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The government is now operating in accordance with the Guidance on Caretaker Conventions, pending the outcome of the 2025 federal election. What does this mean?

Stories

stories
Smiling Pacific worker picking berries in a greenhouse

Simfresh employs around 100 Pacific island workers on their farms in Queensland and Victoria. Around 60% of these workers are women who have taken on roles as pickers, packers, line leaders and in quality assurance. Ana from Tonga says, " The experience is incredible... whatever men can do women can do the same thing."

Pacific worker at Simfresh in Mildura

When coronavirus restrictions began, Simfresh – which produces almost 2 million boxes of citrus annually from farms in NSW and Queensland – was “already ahead of the game” in helping its workers stay healthy and happy during the pandemic, operations manager Luke Cini said.

A man stands in front of a light blue Fijian flag.

During the uncertain times of the COVID-19 pandemic, George Brown Bakani and Ratu Duilomaloa sent messages back to their family, friends and villages in Fiji to let them know they were keeping well and they were following the health guidelines to keep safe.

Tuvaluan forestry workers in Kingaroy
Saving money, making connections and developing new skills

K&S Contracting specialises in forestry and weed control. The business signed up to the Pacific Labour Scheme (PLS) in 2018 after struggling to find reliable local labour for forestry work. It currently employs 5 Tuvaluans who are now active members of the local community.

A man is laughing in front of a Fijian flag.

As the COVID-19 pandemic took hold in early 2020, people were asked to stay home to stop the spread of the virus. Isoa Tuinasaoalau, from Fiji, sends a message back home to friends and family and shares how the PALM scheme workers found a way to avoid missing church services. Isoa says the workers held their own services at home in Childers, Queensland, getting dressed up in their best clothes, singing songs and sharing Bible verses.

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Five women from a remote village in the highlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG) have been recruited to pick mandarins at Ironbark Citrus in outback Queensland. Ironbark Citrus joined the Seasonal Worker Programme (SWP) in 2012 and also recruits workers from Timor-Leste and Tonga. Working in Australia has been life-changing for the workers.

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The Nutrano Produce Group struggled to find workers for its citrus farm in Victoria's Sunraysia district until it joined the Seasonal Worker Programme (SWP) in 2017. It now employs a large group of workers from Solomon Islands, some of whom have used their savings to build new houses and a church for their village.