National Border Surveillance and Hitchhiker Surveillance Program
Who we are
The Biosecurity Plant and Science Services Division (BPSSD) safeguards Australia’s plant health status to achieve, maintain and expand overseas markets while protecting the economy and environment. The division includes four branches which together focus on providing scientific analysis and technical advice, facilitating the safe importation of plants and plant products, improving systems, market access, capacity building and stakeholder engagement. The division provides diagnostics, with advice on biosecurity risk and measures, and biosecurity training. The division conducts surveillance and response at first points of entry and approved arrangements sites nationally and delivers plant, animal and aquatic health surveillance in northern Australia. The division works closely with communities and Indigenous rangers and regulates biosecurity risk in the Torres Strait.
Science and Surveillance Group (SSG) is comprised of scientists, operations and support staff responsible for regulatory advice and training, technical input to biosecurity policy, regulation activity in the Torres Strait and diverse surveillance and diagnostic services around Australia, including animal and plant health surveillance measures under the Northern Australia Quarantine Strategy.
Within Operational Science and Surveillance are the National Border Surveillance (NBS) Program and the Hitchhiker Surveillance Program (HSP). The NBS program conducts surveillance in the vicinity of international ports and import facilities, with the primary objective being the early detection of pests that have escaped biosecurity control before they reach production areas or establish in the natural environment. The NBS program began operations in late 2016 is now one of the department’s largest plant pest surveillance programs. The HSP is a key component of national biosecurity surveillance with a focus on improving the capability of early detection of high priority exotic hitchhiker pests at locations which receive high- risk imported goods and conveyances. The principal objective of the HSP is to investigate new and improved approaches that could be adopted to enhance the department’s surveillance capability for early detection of exotic hitchhiker pests. HSP activities include trialling emerging surveillance technologies for improving the efficacy and efficiency of hitchhiker pest detections.
The Job
The duties will include but not limited to the following:
For the HSP role you will also:
Please note that this recruitment process will be used to fill two existing ongoing vacancies. One vacancy is in the National Border Surveillance Program and one vacancy is in the Hitchhiker Surveillance Program both in Sydney.
What we are looking for
Knowledge and experience
The successful applicants will have:
Mandatory qualifications
The successful applicant must:
Monthly based
Sydney, Council of the City of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Sydney, Council of the City of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia