![]() ![]() research station." - When entering the bus. “These should all have been green-lit months ago.Entrance " Welcome aboard, please secure all personal belongings and take your seat. We are desperately short of nurses, bus services have stopped running, and we don’t have enough teachers. “These drivers will continue to walk away from the job –- residency is only a short-term solution.”ĪCT immigration spokesperson James McDowall said the announcement should have happened sooner. “If you’re only addressing one part of the problem, how do you retain local drivers? “We’re struggling to fill the industry because people are taking jobs in Australia or moving into truck driving because the pay is better. Maga said that attracting drivers was necessary, but the pay rate was not competitive enough, and the industry was struggling to retain drivers. “The second thing is health and safety conditions, we need better training if drivers are coming from overseas because they’re driving in a different environment. We’re trying to get them $30 an hour through government funding and getting bus operators to pay more. “There are a couple of things to understand, drivers are short-paid. ![]() However, First Union general secretary Dennis Maga said that whereas the announcement was welcome, it didn’t go far enough. “At this time, we don’t have any further details that we can share,” they said. Tranzit said the time-limited residency pathway for bus drivers was subject to a sector agreement which was yet to be developed but looking to start in the new year. Nationwide, thousands of drivers are needed. “There is workforce pressure all around unfortunately.”Īcross the Greater Wellington region there are about 120 bus driver vacancies. ![]() Although we do acknowledge we don’t have the same comfortable level of surplus drivers that we previously had, and this does put pressure on our operations team’s ability to cover both planned and unplanned leave. “Tranzit does not have a bus driver shortage in Wairarapa or across the regional areas we operate in. ![]() “Operators have already begun recruiting from overseas through existing immigration policy to fill vacancies and improve reliability across public transport networks. This will help relieve the national driver shortage, helping Kiwis and goods get to where they need to go.”Ī Tranzit spokesperson said that, similar to many operators in the bus and coach industry, Tranzit was experiencing workforce pressures in its urban operations, particularly in cities such as Wellington and Auckland. “The agreement will support our work underway to improve better wages and conditions for bus drivers and local workforce development. “Today we have agreed to extend the scheme to bus and truck drivers with a time-limited, two-year residence pathway. “Our sector agreements are in place across the construction, seafood, aged care, meat processing, seasonal snow, and adventure tourism sectors,” Wood said. Immigration minister Michael Wood announced on Monday the Government was expanding the Green List to fill labour shortages, with bus and truck drivers having a time-limited residence pathway through a sector agreement. A pathway to residency for migrant bus drivers isn’t enough to plug the gaps, one union representative says, as the Government moves to urgently attract much-needed workers. ![]()
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