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-   -   can foreign flight instructors work in canada through working permit visa (https://www.pprune.org/canada/603823-can-foreign-flight-instructors-work-canada-through-working-permit-visa.html)

prof1999 4th Jan 2018 01:29

can foreign flight instructors work in canada through working permit visa
 
Good day good people , please I wanna if a south african trained flight instructor is eligible for work permit in canada .

clunckdriver 4th Jan 2018 12:15

Please, just go to Google or any of the MOT sites , all you need to know is contained in these simple to read data sheets, this way we wont be wasting our time answering the same question and repeating the same information every time we log on, good luck to you in your future.

desiaviator 4th Jan 2018 12:36


Originally Posted by prof1999 (Post 10009747)
Good day good people , please I wanna if a south african trained flight instructor is eligible for work permit in canada .

Please do your research. Go to cic.gc.ca for immigration-related questions.

rigpiggy 6th Jan 2018 17:36

Talk with evas , they have brought over a few. Be forewarned it is a bit of a sh!tshow. 2years as fi, then maybe a 1900 fo

BluSdUp 7th Jan 2018 15:12

prof1999
 
NO!!!!!!!!!!!

Thales Coelho 11th Jan 2018 03:25


Originally Posted by prof1999 (Post 10009747)
Good day good people , please I wanna if a south african trained flight instructor is eligible for work permit in canada .

I understand that if you have enougth education level, english level (not a problem for you) and suficient work experience, than you can apply for Express Entry. Take a look at cic.gc.ca

Or...

You can go the study path. Make a 2yrs College, you will have a part-time work permit while studying and a 3 years full-time work permit (called Post Graduation Work Permit) afther graduating. Than you may apply for your Permanent Residence. That`s what I`m planning to do.

Love PanAm 14th Jan 2018 09:37

Really! just study 2 years and you get a 3 years work permit
Incredible

Ramjet555 15th Jan 2018 20:08

It's a simple question.
Non Canadian Instructors need to know that it will take 15 hours ground and 15 hours air time (or more) before they can do a class 4 Instructor ride. Getting a job right now is relatively easy and all Canadian employers need is a labour market assessment
And advertise the job for 3 months,

You can scroll thru Pilots / Instructors wanted and spot the telltale adverts written for this purpose.

That will give you a list of those employers.

Once with a Class 4 flight schools report months of delay by TC before granting class 3 upgrades after 3 first solos and 3 licence reccomends.

TC management also seek to indirectly and improperly deny Class 3 upgrades to instructors with foreign instructing experience and schools should triple check all such paperwork to minimize expected delays that should not be happening.

It's a lot easier for foreigners to get any other flying job than instructing but it can be done providing you very clearly understand the requirements which become simple enough once you have seen it done once.

The problem is getting it right the first time as you may not get a second kick at the can.

Flex88 14th Feb 2018 01:44

Quebec 4.9 percent (near full employment)
 

Originally Posted by evansb (Post 10013332)
This just in:

2017 Unemployment Percentage Rates by Province

Newfoundland and Labrador 14.7 percent.(Third-world rate, and has always been thus)
Prince Edward Island 9.8 percent.
Nova Scotia 8.0 percent
New Brunswick 7.8 percent.
Quebec 4.9 percent (near full employment)
Ontario 5.5 percent.
Manitoba 5.7 percent.
Saskatchewan 6.4 percent.
Alberta 6.9 percent. (around 5.7 in December)
British Columbia 4.6 percent. (near full employment)
The Territories? (Yukon, Northwest and Nunavut) Population too small to be statistically significant. Who cares anywayze?

Oh, if you think Canada has universal and uniform "free" health care available to all Canadians, it kinda sorta does. Public health care in Canada is administered provincially. Yes, each province (and territories) have varying levels of health care. Aboriginal (native) Canadians, including Metis, (half-breed, one-third breed, one-quarter breed), have a different level of health care than non-aboriginal Canadians. Refugees are also given preferential health care above levels not available to most other Canadians. Citizens below a certain income level and those on social assistance, (welfare), also receive a different level of health care than other Canadians. Presently, Canada's federal health care programme does NOT include pharmaceuticals (changes are coming), dental nor optometry. Your wait times for scans and non-emergency surgery may be weeks, some times months if not 18 months. Some Canadians go to the U.S.A. and even Mexico to expedite the caring of specific health care issues, such as hip joint replacement surgery. Vaccinations of some contagious diseases are NOT mandatory in Canada, so Whooping Cough (pertussis) outbreaks are common. Just saying.

Quebec 4.9 % ??? Of course when most are employed by the government just to produce stats like this.. :D:D

Ramjet555 18th Feb 2018 00:04

Provincial unemployment rates have nothing to do with the question asked.

We can expect to see a continuation of foreigners getting visas to become Canadian Flight Instructors and work in Canada.

What needs to be understood is that Canada is dam near an open door when it comes to Immigration, be it walking across at an unofficial crossing because they are about to be deported from the USA or, pay a fee in a third world country to get a guaranteed job at a Tim Hortons or McDonalds. Those numbers are staggering.
What is disturbing is that many of the illegals entering Canada are squeezed out of the USA at a cost that should be billed to cadet spur bones.


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