Migrants will now be allowed to stay in Australia to pursue workplace exploitation claims

The Workplace Justice Pilot will run for two years and aims to support temporary migrants who allege they have been exploited by their employers.
Key Points
- The government has introduced a new visa to support migrants who are making worker exploitation claims.
- Temporary migrants can now stay in Australia for six to 12 months if it is beneficial or necessary for their claim.
- The Temporary Activity visa (subclass 408) was introduced last week as a two-year pilot.
(subclass 408) was introduced last week as a two-year pilot and has been designed to enable temporary migrants to remain in Australia to pursue a workplace exploitation claim.
Workplace exploitation can include underpayment of wages, pressure to work more hours than their visa conditions allow, employers threatening to cancel visas, bullying or harassment, or pressure for workers to give their employers their passports.
on Sunday. SBS