NorthIdahoDude
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2022
- Messages
- 324
Happy to share what I know.Thanks for taking the time with a detailed response like that! I haven’t lived in the east kootneys before but every day I check the weather for years and they are always significantly warmer than up here and more sunshine which helps a lot.
I am glad to see that gaining citizenship is hard in the states in a way. Canada you can just show up and get everything handed to you now. Hence why the country is collapsing.
Also seems like the healthcare is manageable if you have health insurance
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The EK definitely gets a lot of sunshine, compared to the surrounding area. Grand Forks does as well.
To be clear, I wasn't talking about citizenship, I was just talking about legal immigration (getting a green card, which is roughly the same thing is getting your permanent resident card in Canada). After living here as a legal resident for about 10 years my wife went ahead and got her citizenship, and that part was pretty easy, fill out some paperwork, wait about 9 months for it to get processed, then go get sworn in, and that was done.
And yes, health insurance is very manageable. Definitely not as big a deal as some people are making it out to be. I mean, it certainly can be a huge deal depending on the situation (ie: if you have to go buy your own on an individual plan), but employer funded health insurance where you can pay a bit extra to get your whole family covered is super common down here, to the point of being pretty much a universal benefit for any professional job. And my wife and I both have non-trivial chronic medical conditions we live with (epilepsy and autoimmune disease, respectively), so I have a ton of in-depth experience in dealing with the system down here (and up there as well). Both systems have their upsides and downsides, but in my view it all roughly comes out in the wash. Medical problems are just a b**** on both sides of the border.