Skip to content
Building Construction, Government Federal

Albanese Government leaves skilled construction machinery workers in the lurch

Master Builders Australia 2 mins read

After the long-awaited release of the Federal Government’s Core Skills Occupation List, the building and construction industry has been left scratching their heads as to why key machinery operator roles have not made the final list.

The Core Skills Occupation List provides the only viable pathway for skilled construction workers to enter Australia and play their part in tackling the housing crisis after the Federal Government deliberately excluded trades and machinery operators from the expedited specialist skills pathway.

According to Jobs and Skills Australia, all 15 building and construction key occupation groups are in shortage at a national or state/territory level.

This includes crane, hoist and lift operators, drillers, bulldozer or excavator operators and other heavy machinery operators.

These are well paying jobs, above the TSMIT. Crane operators earn an average income of $118,000 and bulldozer operators earn on average over $100,000.

Thankfully, some roles that were previously left off the list, like plumbers, bricklayers and carpenter joiners, are now included and the Government is to be commended for that.

Quotes attributable to Master Builders Australia’s CEO Denita Wawn:

“Master Builders is pleased that some of our concerns were heard with the inclusion of key trades like brickies, plumbers and tilers.

 

“However, we remain dismayed that in the middle of a housing crisis and chronic labour shortages, key roles in the industry have been left off the list.

 

“You can’t build a house, schools, hospitals or roads without crane, bulldozer and excavator operators, who have not made the cut.

 

“The evidence speaks for itself – all building and construction industry occupation groups remain in shortage and should be on the list.

 

“The Federal Government has missed an opportunity to signal to the industry and the community that they are really committed to fixing the housing crisis and addressing labour shortages.

 

“Labour shortages have been one of the biggest drivers of cost increases and time delays.

 

“We’ve seen construction costs increase by 40 per cent over the last five years and build times from approvals to completions blow out by over 44 per cent over the same time period.”

 

Media contact: Dee Zegarac, National Director, Media & Public Affairs

0400 493 071 | dee.zegarac@masterbuilders.com.au

Media

More from this category

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Government Federal
  • 21/01/2025
  • 08:57
ACOSS

Latest Workforce Australia IT disaster shows system is broken

ACOSS is demanding an ongoing pause to the enforcement of mutual obligations following latest IT failures which have required the government to suspend them. Since January 6th, the government has paused mutual obligations due to ongoing failures with the Workforce Australia IT system. The pause has now been extended until Tuesday 28th January 2025 . The latest failures of the employment services system come after a string of errors uncovered in 2024, including that income support payments may have been illegally cancelled, affecting at least 1,000 people between April 2022 and July 2024. In addition, over 1,000 people had wrongful…

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 21/01/2025
  • 07:59
Australian Conservation Foundation

Approved destruction of koala habitat tripled in 2024

The Albanese government, which committed to ‘no new extinctions’ in 2022, approved more than 25,000 hectares of threatened species habitat to be destroyed in 2024 – more than twice as much as the previous year, new analysis by the Australian Conservation Foundation reveals. The government approved the destruction of 3,003 hectares of koala habitat – triple the amount that was approved for clearing in 2023 and more than any other threatened species’ habitat. ACF’s Extinction wrapped: Changes to Australia’s national threatened species list in 2024 finds: The Albanese government approved the destruction of more than 25,000 hectares of threatened species…

  • Government Federal
  • 21/01/2025
  • 07:00
e61 Institute

Higher benefits increase job-seekers’ time out of work: New research

Increasing unemployment benefits will change the way people look for jobs and increase the average time spent out of work, according to new research by the e61 Institute.The study measured the impact of the JobSeeker Coronavirus Supplement, finding the higher benefit made people who were out of work spend more time unemployed.The research found that the $550-a-fortnight supplement, which effectively doubled the unemployment benefit in March 2020, reduced job-finding by 19%.Based on this data, the researchers calculated that a 10% increase in benefits would lead to a 2.1% decline in job-finding rates, increasing the average time spent out of work…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.