A South Australian aged care nurse and his household haveactually been given brand-new bridging visas, 4 days priorto they were set to be deported. Key points:Aged care nurse Clifford Chisengalumbwe and his household’s visas were due to end on FridayThey haveactually been approved bridging visas upuntil JanuaryTheir legalrepresentative states individuals working in sought-after tasks oughtto get visas more easilyClifford Chisengalumbwe faced being deported tomorrow if the federal federalgovernment did not grant him, his otherhalf, Ngoza, and their child, Mckayla, brand-new visas enabling them to stay in Australia. Mr Chisengalumbwe hasactually been working in aged care giventhat 2012, and hasactually been an registered nurse at the Lerwin Nursing Home in Murray Bridge because2017 He and his spouse veryfirst showedup in Australia from Zambia in 2005 and had their child, Mckayla, in2014 The brand-new visas come with complete working rights and suggest the household can remain upuntil January. Clifford Chisengalumbwe with his spouse, Ngoza, and child, Mckayla.(Facebook)Mr Chisengalumbwe stated the news hadactually provided his household some peace of mind. “That was really excellent, and at least we settled a bit duetothefactthat they were simply providing us bridging visas for a month, for up to 30 days,” he stated. “But this time they’ve offered us a bridging visas that’s up to January 12.” Call for simpler procedure for experienced workersMr Chisengalumbwe’s migration representative, Mark Glazbrook, s
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