Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Foreign workers approved for mining jobs

Australia’s government announced Friday it will allow a new mine to hire about 1,700 foreign workers to alleviate a labour shortage threatening the resources boom. Immigration Minister, Chris Bowen, said the government’s first Enterprise Migration Agreement (EMA) had been granted to the $9.3 billion Roy Hill iron ore mining project, part-owned by the country’s richest person and the world’s wealthiest woman Gina Rinehart. In a statement, Bowen said that, while the community justifiably wanted to ensure Australians had the first go at job opportunities presented by the mining boom, skilled migrants were critical to getting these projects off the ground. “The government’s first priority is always ensuring jobs for Australian workers, but there is a need for temporary workers to help keep our economy strong,” Bowen said. “With more than 8,000 workers required during the construction phase of the Roy Hill project, there simply aren’t enough people in the local workforce to get the job done,” he added. Australian authorities believe these types of agreements will address one of the biggest risks to many resources projects – the inadequate supply of labour and skills in the short-term construction phase. Under the EMA approved Friday, Roy Hill will provide up to 2000 training places for Australians. This includes places for more than 200 Australian apprentices and trainees, as well as preparing over 100 foreigners to work in the construction industry. The minister said the EMA also sets out protections to ensure that foreign workers are only recruited after genuine efforts to first employ Australians, and that visa holders engaged on the project receive the same wages and conditions as their Australian counterparts. Major miners, such as Rio Tinto, have taken the bull by the horns and launched their own recruitment initiatives earlier this year. In April, for instance, Rio started an aggressive recruitment campaign to fill 6,000 vacancies across its 30 operations in Australia, which is considered the largest such campaign in the country’s history. http://www.mining.com/

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Foreign language study in Australian schools

The following comes from:http://www.news.com.au/money/federal-budget/preschoolers-to-learn-second-language-under-tony-abbott-and-the-coalition/story-fn84fgcm-1226352494563 EVERY preschool child would have to study a foreign language if the Coalition wins the next election, as part of Tony Abbott's vision to help prepare Australia for the Asian boom. And within a decade, 40 per cent of Year 12 students would be studying a second language under a target set by Mr Abbott in his Budget reply speech last night. China was Australia's biggest trading partner but there are just 300 Year 12 students of Mandarin who aren't of Chinese heritage across Australia. Japanese, the language of Australia's second-biggest trading partner, had seen a 21 per cent decline in students studying it since 2001. "Indonesia is a vital partner in Australia's long-term future and on current trends Indonesian will disappear from Year 12 studies within four years," Mr Abbott said in a joint statement with his deputy Julie Bishop and education spokesman Christopher Pyne. Korean had all but disappeared from the education system - a concern because Korea is Australia's third-largest trading partner. "Similarly Australia's relationship with India is of growing importance and the Australian-Indian community numbers more than 300,000," Mr Abbott said. "But there has been a steady decline in the study of Hindi in Australia - for example in 2010 only 16 students sat the NSW HSC in Hindi." If Australians wanted to make their way in the world, they could not rely on other people speaking their language, Mr Abbott said. "The Coalition believes that starting in pre-school every student should have an exposure to foreign languages," he said. The shift would be generational because foreign language speakers would have to be mobilised and teachers trained. "We will urgently work with the states to ensure that the Australian workforce of the future can grasp the full opportunity of the Asian century," Mr Abbott said. The announcement mirrored the Coalition's policy on teaching children foreign languages in its 2010 election platform but provided more specific targets and details. Read more: http://www.news.com.au/money/federal-budget/preschoolers-to-learn-second-language-under-tony-abbott-and-the-coalition/story-fn84fgcm-1226352494563#ixzz1uWq75i58