On the flipside though, in the territories housing, wouldn't be too problematic.Alberta is basically the Texas of Canada for all practical purposes. It has a really strong oil and gas industry and so I have been seeing jobs in that sector. Having said that, a lot of these seem to require more digging than just typical job search sites. They like to hire through contacts and references based on the what I have been finding. Upping my linkedin game has helped a bit. Ontario has a LOT of jobs especially in Pharma and biochem. They require years of experience for the good research positions though. The territories have jobs in the mining sector but there is a limit to how much I am willing to freeze and pay 20 bucks for milk while hanging out with cute polar bears lol
This is totally BS and spreading misinformation… A PNP applicant is nominated based on a bonafide intention to move there, and is not a condition to maintain the permanent residency status.For PNP candidates, saw this in Kubeir's group:
You are required to submit a signed letter to both the province and IRCC during the application process about your intention to reside in the nominated province, that should have some meaning no?This is totally BS and spreading misinformation… A PNP applicant is nominated based on a bonafide intention to move there, and is not a condition to maintain the permanent residency status.
A permanent resident has the right to live, work and pursue a living anywhere in Canada and their rights are fully protected under the Charter of Rights and Freedom. The requirements for Citizenship are clear and does not involve PNP nomination compliance. This guy must’ve done something else that has a material adverse effect on his application.
True. That's how pathetic Canada's job market is in STEM. Canada's STEM job market = IT/compsci jobs in Ontario. One particular profession in one particular province. BC has some IT/compsci jobs too. The rest of STEM (which would probably be about 95% if you deduce IT) will encounter what I mentioned; well except construction, mining, oil & gas, energy fellas.
Now I believe you peeps have enough brain cells to not go "oh I found a job in Canada so Canada has a great job market!".
I agree about rights and all that but I'd rather not leave a PNP province in a week after promising to IRCC inThis is totally BS and spreading misinformation… A PNP applicant is nominated based on a bonafide intention to move there, and is not a condition to maintain the permanent residency status.
A permanent resident has the right to live, work and pursue a living anywhere in Canada and their rights are fully protected under the Charter of Rights and Freedom. The requirements for Citizenship are clear and does not involve PNP nomination compliance. This guy must’ve done something else that has a material adverse effect on his application.
Metro calgary is essential one city and two counties (and a half?). Metro Vancouver is multiple cities including Burnaby, Surrey and what not. Thankfully Calgary Metro has more land and that keeps prices low. Not to mention, by any standard Calgary cann't be a small city. There are 25 odd cities in entire North America with population more than 1 million, needless to say Calgary is one of them.But Vancouver Metro's population is twice the population of Calgary Metro's.
Welcome back brother!I had taken a very long break from this forum to work on my masters and boost my CRS. Safe to say, I’ve successfully achieved that goal. I’ve been a silent spectator on this forum for the past week, but now’s the time to get back in the game. This post sorta lifted my spirits; praying IRCC conducts all program specific draws soon. Wishful thinking I guess.
I am not a lawyer but it will come down to this.Yes, the Charter of Rights and Freedom does protect the mobility of newly minted PRs, but there still has to be some common sense on both the part of said applicant, and IRCC.
Much in the same way that someone who applies for, and gets PR from outside of Quebec, moves to Quebec almost immediately after getting their COPR, is going to raise suspicion, regardless of legality.
As with most things to come from these useless Facebook groups, there is probably a bit of embellishment in that story.
The requirement for citizenship is having a PR, which can be taken away if it’s found that you achieved it through misrepresentation.This is totally BS and spreading misinformation… A PNP applicant is nominated based on a bonafide intention to move there, and is not a condition to maintain the permanent residency status.
A permanent resident has the right to live, work and pursue a living anywhere in Canada and their rights are fully protected under the Charter of Rights and Freedom. The requirements for Citizenship are clear and does not involve PNP nomination compliance. This guy must’ve done something else that has a material adverse effect on his application.
Since it's not a contract , isn't it fine to report to IRCC before moving away from the nominated province giving proofs that the person has lived there for a while and unable to find some good jobs or feels quite uncomfortable to live in that provinceI am not a lawyer but it will come down to this.
Does "Good faith" works in court? If this was a contract or a statuary declaration or a condition on visa it would have made sense. "Good faith" cannot work like that.
There's some sus backstory to this which the OP is hiding.This is totally BS and spreading misinformation… A PNP applicant is nominated based on a bonafide intention to move there, and is not a condition to maintain the permanent residency status.
A permanent resident has the right to live, work and pursue a living anywhere in Canada and their rights are fully protected under the Charter of Rights and Freedom. The requirements for Citizenship are clear and does not involve PNP nomination compliance. This guy must’ve done something else that has a material adverse effect on his application.
Yeah Indian fellas find it hard to find a job in Canada but the topic has nothing to do with one's nationality; I'm talking pure numbers. Canada has a pathetic STEM job market because;The struggle is real for people from outside Canada and US. If someone from the US cannot find a job within 2 months, I'd say the person is dumb. For others, there will be a struggle because they need some time to adapt to the hiring process. For folks in India, they need to drop their personal biography in a resume. My countrymen feel proud putting their blood group, fathers name, mothers name, languages they speak, a declaration with signature, and some worst candidates paste their picture. The one-page resume works here. Many don't know what to put in their cover letter. Simple tip. Put information that's not in your resume. Folks waiting for a PR should start tweaking their resumes if they are not in North American formal instead of applying for jobs now. Now don't ask what's the format. Fking GOOGLE.
Canada has a population of 38.2 m- about 1/10th the US. It still has the same (if not higher especially in terms of healthcare) living standards as the US. End of the day, they are making enough money with a fraction of the same resources as the States. This means they are doing something right. Population to job ratio has to be fine. Every country has its moneymakers- natural resources and tech may be the strongest in Canada.Yeah Indian fellas find it hard to find a job in Canada but the topic has nothing to do with one's nationality; I'm talking pure numbers. Canada has a pathetic STEM job market because;
- The number of currently open jobs is low,
- The frequency new jobs are added is low,
- The variety of jobs is lacking, only a few sectors are lucky,
- Most jobs are not very "skilled", Canada doesn't produce technology in many fields but only consumes,
- Pay is low compared to Sweden, Switzerland, Netherlands etc.,
- There's just a handful of global corporations in Canada, most STEM jobs are at very small startups which don't last,
- Because of the above, the corporate culture isn't strong in Canada, work feels like a school project,
I could go on and on but you get the idea hopefully.