Come on, now.
I figured if you’re willing to part so easily with $5K to an unseen law firm in Hong Kong, or a Nigerian prince…
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Come on, now.
Head in the sand...a220hereicome wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 3:55 pmCome on, now.
I figured if you’re willing to part so easily with $5K to an unseen law firm in Hong Kong, or a Nigerian prince…
altiplano wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 4:01 pmHead in the sand...a220hereicome wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 3:55 pmCome on, now.
I figured if you’re willing to part so easily with $5K to an unseen law firm in Hong Kong, or a Nigerian prince…
People are going to go... tell your management pals to get their chequebook ready.
Good to know. I was told I don't have enough aviation experience for the NIW. What type of experience do you have?FL320 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 12:55 pmFor your information I am in the process with a lawyer; for the new NIW that is applicable to pilots. At the moment it takes up to 18 months to complete the entire process (including a medical exam) then you get the green card. No need a job offer but a FAA ATP and extensive flying experience on jets. My lawyer got about 3000 applications/requests from Canadian pilots but they have selected about 220 pilots with the appropriate experience to pursue the application.a220hereicome wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 6:20 pmAnd that is simply not the case with airlines in the US. Same rumours in the 90s during the big hiring boom. And nothing happened.
Medical professions, yes.
There are no floodgates that have been opened, which is why I don’t expect any ‘snowball’ effect. The percentage of pilots at AC who have dual citizenship, or some other family connection to the US, is probably less than 1%.
ATP (FAA,TC,EASA) with type ratings and PIC hours on B737NG/A330/A321. The pre-covid salary is also taken in consideration for the NIW: the lawyer said it’s limit okAsh Ketchum wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 5:21 amGood to know. I was told I don't have enough aviation experience for the NIW. What type of experience do you have?FL320 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 12:55 pmFor your information I am in the process with a lawyer; for the new NIW that is applicable to pilots. At the moment it takes up to 18 months to complete the entire process (including a medical exam) then you get the green card. No need a job offer but a FAA ATP and extensive flying experience on jets. My lawyer got about 3000 applications/requests from Canadian pilots but they have selected about 220 pilots with the appropriate experience to pursue the application.a220hereicome wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 6:20 pm
And that is simply not the case with airlines in the US. Same rumours in the 90s during the big hiring boom. And nothing happened.
Medical professions, yes.
There are no floodgates that have been opened, which is why I don’t expect any ‘snowball’ effect. The percentage of pilots at AC who have dual citizenship, or some other family connection to the US, is probably less than 1%.
Thanks for that explanation. Makes sense now, although it begs the question, does Australian airline industry have such an excess of airline pilots that they are ok with losing them to the US?Cavalier44 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 12:22 pmThe Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement (AUSFTA) contains a clause that allows US airlines to offer EB-3 visas to Australians. The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) which replaced NAFTA in 2020 does not contain any such clause to allow Canadians to be sponsored by US airlines for an EB-3 visa. Obviously, this has nothing to do with the competency of Australian pilots vis-à-vis Canadian pilots, rather it is a product of bilateral agreements between those two nations.
The Canadian government has no impetus to push for such a clause, in part because airline lobby groups like the Air Transport Association of Canada (ATAC) are spending millions of dollars to influence our elected officials and regulatory bodies. They are keenly aware that opening up the border and allowing Canadian pilots to seek employment in the United States would decimate the Canadian aviation industry overnight by depriving them of their pool of cheap labour.
Wow very impressive. I wish you the best of luck with your application. I was trying to get the EB-2 NIW process going as a regional captain but was told I needed more experience (and higher pay). My plan was to try and get into a US regional as an FO and hopefully flow through to a major US airline in a few years time.FL320 wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 8:16 amATP (FAA,TC,EASA) with type ratings and PIC hours on B737NG/A330/A321. The pre-covid salary is also taken in consideration for the NIW: the lawyer said it’s limit okAsh Ketchum wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 5:21 amGood to know. I was told I don't have enough aviation experience for the NIW. What type of experience do you have?FL320 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 12:55 pm
For your information I am in the process with a lawyer; for the new NIW that is applicable to pilots. At the moment it takes up to 18 months to complete the entire process (including a medical exam) then you get the green card. No need a job offer but a FAA ATP and extensive flying experience on jets. My lawyer got about 3000 applications/requests from Canadian pilots but they have selected about 220 pilots with the appropriate experience to pursue the application.![]()
What is going to drive up wages is removing concessionary trained acpa reps from the association.a220hereicome wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 4:08 pmaltiplano wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 4:01 pmHead in the sand...a220hereicome wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 3:55 pm
Come on, now.
I figured if you’re willing to part so easily with $5K to an unseen law firm in Hong Kong, or a Nigerian prince…
People are going to go... tell your management pals to get their chequebook ready.Too funny.
How about we park this, and you report back in a year and tell us about how the floodgates opened and the mass exodus that followed. Or not.
As far as head in the sand..."chequebook?" This exodus you foresee, you think this is going to drive up pilot wages at AC? Wow.
MontrealCanucks wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 7:45 pmWhat is going to drive up wages is removing concessionary trained acpa reps from the association.a220hereicome wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 4:08 pmToo funny.
How about we park this, and you report back in a year and tell us about how the floodgates opened and the mass exodus that followed. Or not.
As far as head in the sand..."chequebook?" This exodus you foresee, you think this is going to drive up pilot wages at AC? Wow.
This endless, negative, defeated rhetoric shouldn't be anywhere near a leadership table of a elementary school student council let alone a professional association
You're not picking up what I'm laying down.MontrealCanucks wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 7:45 pm
What is going to drive up wages is removing concessionary trained acpa reps from the association.
This endless, negative, defeated rhetoric shouldn't be anywhere near a leadership table of a elementary school student council let alone a professional association
You have done a good job picking up what the company is laying down and crapping it all over the pilot group.a220hereicome wrote: ↑Sat Mar 05, 2022 9:37 amYou're not picking up what I'm laying down.MontrealCanucks wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 7:45 pm
What is going to drive up wages is removing concessionary trained acpa reps from the association.
This endless, negative, defeated rhetoric shouldn't be anywhere near a leadership table of a elementary school student council let alone a professional association
If you want to try and go work in the US, best of luck to you. I'm saying that most who shell out the $5000, $10,000 or $20,000 US for this process will never see that money again. The lawyers will gladly take your money, but their success rate so far is essentially zero. Ask them that very pointed question! And there has been no legislation passed in the US to change that success rate. Even the letter from that Hong Kong firm posted elsewhere on this forum speaks only of rumours. And you're going to hand over 5 large to a HK law firm based on that?
If a handful of AC pilots do quit and go to the US (those with family connections), this will have no effect on Air Canada's ability to crew the airline. Which will have no effect on wages. "Tell management to get out their chequebook, or I'm gonna marry me an American bride and leave!" Give me a break. That's not how we're going to achieve higher wages.
That's not concessionary thinking, that's a reality check for those of you who think that the floodgates to the US are about to open because they are desperate for Canadian pilots south of the border.![]()
I always find it sad when I hear about people in India or Bangladesh being swindled out of their money by bogus immigration schemes to Canada. I think, how could they believe such a story?
This bill you mention, maybe you should read it?aeronauticaldisaster wrote: ↑Sat Mar 05, 2022 2:55 pm
But from 2020, there was a substantial change in the scenario: there was a Bill in October 2020 entered in Congress "for the purpose of supporting and promoting civil and military aviation and aerospace in order to address the demands and challenges associated with ensuring a safe and vibrant national aviation system.", highlighting the national interest in resolving the upcoming shortage
totally agree, the government is probably keeping us hereelite wrote: ↑Mon Mar 07, 2022 9:33 am I wonder about the Canadian federal government’s role in this. Although, the U.S may be in favour of it, they still have a work out a bilateral agreement. And the Canadian federal government is always lobbied, especially by AC, against such measures that put more strain on their cost, especially after changing duty rules just recently.
I think you’re really grasping at straws here.dumpsterfire wrote: ↑Sun Mar 06, 2022 6:43 pm I think the point is that they have formally established that there is a shortage of pilots in the US.
The Dhanasa case established the framework for immigrating through the National Interest Waiver
I'm watching.rudder wrote: ↑Wed Mar 09, 2022 9:04 am Major US airlines are including in their quarterly SEC filings that pilot supply chain issues are and will continue to negatively impact schedule integrity and growth. They are planting the seeds.
My guess is that the US will start by pressing ICAO for an Age 67 limit. Beyond that, they will press to increase the pilot supply chain by creating a facility within the US immigration system for either temporary or permanent resident rights for qualified pilots (either with or without an accompanying offer of employment).
Just watch.