Hi, My NOC 3113 - Dentists, and my CRS score 377 . my spouse brother living in Alberta . application submitted on 30th October 2019 . My EE profile was submitted on 28th October
> NOC is in-demand 3113 - Dentists in Alberta
> The AINP is assessing applications received before November 12, 2019.
> CRS score 377
What are my chances to receive NOI? and what exactly is meant by "AINP is assessing applications received before November 12, 2019" ?
Who is principal applicant? I think your spouse’s brother will only count if your spouse is the applicant.
The "AINP is assessing applications received before November 12, 2019" statement refers to the Opportunity Stream. This is paper-based at provincial and federal stages (i.e. NOT aligned to Express Entry). It also requires a valid job offer in Alberta. Presumably you don’t have this?
The NOC and ties to Alberta are most important in Express Entry for receiving NOI under AEES. No one really knows how they judge in demand, though there’s some ways to guess (like Alis, where 3113 is indeed in demand). Being inland with current job, job offer +/- education have been most important lately. In the past, outland applicants without ties have also been successful.
There’s no advantage to having a higher CRS under AINP. So you could look at: (1) if it would be worthwhile doing any postgraduate education in dentistry or subspecialties in Alberta, (2) if you could get a job offer (which would either need to be with LMIA or to do a dental residency in Canada), (3) if your spouse should be the principal applicant (you can each have an EE profile anyway). Please note that (1) and (2) may well not be possible or financially worthwhile.
It’s actually very involved to get a job as a health care professional in Canada, particularly in independent practice. There are no guarantees. Even if successful, you would need to repeat time under supervised practice to demonstrate meet Canadian standards, so basically need some local dentists or training centre to support you (it’s quite nepotistic). You might not be able to get a job and your quality of life might be worse in Canada. Plus pretty much all dentistry and oral surgery have been shut down during pandemic too. See posts about this here:
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/dentist.681898/. There are probably other relevant discussions you could find from searching the forums too.