Employment Workplace Relations
Director, Philip Brewin is a specialist in Workplace Relations and heads our Workplace Relations Work Group.
Corporate and Business Law
The Nevett Ford Corporate and Business Law team has a wealth of experience and expertise and have established quality relationships with clients, including many small and medium business enterprises, across a wide range of industries.
Dispute Resolution ( Litigation)
Nevett Ford has wide experience in all manner of litigation.
Mediation
Mediation is a process and set of principles designed to manage and resolve disputes between parties. It is an efficient and effective method of dispute resolution that can help to preserve relationships through the intervention of a third party, known as a mediator.
Property Law
Nevett Ford has been conveying Victorian property for more than 150 years.
Monday, 16 December 2013
Resident Return Visa (subclass 155) – absence of more than 5 years
New Post Study Arrangements for Student Graduates - subclass 485 TR visa
457 Visa Holders – Your rights & the Worker Protection Act 2008
You are entitled to receive pay and conditions at least as good as Australian workers who are doing the same work at the same workplace.
Under the laws of the Worker Protection Act 2008, your 457 sponsor must:
I’m Australian, but is the E-3 visa right for me?
Can I get an E-3 visa for the United States?
Is There a Pathway to Permanent Residence Under the Employer Nomination Scheme for Persons Over the Age of 50?
In-house (On-the-job) Training Expenditure for 457 and 186 Visa Applications
Thursday, 12 December 2013
Who can get an Enterprise Migration Agreement (EMA)?
Rather than each sub-contractor having to negotiate their own labour agreement, the bulk of negotiation occurs with the project owner. This means project owners can plan their workforce needs from the outset, and sub-contractors can sign up to an individual labour agreement.
NO FURTHER STAY visa condition - waiver of condition 8503
- Sponsored Family
Visitor visa (subclass 679)
- Tourist visa (subclass
676) granted under the Approved Destination Status scheme operating out of
the People's Republic of China
- Sponsored Business
Visitor visa (subclass 459) if the application was made before 1 July 2006
- Professional
Development visa (subclass 470)
- Work and Holiday visa (subclass 462) if you have previously held two subclass 462 visas.
- the circumstances that
have developed since you were granted the visa are both compassionate and
compelling
- you had no control
over these circumstances
- these circumstances have resulted in a major change to your personal circumstances.
Partner Visa Australia
- A limit of two approved sponsorships or
nominations can be made, with a minimum of five years apart.
- If the sponsor was sponsored or
nominated to Australia as a partner, they must wait five years before
sponsoring a partner or fiancé.
- Approved sponsorships or nominations are
those which result in the applicant being granted a partner or Prospective
Marriage visa.
- if the previous fiancé or partner has
died or abandoned the relationship, leaving young children
- if a new relationship is formed that is
long-standing or involves dependent children of the relationship.
Adoption visas
- adopted (or is to be adopted) with the involvement of an Australian
state or territory adoption authority (either under the Hague Convention
or another adoption agreement); or
- adopted privately by expatriate Australians who have been living
overseas for more than 12 months at the time of lodging the visa
application; or
- adopted under the Hague Convention and the adoption was arranged between 2 Hague convention countries other than Australia.
- has adopted the child under the laws of a country other than
Australia and who has been living outside Australia for the 12 months
prior to lodging the Adoption visa application; or
- has adopted the child under the Hague Convention. The parent must
possess a valid adoption compliance certificate testifying that the child
has been adopted under the Hague Convention.
- has been approved by an Australian state or territory adoption
authority as a suitable person to adopt the child and who intends to bring
the child to Australia under the supervision of that authority - in this
case, adoption will be completed in Australia; or
- has been allocated the child for adoption under the provisions of
the Hague Convention.
- they have been living overseas for more than 12 months at the time
of the visa application and they did not deliberately live overseas in
order to get around the entry requirements for adopting an overseas child;
and
- they have lawfully acquired full and permanent parental rights by
the adoption - this means that under the laws of the child’s country, the
natural parents no longer have any legal responsibility for the child.
- An adoption visa cannot be granted to a child who has been adopted
in circumstances other than those outlined above, even if the child has
been adopted lawfully in another country.
- State and territory adoption authorities will not generally support
the adoption of a child who is a relative, nor a specific child where the
adoption has not been arranged by that authority.
- “Full and permanent adoption- does not exist in the laws of some
countries. An adoption order which does not grant full parental rights to
the adoptive parents is not acceptable for the grant of a visa.
- If you wish to proceed with an adoption that has not been arranged by your state or territory adoption authority, it is strongly recommended that you first seek legal advice both in Australia and the overseas country, to ensure that the adoption can be recognised, and that the child will be eligible to enter Australia.