
LML
location 4
Two weeks. I have two current NSW applications in their 5th weeks. 4 weeks is about standard.Tintola wrote:Can you explain the $30 fee and two week waiting period that we have to endure in NSW? No other state has a fee anywhere near this cost and usually grant it within a day.Tiaris wrote:Only registered natives for wilkdlife protection purposes. Otherwise any laws to impose interstate trade barriers (as an import permit at a cost would) contravene s52 of the Australian constitution.![]()
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DB It is not the degree of difficulty that we are dissatisfied with, It is the over regulation, the $30 cost and the inconvenience of waiting two weeks or more to be able (legally) to do it. If I send/receive only five shipments per year interstate, there is $150 on top of the license fee that we pay already. I live almost on a state border and if I want to drive the birds twenty minutes into Qld I have to pay $30 and wait at least two weeks to do it and then send in another form to state that nothing else was added to the first one. WHY? when other states don't have these ridiculous, revenue raising laws. Qld for example has a cost of two or four dollars and approval the same day by fax or phone. Any wonder a lot of people that I know avoid all this whenever they can and just "do it"!desertbirds wrote:If a couple of country bumpkins can freight stuff all over the place , im sure city slickers can work it out, seriously its not that HARD.
Stop whinging.
1. Get a permit for the birds you want to send or import
2. Get a box to send them in .
3. Put them in the box and take them to the airport or go to the airport and pick them up.
4. Pick up the phone, and be nice to people on the other end,they have a job to do, its suprising how much difference that can make.
I freighted a few hundred birds before joining the forum , all states but Tassie , people make it sound way harder than it is.
Same experience here. After 3 weeks I rang and was told it was unlikely it would be processed for another week or so unless I was willing to pay a $30 "hurry up" fee. And this for $150 worth of birds. You try to do the right thing, but I got sick of it and just sent the birds - fortunately the permit arrived the following day. Clearly issuing the permits is one small part of one person's job and its a low priority - how many applications can there be each week? Can't be many, and are any ever refused? They should just automate the whole thing through the online record keeping system.Tiaris wrote:If you apply for the permit online the fee is $27 (wow, big saving) and turnaround time is 2 weeks. By postal application or fax it takes longer & I know of a couple of instances where it had taken a while & phone enquiries to try to hurry it up were responded to with "if you send another $30 I'll do it next day" (ICAC stuff).
Sam, see Buzz's post it has graph at the bottom of the link of how many import/export licenses have been issued since 2007.SamDavis wrote:- how many applications can there be each week? Can't be many, and are any ever refused? They should just automate the whole thing through the online record keeping system.