I just find it difficult to believe if you have a masters, that’s all... (assuming it’s not in needlework ) anyway..l I know people get upset when their hopes are dashed but I believe that if you and others here really want to make it to the US you need to look at non-DV options. Personally I’d be more surprised than not if they even announce a draw for DV2019, there’s a lot of pressure to get some sort of deal into law in the next couple of months.
I also have a masters and actually was on an HB-1 (barely got it), but the green card is infinitely harder to get, almost decade in waiting time, complex and very expensive for employers, and the whole situation puts you in a nightmarish limbo that hacks your life away. Only ones it is easy for is rich companies like accounting and software and all that. Let's just say that if all my hypothetical "merit-based" points for America could be used for Canada's system (which actually has one), forget citizenship, I could be applying to be their prime minister by now. People who aren't in the rut don't understand how unfair and absurd and nightmarish America's legal process is. So that's why it really irks me when there is talk about it being/becoming "merit-based," because again the only thing it helps is people in very select few positions.
At this point because of where I live (Bay Area) I know a number of people who got green cards through H, L and O visas, all of which are non-immigrant visas, but there were quite a few people I knew at high school who went into medical fields and all those who wanted to emigrate to the US found it pretty easy to do, whether right after graduation or whether after working at practices or hospitals in our home country for a while. I contacted one yesterday (they all know each other obviously from school) and it seems almost all got employment-based green cards with no need to go through a non-immigrant visa first. I also know a lot - a LOT - of people who emigrated to Australia, Canada and the UK under the various points based systems. The point being that there are many ways to get skilled immigrants in, whether a points system or whether expanding the kind of visa medical employees have found to other fields; I don’t know why people keep focusing on a broken H visa system in the context of skilled immigration when it isn’t even an immigrant visa. Logically (and I concede easily that the current administration is not terribly logical) the point of reforming would be to replace non-skilled immigrant visas with skills-based immigrant visas, not just taking DV and family visas away and then leaving people to rely on the existing deeply flawed H visa system.
Mini good news here
https://www.yahoo.com/news/white-house-immigration-proposal-critics-left-right-210528690.html
It's the first time in a while that I read that Democrats strongly oppose the elimination of the diversity visa lottery. Hope they will not chicken out again. And hope DV program survives until that racist/bigot/chauvinist/put whatever you want here - is removed from the office.
Is there an agreement between South-Africa and the US? Because my brother who works in a medical field,...gave up on his shot at a DV visa when he realized he had to go back to school for 2-3 years plus state exams plus 240k$ of debt (he already spent 8 years studying,...and didn't feel like going back to school and putting himself in debt). Not as easy as it seems in the medical field (unless there are agreements with certain countries or some sorts of special programs I'm unaware of).
Agree. If they say they like it then the optics of giving it up in bargaining work better.. So the lottery visa is something democrats are ready to give away as a consolation prize to Republicans. It's all about politics.
Democrats wants narrow bill that only has Wall and DACA. They want to tackle legal immigration later
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So yes I can see your brother would need to do US exams, not sure why he would need to go back to school for a few years unless your home country qualifications are considered inferior (I’d be surprised if that were the case) or where another $240k of debt would come from though.
Many moroccan-trained doctors work in France and other european countries without any further education,...so my home-country qualifications are definitly not considered inferior, at least in europe. The US' 2-3 years programs are mandatory for all foreign-trained dentists (the exception is Canada, ....I think). And dental-schools in the US are very expensive, around 80k per year. More than worries about foreign qualifications,...these are restrictions imposed by College/association/union of physicians to restrict the access of foreigners in their field (and keep wages high). In France there are restrictions for foreign-trained dentists and specialists,....but not for general practitioners since they have a shortage of doctors in Hospitals' emergency departments and rural clinics. I also heard in the US,...foreign nurses had it easier than doctors because of shortage.
I didn’t think it would be a qualifications issue. My cousin is a dentist, he came over to the US once a year for I think 3 years to write the US exams and then he got a California state license. He had been practicing back in SA while doing all this. He’s had his own practice here for years now. I don’t know if the requirements have changed since then but he didn’t have to attend a US dental school or anything like that.
Must have changed since then.Maybe things have changed,...but this is something we're sure about, since we gathered a lot of information for months when my brother got selected last year (his case number will go current next month,...but he didn't send ds260 and forgot about all the matter). If you got your degree from outside the US and Canada,...you need to enroll into an advanced standing program for foreign-trained dentists. No exception. Your cousin was lucky.
Maybe things have changed,...but this is something we're sure about, since we gathered a lot of information for months when my brother got selected last year (his case number will go current next month,...but he didn't send ds260 and forgot about all the matter). If you got your degree from outside the US and Canada,...you need to enroll into an advanced standing program for foreign-trained dentists. No exception. Your cousin was lucky.
Must have changed since then.
But...
Apparently there is an exception- Minnesota? Restricted at first but at least this way he’s earning salary rather than paying dental school fees?
1. NO ADDITIONAL EDUCATION REQUIRED
The only state that grants a US dental license without additional US training is Minnesota (MN). In 2008, the Minnesota Board of Dentistry developed considerations to enable qualified dentists from Non-Accredited dental schools to apply for Minnesota dental license. The Credentials Committee of the Board meets approximately every six weeks to review submitted materials on a first-come, first-served basis. If accepted, then the candidate can appear for the state clinical licensing exam and eventually the state license. A person licensed under this provision must practice for three years under the supervision of a Minnesota-licensed dentist who may limit the types of services authorized. At the end of the 3 year period, they will be eligible for an unrestricted dental license in Minnesota. Click here for more information.