Hi all
I am trying to plan ahead and calculate my potential points. Come September i will have 1 year of Canadian work experience with one employer in at NOC level B.
To the best of my knowledge and from i should be able to gain extra points if my employer will give me a job offer that matches this criteria ; A valid job offer has to be:
if you have a valid work permit for a NOC 0, A or B job that is exempt from needing an LMIA, and you:
So far so good and fairly easy to understand. I have a work permit IEC from the UK which i believe is exempt from a LIMA.
If you check this page: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/immigrate-canada/express-entry/become-candidate/eligibility/offer-employment/lmia-exempt.html
It states:
For Express Entry, your employer doesn’t need an LMIA if you:
Jobs exempt from the LMIA
You may be exempt from needing an LMIA for Express Entry if your current temporary job is LMIA-exempt, states a specific employer or employers (for skilled trade jobs, up to two employers can make a job offer), and is:
However this section: throws some doubt on that (https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/immigrate-canada/express-entry/become-candidate/eligibility/offer-employment.html)
Jobs exempt from needing an LMIA
There are only two reasons the employer making you the offer doesn’t need to get a new LMIA:
Please could someone confirm to me that my understanding is correct, i have seen some posts which indicate the IEC is not LIMA exempt- are i can't understand why given the information i have shared. Thanks for any help and light you can shed on the matter.
PS sorry for the long post
I am trying to plan ahead and calculate my potential points. Come September i will have 1 year of Canadian work experience with one employer in at NOC level B.
To the best of my knowledge and from i should be able to gain extra points if my employer will give me a job offer that matches this criteria ; A valid job offer has to be:
- made by one employer
- continuous
- paid
- full-time (at least 30 hours a week)
- for at least one year after we issue your permanent resident visa
- not seasonal
- not on a contract basis
- in a job that is NOC:
- Skill Type 0 or
- Skill Levels A or B
if you have a valid work permit for a NOC 0, A or B job that is exempt from needing an LMIA, and you:
- are currently working for an employer specified on the work permit
- have one year of full-time work experience (or an equal amount of part-time work) for that employer
- have a valid job offer from that employer for at least one year after we issue your permanent resident visa
So far so good and fairly easy to understand. I have a work permit IEC from the UK which i believe is exempt from a LIMA.
If you check this page: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/immigrate-canada/express-entry/become-candidate/eligibility/offer-employment/lmia-exempt.html
It states:
For Express Entry, your employer doesn’t need an LMIA if you:
- have been working full-time for the employer on your work permit for at least one year (or an equal amount of part-time work) -
- have a valid job offer, and
- have a valid work permit that is exempt from an LMIA under
- an international agreement
- a federal-provincial agreement or
- the “Canadian interests” category- it would be this category that i believe an IEC would fall under.
Jobs exempt from the LMIA
You may be exempt from needing an LMIA for Express Entry if your current temporary job is LMIA-exempt, states a specific employer or employers (for skilled trade jobs, up to two employers can make a job offer), and is:
- covered by an international agreement like NAFTA or GATS, and non-trade agreements. This can include professionals, traders and investors.
- covered by an agreement between Canada and a province or territory. This includes “significant investment” projects.
- exempt for “Canadian interests” reasons:
- “significant benefit” – if your employer can prove you will bring an important social, cultural, and/or economic benefit to Canada. This can include:
- general: Self-employed engineers, technical workers, creative and performing artists, etc.
- workers transferred within a company (intra-company transferees with specialized knowledge) – only those that will benefit Canada with their skills and experience
- workers under Mobilité francophone
- reciprocal employment – lets foreign workers get jobs in Canada when Canadians have similar opportunities in other countries
- general (such as professional coaches and athletes working for Canadian teams)
- International Experience Canada – a work abroad program for youth and young professionals
- people in exchange programs like professors and visiting lecturers
- designated by the Minister
- academics, including researchers, guest lecturers and visiting professors (sponsored through a recognized federal program)
- competitiveness and public policy
- medical residents and fellows
- post-doctoral fellows and people who have won academic awards from Canadian schools
- Charity and religious work (not including volunteers)
- “significant benefit” – if your employer can prove you will bring an important social, cultural, and/or economic benefit to Canada. This can include:
However this section: throws some doubt on that (https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/immigrate-canada/express-entry/become-candidate/eligibility/offer-employment.html)
Jobs exempt from needing an LMIA
There are only two reasons the employer making you the offer doesn’t need to get a new LMIA:
- if you’re already working for them with a work permit based on that LMIA
- if you work in a job that doesn’t need an LMIA
Please could someone confirm to me that my understanding is correct, i have seen some posts which indicate the IEC is not LIMA exempt- are i can't understand why given the information i have shared. Thanks for any help and light you can shed on the matter.
PS sorry for the long post