A way to permanent residence in USA for people who are told there are no way.
#46

An employer has to pay only for the labor certification cost, usually its not for few positions its for 50 or hundreds of positions on several locations. There is a shortage of people willing to work for these kind of jobs. I'm not doing the rules for the labor certfication maybe they're recruiting standard are too low but its another subject. but it seems that they get approvals by the department of labor so...
I don't know why this thread was moved out of the immigration forum by the way, since it's about immigration.
I don't know why this thread was moved out of the immigration forum by the way, since it's about immigration.
Last edited by Jerseygirl; Sep 18th 2020 at 10:46 pm.
#47

Do you not think that this situation is allowed to exist precisely because the administration has demonised immigrant workers from Mexico southwards and is instead trying to encourage nice white Europeans to do the crappy jobs that Americans don't want?
#48
Account Closed
Joined: Mar 2004
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This is nothing new and I can think of worse abuses,H1b comes to mind.
#49
Forum Regular



Joined: May 2018
Posts: 233












[QUOTE=Pulaski;12911746]But then there are the costs of being a homeowner that nobody in the UK would ever consider - such as the perpetual cycle of replacing roofs, and heating/ AC systems, and the fact that "things" always seem to need repair or replacement in American homes. As I have posted from time to time, my US home isn't just a home, it's a hobby too! It might sound like a joke, but anyone who has owned a home in the US knows that the joke very quickly wears thin.
[/QUOT
You've obviously never been involved in the UK building industry.

You've obviously never been involved in the UK building industry.
#50

I know what my parents needed to do keep their home repaired and maintained, and what broke/ wore out and needed to be replaced; also my own home in the UK. ..... It wasn't much compared to what I spend and the time I take on maintaining and repairing my home in the US.
#51
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#52

I agree. We have owned houses for 15 years in the UK and 13 years in the USA. I kept a detailed account of the money spent maintaining our house in Louisiana and over the 13 years we spent about 4%/year of the value of the house, which sounds a lot but in that time frame we had to replace the HVAC system including gas furnace, the main roof, the flat roof, termite repairs and remediation and on and on...
#54
#55

I don’t really agree with all the talk of no social net here. Assuming your are educated and have a well paid job, you bank the significant tax savings and worst case there is state UI, COBRA, and other things like ACA. If it was a bad here as posters make out why are there here and why are Americans not trying to get to Canada/UK/EU... the reality is both have pros and cons and with some smarts my judgment was I would make out better here and to date I have.
The UK has a lot of poverty issues and a poor health system.
The EU is certainly attractive, but there is of course the language barrier for the countries worth moving to.
#56
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Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 5,786












You obviously have not seen the cost of housing in Western Canada. BC is very expensive compare to most of the US.
The UK has a lot of poverty issues and a poor health system.
The EU is certainly attractive, but there is of course the language barrier for the countries worth moving to.
The UK has a lot of poverty issues and a poor health system.
The EU is certainly attractive, but there is of course the language barrier for the countries worth moving to.
#57

The larger cities in the US are known to have high property taxes, as well as California, Texas, and the high population density swath of the US from DC to Boston, but for much of the US property taxes are not necessarily onerous.
Last edited by Pulaski; Sep 23rd 2020 at 3:31 pm.
#58
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Joined: Feb 2013
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Those are sweeping generalizations that are not generally true. When we moved here in 2013, my property tax bill in NC on a detached 4/5 bed home was lower than my council tax bill on a 750sqft 2-bed terraced home in Wimbledon, and has about kept place with inflation since then.
The larger cities in the US are known to have high property taxes, as well as California, Texas, and the high population density swath of the US from DC to Boston, but for much of the US property taxes are not necessarily onerous.
The larger cities in the US are known to have high property taxes, as well as California, Texas, and the high population density swath of the US from DC to Boston, but for much of the US property taxes are not necessarily onerous.
Last edited by Moses2013; Sep 23rd 2020 at 3:46 pm.
#59
DE-UK-NZ-IE-US... the TYP







Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 2,662












that said they may be some corner cases e.g. if you retire and don’t need good schools and have minimal income where you can actually live somewhere virtually tax free and subsidized by others. Even the services provided for by the local tax authorities vary, in NYC I paid $400 a year in property tax thanks to a 25 year 421a and had my garbage collected, out in CT I pay more than that every month and have to pay $10 a week to have my trash collected and taken to the transfer station (else I would have to take my own there, and still need a $20 a year sticker to access it).
#60
DE-UK-NZ-IE-US... the TYP







Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 2,662












Those are sweeping generalizations that are not generally true. When we moved here in 2013, my property tax bill in NC on a detached 4/5 bed home was lower than my council tax bill on a 750sqft 2-bed terraced home in Wimbledon, and has about kept place with inflation since then.
The larger cities in the US are known to have high property taxes, as well as California, Texas, and the high population density swath of the US from DC to Boston, but for much of the US property taxes are not necessarily onerous.
The larger cities in the US are known to have high property taxes, as well as California, Texas, and the high population density swath of the US from DC to Boston, but for much of the US property taxes are not necessarily onerous.