Seasonal worker movement from the Pacific confirmed

28 September 2021

The Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern, has confirmed that quarantine free travel for Recognised Seasonal Employer (RSE) scheme workers from some Pacific countries will start on 4 October 2021. 

This good news comes after two previous announcements: one from the Prime Minister and another from the Minister of Agriculture, Damien O’Connor.  These earlier announcements enabled the industry collective (NZKGI, NZAPI, Summerfruit NZ, NZ Ethical Employers, Wine NZ and HortNZ) to work with Government officials to make quarantine free travel as workable as possible, and to re-schedule the deferred MIQ flights from Vanuatu and Samoa. 

In October, there will be two quarantine free flights from Vanuatu, the first arriving on 4 October and the second on 11 October, as well as a quarantine free flight from Samoa arriving on 16 October. 

Already planned is another quarantine free flight from Samoa later in November and the last MIQ flight from the Solomons on 4 November.  The Solomons flight remains MIQ as the Government has only authorised quarantine free flights from Vanuatu, Samoa and Tonga.

One of the Government’s conditions for the quarantine free flights is repatriation of workers back to Vanuatu, Samoa and Tonga, with the workers who have been in New Zealand the longest being returned home first.  These workers then have the option to return to New Zealand in the new year, once they have spent some time in their home countries. 

Workers from Vanuatu and Samoa have been repatriating but to date, there has been very little repatriation to Tonga.  Once repatriation to Tonga commences, workers from Tonga can come to New Zealand.

The industry collective, with NZKGI and NZAPI taking the lead, has been surveying RSE scheme employers to ascertain how many workers they would like to bring into New Zealand from November.  The start date is November as recruitment, visas and other approvals need to be processed before the workers can leave their home countries.  This takes a minimum of seven weeks. 

The upper limit for the number of RSE workers each employer can bring in is what the Government’s RSE Unit has issued an approval for (each employer’s approved ATR), plus the number of RSE workers currently in New Zealand less those RSE workers that are being repatriated. 

This should result in an increasing number of RSE workers arriving in New Zealand as harvest commences.

 

Seasonal worker shortfall

There will still be a shortfall of seasonal workers for the coming season due to the drop in the number of backpackers.  The shortfall is estimated to be a minimum of 18,000, even with the increased movement of RSE workers from the Pacific. 

As a result, every part of the horticulture industry has programmes underway to attract as many New Zealanders as possible to work in horticulture.  This includes the activities of the industry’s ten career progression managers, located across the country from Northland to Central Otago.

Ngā mihi nui

Nadine Tunley
HortNZ Chief Executive