Nanami said:
So here's my situation. I'm currently in Canada and I would like to work here. I'm staying with my girlfriend and I have a temporary resident visa. Can someone please give me any advice? I'm trying to sign up to take the CELPIP test but in the registration survey it asks me "What sector do you work in?' and "What is your normal role at work?" Since I'm not currently working, I'm not sure what to pick... my last recent employment was Pizza Hut. I graduated from High school in the year of 2006 and I have a certificate for Veterinary assistant but no experience. I live in a small town and I applied many many times for vet assistant the closest I got was Volunteer work at the animal shelter and all I did was clean cats at Petco. I moved to Phoenix AZ for 6 months worked there as an event specialist at Sams club in 2012 and I tried to look for vet assistant work and no luck. I;m stressing out because of my work history, I don't think it'll be good enough to qualify to work here or live here with my gf. Please can someone give me some advice to what I should do... or could do.. I desperately need your guidance.
Thank you so much for your time, in advance.
B.
If you are from the US, why do you have a TRV? You wouldn't need a visa to come to Canada for up to 6 months. As for the rest, look at this: http://www5.hrsdc.gc.ca/NOC/English/NOC/2011/ProfileQuickSearch.aspx?val=3&val1=3213
If your education and duties are as described, then your job falls in NOC B, which is eligible for Express Entry. Your biggest problems are your lack of experience in the job you were trained for, and your lack of a job in Canada. If there is a lack of trained veterinary assistants/technicians in the area where your girlfriend lives, you should try to find a job, and convince them to apply for an LMIA for you. That would be your best route to a work visa.
Another option is to find a job in the US and convince your girlfriend to come live with you there for a year, perhaps on a student visa. You would be building experience in your field, and a year living together would qualify you as a common-law spouse for immigration to Canada.
But, generally, the thing is not to say, "I can't find a job," but to be absolutely determined to find one, and to make your plans work.
I came to Canada in late 2012, with my European common-law spouse, who is a graduate student here. I was given an open work permit, and I had decided before we came to become a literary agent. I am from the US, my degree is in opera performance (music), and my experience was as an ESL teacher and journalist in Europe, so this was a career switch. I must have sent out thousands of resumes and had dozens of interviews before, after 14 terrifying months, I landed a job as a literary agent here. When I realized later that there are only maybe 25-30 such jobs in all of Toronto (I'm originally from NYC, where there are a lot more!), I realized how absolutely crazy my dream was. But I was determined to make it work, and, with a lot of hard work and some good luck, it did. If you feel strongly about being with your girlfriend and living in Canada, you need to find the same kind of determination and willingness to work at it until you find a way.
Good luck!