Posted: 2022-10-16 18:48:43

A visit to the town of Griffith tells you everything you need to know about Australia's worker shortage crisis. 

Peter Ceccato struggles to walk these rows — the soil in his orchard is carpeted with rotten oranges.

Every tree is laden with ripe fruit that's bound to fall, unpicked.

"It's heartbreaking that you have to get up in the morning, you have to face the orchard each day, and you see all this fruit on the ground, all the fruit on the tree, and you think, 'Why am I doing this, to what end?' says Mr Ceccato, general manager of the Super Seasons orchard in the NSW Riverina.

Peter Ceccato stands in the middle of a row of orange trees
Peter Ceccato, general manager of the Super Seasons orchard near Griffith, is watching most of this year's crop rot due to a lack of pickers. (Four Corners: Amy Donaldson)

There should have been 200 workers at the vast orchard, picking fruit from its half-a-million citrus trees.

Mr Ceccato found just 20.

The award wage for fruit picking is $26.73 an hour, but Mr Ceccato pays his workers $29.

He says he couldn't find more workers even when he offered $45 an hour.

"Look, it is hard work. There's no denying it. I would not do it. It's very hard. So that would have to be a major factor. But again, if I look throughout our town, we've had businesses closed, takeaway shops or mechanics et cetera, that have had to close down simply because they can't get a workforce. So what hope have we got?"

Mr Ceccato says the worker crisis is affecting the mental health of the region's growers — and his own.

"It gets worse each day, as we see more and more fruit that drops down. I find it difficult to get up in the mornings. I find it very difficult to sleep at night, because you're constantly thinking 'what can I do, how can I try and resolve this issue, not only for this year, but for next year?' You start spiralling downwards into depression."

Oranges on a tree with many more rotting on the ground.
Oranges rotting at the Super Seasons orchard near Griffith. (Four Corners: Amy Donaldson)
A rotting orange on a tree near Griffith. 
A rotting orange on a tree near Griffith. (Four Corners: Maddy King)
Hand written signs advertising citrus for sale in Griffith, NSW.
Hand-written signs advertising citrus for sale in Griffith, NSW.(Four Corners: Maddy King)

Australia is in the grip of a chronic worker shortage.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics says there are 470,900 unfilled jobs.

Job vacancies have jumped 40 per cent in 12 months. The number of occupations suffering shortages has almost doubled just this year – and some of the worst affected professions are critical to the nation's health and future, like doctors, nurses, teachers and engineers.

There are complex reasons for the shortages: in some sectors, like agriculture, two years of COVID restrictions prevented overseas workers from coming to Australia, and the availability of other, better-paying jobs has deterred locals from taking hard labouring work.

In teaching and nursing, workload and pay have led to high attrition rates. Wages have deterred childcare workers too, with fully qualified early childhood educators paid less by the hour than casual fruit pickers.

To explore the impact of the worker shortage across Australia, Four Corners is focusing on a place that's emblematic of the national crisis: the NSW town of Griffith. The city of around 27,000 people is a hub for agriculture, industry and services, with a major hospital and schools. Its difficulties illustrate how shortages in one sector flow across the community.

Two people walk past on the footpath outside Cafe Beautiful Chinese Restauant in Griffith
Cafe Beautiful in Griffith, New South Wales. (Four Corners: Maddy King)
A boarded up shop with a for sale sign in the window in Griffith
A boarded up shop with a for sale sign in the window in Griffith, New South Wales. (Four Corners: Maddy King)

Local GP Dr Thevashangar Vasuthevan is exhausted. He's embarrassed that his desk is littered with reminders of unfinished work – patients to call, specialists to consult, scripts to write.

"If you see my table, it's one of the messiest tables you'll ever see," he says, gesturing at the pile of notes.

"These are all requests I've got to do. At the end of the day, we stay for an hour and a half. I usually go [home at] 7, 7.30[pm], even though we finish our patients at 5.30, 6[pm]. It's a bit of a hard grind for us."

Dr Thevashangar Vasuthevan sits on the edge of a examination table in is office.
Griffith GP Dr Thevashangar Vasuthevan says he hasn't had a holiday in three years because work is so busy. (Four Corners: Maddy King)

"I have not taken a holiday the last two, three years," Dr Vasuthevan says. "I'm from Sri Lanka, so I have to go back to see mum, who is not well, but I need to find a time when I can go. Sometimes I feel like I am a useless son."

He feels he cannot leave Griffith because the town's need is so acute. The clinic is short three doctors, and the waiting list to see Dr Vasuthevan is six weeks long.

The heavy workload for GPs like Dr Vasuthevan helps explain why the number of medical graduates entering general practice has slumped: from 40 per cent 30 years ago to just 14 per cent now.

"We are busy all these days, not having enough staff, including doctors, nurses, admin staff. We are struggling, really struggling," Dr Vasuthevan says.

Papers, pens and a keyboard scattered on Dr Thevashangar Vasuthevan's desk
Papers litter Dr Thevashangar Vasuthevan's desk in his GP's office in Griffith. (Four Corners: Maddy King)
The entrance to the Griffith Medical Centre.
There is a six-week waiting list to see Dr Vasuthevan.(Four Corners: Maddy King)

The clinic's reception staff spend their days telling patients that there are no available appointments. When Four Corners visited, one 22-year-old receptionist was in tears after being abused by a patient who was angry he couldn't get in to see a doctor.

"It's not uncommon to have one of the girls in here crying," says practice manager Rosie Harriman.

"It's the impact of not having enough GPs on the floor. Definitely, it's just a roll-on effect that affects us all."

Since Four Corners visited the clinic last month, four administrative staff have resigned, citing stress and workload.

The clinic is in the process of hiring a GP from South Africa, but an eight-month visa and accreditation process means that getting help from overseas is a slow process.

There are 319 overseas-trained GPs waiting for their visas to be approved, according to the Department of Home Affairs.

Stephanie Bell sits on a couch knitting a blanket
Stephanie Bell says she doesn't know how much longer she can last in her job.(Four Corners: Maddy King)
Stephanie Bell's hands push material through a sewing machine.
Stephanie Bell sews her own nursing scrubs out of colourful fabrics. (Four Corners: Maddy King)

Stephanie Bell wears the love for her profession on her hand-stitched sleeves: she sews her own nursing tunics out of colourful fabric to brighten the days of her young patients.

But this paediatric nurse isn't sure how much longer she can last in the public hospital system.

"I definitely don't see myself staying at the bedside for more than the next couple of years, if I make it that long," she says.

Stephanie Bell says the current work load at the Griffith hospital is gruelling.

She works at Griffith Base Hospital, which is short 43 staff from its 490-strong complement.

Ms Bell, who is speaking as a representative of the NSW Nurses and Midwives' Association, says the short-staffed wards mean the nurses don't have time to do their jobs properly.

"When you don't have enough staff to do the job, the job doesn't get done," she says.

"So the extra stuff is what's not being done. You might have been in hospital for a couple of days and you're really looking forward to having a shower today, 'sorry, there's no one to shower you'. If you are a dependent patient, you rely on someone to help you eat your breakfast in the morning, 'sorry, there's no one to help you eat your breakfast'."

A sign for the Griffith Base Hospital emergency driveway
Griffith Base Hospital is currently short 43 staff. (Four Corners: Maddy King)

Ms Bell says that's dangerous for patients.

"When you know that you only have a set time to do things, when you're understaffed and you're under the pump, you're rushing through these jobs. And the more you rush, the more likely you are to make a mistake and that's just a fact," she says.

She says her colleagues work extra hours and take on double shifts out of concern for their co-workers and their patients. But it's gruelling and unsustainable.

It's a national problem. Retention of nurses in the profession has reached a crisis point. A report by McKinsey consultants published last month revealed one in five nurses plan to leave their role in the next 12 months.

Nurses surveyed said pay was the biggest factor pushing them out of the profession.

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