves employer sponsorship when a force is recruiting internationally. In the past couple of years WAPOL has recruited internationally but this is no guarantee that they will again. |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Originally Posted by old.sparkles
(Post 11539964)
Police officer is on the skills list but is CSOL only meaning that sponsorship is required for a PR visa.
No state is sponsoring the occupation which leaves employer sponsorship when a force is recruiting internationally. In the past couple of years WAPOL has recruited internationally but this is no guarantee that they will again. |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Or partner of someone who can get a skilled visa.
|
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Originally Posted by Slippery Pete
(Post 11539843)
Anybody thinking of becoming a Permanent Resident of Australia to join WAPOL ?
FAQ's about Australia As of late South Africa and Switzerland officers seem to be doing just that. |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Myself and the other half are considering just this option. I was unsuccessful on the 2014 transitional recruitment programme, falling at the first hurdle on the application. (Fairly sure I'd put a pretty good application together, but hard to tell with no feedback. That's another story for a different day though!)
Ive now passed the ten year service point that was set out last year, so even if it opens again I'm scuppered if similar terms are stipulated for applicants. Therefore we've explored alternatives. One of which is becoming a PR and then applying as a lateral transfer. My good lady wife has an occupation that after some research seems likely to offer us a route on a 189 visa. I'd love to hear from anyone that has experience, either first hand or knowledge of others that have gone this route. Surely there's somebody here? My understanding would be (providing all goes to plan!!) Submit an EOI. Submit and pay for visa, including all relevant checks and medicals. If/when granted, all applicants visit Australia to "activate" visa. Then apply as lateral transfer. If successful, trip to Joondalup for tests, assessment, interviews. If successful, pack up and move? I appreciate its all rather simplistic, and that it'll be a more costly and certainly drawn out process than going through the transitional programme. Any thoughts,advice welcome though. |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Hi first post here:
I have also looked into this route, my wife is a nurse and I would be looking to have permanent residency through her Visa, when I spoke to WAPOL regarding my options, they said once I have my PR, I can then apply and transfer my service over meaning only the 13 weeks at Joondalup and the higher salary after training. I have just under 6 years service with Police Scotland and just dropped out of the pension here! Can anyone tell me the main benefits for me if they do re open international recruitment? Do WAPOL pay my family's visas? Just wondering if it is worth holding out for instead of going it alone so to speak! Cheers |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
There are no benefits to waiting for international recruitment. They don't pay for anything. You'd probably be much better off going on your other half's visa as it would offer you plenty of flexibility. If I were in your shoes, that's what I'd do anyway.
Good luck! |
Re: Becoming A Permanent Resident of Australia To Join WAPOL
Originally Posted by notbrazil
(Post 11613094)
There are no benefits to waiting for international recruitment. They don't pay for anything. You'd probably be much better off going on your other half's visa as it would offer you plenty of flexibility. If I were in your shoes, that's what I'd do anyway.
Good luck! Just waiting on my good wife passing her English exam and then we can get the ball rolling! |
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