Welcome!I was so relieved to see this thread. I'm a US nurse and I'm just so fed up with where our healthcare system is headed, We decided its time to move on. Explaining it to my friends was easy, some of them said 'stay and fight' others said 'good for you'. But the heat I have gotten from my conservative family is unbelievable. Some of them wont even talk to me, others wont talk to me except to try to convince me that America is perfect and I will regret leaving and that I'm terrible for even trying. Things have just gotten so hard for my wife and I here, I don't feel safe here anymore.
I've finished submitting our APR and now we're in the wait and see phase. I'm rather worried because American employers wont write the detailed employment verification letters that the CIC expects and that's where we're most likely to be rejected. I cant exactly explain to them that I'm immigrating, (I tried that once and they decided to start processing things very slowly and erroneously to prevent me from being able to move).
Does anyone know the likelihood of rejection based off of that? My nursing license through the CNO is being processed as well so hopefully my license comes in at the same time.
On your question employment verification letters, you may want to go with sending your paycheck stub and whatever else you could get from your employers.
Here's what we went through for our employment verification letters:
1) My wife didn't want to let her current boss know, so she went with the route of bypassing them entirely, walking to the main HR office, and asking for it. That worked. She also asked some of her ex-bosses directly (the nice ones), who just typed up a letter for her without making her jump through hoops or going to HR for it.
2) We had issues with my ex-employer (multinational corporation with 49.5K employees for whom I worked for 17 years). My ex-boss didn't want to do anything that could possibly get him in trouble ("Hi, yes he worked here" was apparently too much to ask...), so he sent me to main HR. That was a waste of time. All they provide is an employment verification service for US companies ("The Work Number"), but it's not used for immigration purposes. I just printed what was in "The Work Number" website and sent it along with paycheck stubs. That was accepted.
I guess what I'm getting at is that it probably is not a straightforward process in many cases. So as long as you show an effort and provide some good evidence they will hopefully let it go through.
Good luck with your application!!!