English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

My name is Christian Jordan, I´m a 40 year old male, I´m a psychologist with a master deegre in Human Resources but I´m willing to work in blue collar jobs; I did it before so I have no problem with that, on the contrary. I´m already working on my papers to immigrate to Canada. I´m from Bolivia. I speak Spanish and English. I really appreciate any information that I receive to cjpoem@yahoo.com Thanks.

2006-07-20 14:59:07 · 3 answers · asked by Christian 1 in Business & Finance Other - Business & Finance

3 answers

hi christian, moving to canada does not mean you only can do a blue collar job. go for the internet business which requires less of your time and the one that will not make you feel headache with web designing, or which require IT knowledge. Second, choose the internet based company which offer you the opportunity and at the same time giving you the convenience to start the business. Third, choose the business, which does not require big money to start it.

All the above is only available from: http://www.website.ws/domainie
Honestly, I tried so many opportunities offered through the internet and this is the only one that really works.
PLEASE NOTE: You only will understand the whole marketing concept if you read every details & the trial period is FREE!

General Information:
COMPANY NAME: Global Domains International Inc
LOCATION: CA, USA
CORPORATE INFORMATION : Login here: http://www.freedom.ws (YOUR ACCESS CODE IS: domainie )

Remember, You CAN'T guarantee whether you will get many fish or not by spreading your net into the sea, but u CAN guarantee that there is no fish at all if you never spread your net into the sea.

2006-07-23 01:09:27 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Hi Christian,
I just moved to Canada a year and a half ago. Being 40 is the midpoint for moving to Canada. Over 40 and your age starts to count against you. They do have a point system and that is one of the variables.

Having a master's degree is a big plus and will probably give you enough points to get in right there. When I checked I think the points necessary for consideration had to be above 75. Of course the are many considerations like marital status and if you have children. I think Canada is still looking for as many as 250,000 immigrants per year and haven't really reached that goal as yet. I'm not sure if being from Bolivia is a plus or a minus though.

The fees (i.e. landing fee, personal possessions tax, etc.) can add up to around $2,500USD to $3,000USD depending on your particular situation. If you're filling out paperwork you probably know this already. If you haven't got one yet I suggest you check with an immigration lawyer (do an online search) from Canada (that's what I did) and find out if you have enough points and what it might cost at the bottom line

Also, it is much easier to get this all accomplished if you have a job when you get here (otherwise you will probably have to have a cashier's check for SIX MONTHS worth of living expenses when you cross the border). I would check Canada's Job Bank and see if there are HR jobs available and if you can get one before you move. IT REALLY HELPS!

Another note: don't believe any crap about the taxes being higher here. They're about 3% higher in general and you get free medical care! I'm also tired of people telling me how cold it must be up here- it's not. I'm in New Brunswick and it's warmer than the New Hampshire weather I moved from. :)

Best of luck and I hope to see you up here sometime!
Scott

2006-07-20 22:25:27 · answer #2 · answered by Form 3 · 0 0

no, sorry.

2006-07-20 22:02:04 · answer #3 · answered by Anry 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers