Quick Canadian ?
Moria
78 Posts
Sorry, didn’t mean the subject line literally, as in a “quick Canadian”, I have a “question” regarding hiring of a Canadian and need a quick answer. We are contemplating the employment of a Canadian Development Officer, what problems would I have in getting him status to work in the US. We are an education/research facility. Or do I leave that up to the candidate, that they would have to have status to work in the US prior to consideration for employment. Help me, please!
Comments
Long story short, the employer will have to sponsor the immigrant, which means paying up to 6-8K dollars over the long haul for total green card process. No, immigrants do not get themselves certified and then shop their immigration visa around trying to get hired.
The whole process is designed to have you prove there are no available, qualified domestic (USA) candidates and you must import one to do your job. Beware anyone who tells you they have Canadians who they can get visa certified for a few hundred bucks if you'll hire them. Simply, they are liars.
I have been through this process before with medical doctors, who are foriegn grads and placing them in medically under served areas with J-1 visas. And always used an attorney. This would be quite different if I would have to prove that the position could not be filled by a US citizen.
So maybe I shouldn't waste more time. Any other thoughts?
I've gotten many responses from Canadians who seem to have the same PO Box or an attorney in the Southwest who shops them around promising the moon. He is indeed a space cadet; beware those.
I've also gotten lots of resumes from California safe-houses who shop the resumes of hundreds of Indian and Eastern engineers with tons of elaborate credentials. All of these schemes are merely shopping for an employer anxious to spend 6-8K to sponsor somebody.
Bottom line is that I doubt seriously that you can establish that you cannot locate a US citizen with knowledge of 'Southwestern Archaelogy and native cultures' and would wonder how, in the first place, a Canadian would have acquired this sort of expertise, if not in a classroom.
Tammy
[email]tcolson@oldcastleglass.com[/email]