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Government plan lets you skip airport queues - if you are willing to pay

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A plan to allow wealthy airline passengers to avoid long airport queues will bring more visitors to Australia, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton says.

The government announced the potentially divisive measure in Tuesday's federal budget. Plane passengers would be offered a "premium" experience at airports which Fairfax Media understands may include a fast-tracked passage through border clearance, or even separate terminals.

"Premium" passengers could pay extra to skip airport queues.

"Premium" passengers could pay extra to skip airport queues. Photo: Penny Stephens

It would initially operate at Sydney, Perth and Melbourne airports.

Official data shows that airport queue delays topped the list of complaints to customs authorities last financial year.

Wait times of 90 minutes or more have recently been reported at airports around Australia, including in February this year when a Virgin Airlines check-in glitch left passengers reporting queues flowing out the doors at airports.

Long airport waits could be a thing of the past if you're willing to pay extra.

Long airport waits could be a thing of the past if you're willing to pay extra. Photo: Penny Stephens

Airport operators would pay the government a fee for the premium service, the cost of which may be passed on to airlines or passengers. The government did not say how much revenue would be raised from the measure, citing commercial confidentiality.

It would add to existing premium security lanes currently provided to business and first-class travellers at some Australian airports.

A spokeswoman for Immigration Minister Peter Dutton said "premium traveller facilitation services" could increase visitor numbers to Australia.

"The services would be on a user-pay basis and travellers using these services will be processed under established clearance procedure. They would not be exempt from customs, immigration, biosecurity or aviation security screening," she said.

Tourism and Transport Forum Australia chief executive Margy Osmond said a premium service could include "seamless" disembarkation and immigration clearing processes, fast-tracked passage through arrivals and departures and meet-and-greet services to help passengers with border clearance.

She said similar experiences were offered overseas and were increasingly expected by "high-yield travellers", who were prepared to pay for the service.

"Australia must cater to the needs for all traveller demographics … for a growing number of Asian travellers, which is Australia's key growth market, premium border facilitation is an integral component of the travel experience," Ms Osmond said, adding the measure was no different to airlines offering variously priced seats.

Sydney and Melbourne airports both welcomed the plan, and pointed to measures to improve the border processes for regular passengers such as automated bag drops, self-service check-in and the government's SmartGates.

The gates purportedly allow travellers to self-process through passport control. However there have been reports that the gates are often unusable because they have run out of paper tickets to print.

They also cannot cope with names containing more than 24 characters, forcing passengers with long names to join queues for manual processing. A spokesman for the Department of Immigration and Border Protection said it was "working on a technical solution" to this problem, and the gates had improved queuing time.

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90 comments so far

  • This is a completely rubbish idea. The government should be staffing immigration and customs sufficiently so that everybody gets through the airport in a reasonable time. These are public services, not private.

    Enough privilege to the rich.

    Commenter
    Jezza99
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    May 05, 2016, 8:29AM
    • So what happened to user pays. Now they charge the airline to pass the cost on to us to subsidise the privileged getting a better experience.

      Or is the strategy to deliberately underfund organisations so that they underperform and are forced to charge an extra fee so that they can perform the functions that they were meant to.

      Surely airport parking could cover the cost of extra staff.

      Commenter
      Sir Mascara Snowflake
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 8:47AM
    • Did it ever occur to you that having fewer passengers in the regular border clearance queue will make it quicker for everyone else to get through customs?

      Commenter
      Kit Walker
      Location
      St Kilda
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 8:52AM
    • We are just trying to make it like the health system.

      Commenter
      The Minister
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 8:54AM
    • Queue jumping? - That's unAustralian.

      Commenter
      blah
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 9:07AM
    • @Jezza99,
      This is just another one of little Peter's contribution to his Border Farce disorganisation.

      Commenter
      DukeofWoyWoy
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 9:12AM
    • jezza99 you just don't get it. There's no money for anything. Do you really want to pay a lot more tax & have a lot less services/welfare ?

      You can't pay public servants enormous amounts of money & expect them to work hard as well.

      Commenter
      oh dear
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 9:18AM
    • @ KW the normal queues will be just as long, as immigration staff will just be moved to the new area rather than hiring new staff.

      Commenter
      Me
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 9:29AM
    • Your proposition is not logical Kit Walker. Staff will be taken from the plebs queue and used to staff the elite's queue. The plebs will have to wait even longer. But in keeping with LNP policy it will also act as a punishment for the masses not stepping up to the mark and becoming elites!

      Commenter
      Matthew
      Location
      Adelaide
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 9:30AM
    • Jezza99, you are spot on. This is the age of entitlement and one of those ruling class ideas. Of course, they would come up with an idea such as this. Why? Because air travel has become affordable for everyone and they feel the need to separate the aristocracy from the unclean ones. This is like Elizabethan England. Yet another unintentional revelation of how this government thinks and what they think of middle Australia. Unrepresentative government.

      Commenter
      Barney
      Date and time
      May 05, 2016, 9:31AM

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