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August 21, 2008 at 8:11 PM in reply to: OT: What does it take to get a “green card” in Canada? #259848WickedheartParticipant
I checked it out once and to emmigrate to Canada you have to qualify on their point system. Points are awarded for your education level, fluency in English and French, work experience and age. You also have to have proof of funds if you don’t already have employment in Canada. I remember some other stuff like not being a criminal and more points for having canadian relatives. I think they have a special program for IT people too. I don’t know anything about dual citizenship. I could ask some Canadian friends this weekend.
August 21, 2008 at 8:11 PM in reply to: OT: What does it take to get a “green card” in Canada? #260043WickedheartParticipantI checked it out once and to emmigrate to Canada you have to qualify on their point system. Points are awarded for your education level, fluency in English and French, work experience and age. You also have to have proof of funds if you don’t already have employment in Canada. I remember some other stuff like not being a criminal and more points for having canadian relatives. I think they have a special program for IT people too. I don’t know anything about dual citizenship. I could ask some Canadian friends this weekend.
August 21, 2008 at 8:11 PM in reply to: OT: What does it take to get a “green card” in Canada? #260055WickedheartParticipantI checked it out once and to emmigrate to Canada you have to qualify on their point system. Points are awarded for your education level, fluency in English and French, work experience and age. You also have to have proof of funds if you don’t already have employment in Canada. I remember some other stuff like not being a criminal and more points for having canadian relatives. I think they have a special program for IT people too. I don’t know anything about dual citizenship. I could ask some Canadian friends this weekend.
August 21, 2008 at 8:11 PM in reply to: OT: What does it take to get a “green card” in Canada? #260103WickedheartParticipantI checked it out once and to emmigrate to Canada you have to qualify on their point system. Points are awarded for your education level, fluency in English and French, work experience and age. You also have to have proof of funds if you don’t already have employment in Canada. I remember some other stuff like not being a criminal and more points for having canadian relatives. I think they have a special program for IT people too. I don’t know anything about dual citizenship. I could ask some Canadian friends this weekend.
August 21, 2008 at 8:11 PM in reply to: OT: What does it take to get a “green card” in Canada? #260144WickedheartParticipantI checked it out once and to emmigrate to Canada you have to qualify on their point system. Points are awarded for your education level, fluency in English and French, work experience and age. You also have to have proof of funds if you don’t already have employment in Canada. I remember some other stuff like not being a criminal and more points for having canadian relatives. I think they have a special program for IT people too. I don’t know anything about dual citizenship. I could ask some Canadian friends this weekend.
WickedheartParticipantSD Realtor
Would you mind posting the Actives Pendings for 92123 and 92105?
WickedheartParticipantSD Realtor
Would you mind posting the Actives Pendings for 92123 and 92105?
WickedheartParticipantSD Realtor
Would you mind posting the Actives Pendings for 92123 and 92105?
WickedheartParticipantSD Realtor
Would you mind posting the Actives Pendings for 92123 and 92105?
WickedheartParticipantSD Realtor
Would you mind posting the Actives Pendings for 92123 and 92105?
WickedheartParticipant[quote=EconProf]So let’s see. You’ve got brand new tenants (so no record of regular payments yet), they should have paid this month’s rent over 3 weeks ago, and you are new to the landlording game.
You are sooo underwater. You have already taught this lying tenant you are a pushover. They have now even less incentive to perform than they did on July 5, when you should have served a 3-day notice to pay or quit.
PatientlyWaiting has given you some good points and pitfalls above. Basically, I would go straight to an eviction attorney who does nothing else–they are cheapest and fastest.
I’ve had hundreds of tenants, evicted dozens–some by myself and some with an attorney. You cannot imagine the mines you can step on, especially with professional tenants, which your description tells me you have now.
Also, don’t take any advice from people not experienced in this field. Some posters here think they have to throw out lengthy opinions on every issue.
If you are going to stay a landlord–and maybe its not for you–get some of the many books on the subject and read them thoroughly. [/quote]This is by far the best advice here. My parents had a rental property for over 30 years. My parents had some “professional tenants” once. These people knew how to game the system. It took 8 months and an attorney to be rid of them. And it wasn’t pretty after they left.
WickedheartParticipant[quote=EconProf]So let’s see. You’ve got brand new tenants (so no record of regular payments yet), they should have paid this month’s rent over 3 weeks ago, and you are new to the landlording game.
You are sooo underwater. You have already taught this lying tenant you are a pushover. They have now even less incentive to perform than they did on July 5, when you should have served a 3-day notice to pay or quit.
PatientlyWaiting has given you some good points and pitfalls above. Basically, I would go straight to an eviction attorney who does nothing else–they are cheapest and fastest.
I’ve had hundreds of tenants, evicted dozens–some by myself and some with an attorney. You cannot imagine the mines you can step on, especially with professional tenants, which your description tells me you have now.
Also, don’t take any advice from people not experienced in this field. Some posters here think they have to throw out lengthy opinions on every issue.
If you are going to stay a landlord–and maybe its not for you–get some of the many books on the subject and read them thoroughly. [/quote]This is by far the best advice here. My parents had a rental property for over 30 years. My parents had some “professional tenants” once. These people knew how to game the system. It took 8 months and an attorney to be rid of them. And it wasn’t pretty after they left.
WickedheartParticipant[quote=EconProf]So let’s see. You’ve got brand new tenants (so no record of regular payments yet), they should have paid this month’s rent over 3 weeks ago, and you are new to the landlording game.
You are sooo underwater. You have already taught this lying tenant you are a pushover. They have now even less incentive to perform than they did on July 5, when you should have served a 3-day notice to pay or quit.
PatientlyWaiting has given you some good points and pitfalls above. Basically, I would go straight to an eviction attorney who does nothing else–they are cheapest and fastest.
I’ve had hundreds of tenants, evicted dozens–some by myself and some with an attorney. You cannot imagine the mines you can step on, especially with professional tenants, which your description tells me you have now.
Also, don’t take any advice from people not experienced in this field. Some posters here think they have to throw out lengthy opinions on every issue.
If you are going to stay a landlord–and maybe its not for you–get some of the many books on the subject and read them thoroughly. [/quote]This is by far the best advice here. My parents had a rental property for over 30 years. My parents had some “professional tenants” once. These people knew how to game the system. It took 8 months and an attorney to be rid of them. And it wasn’t pretty after they left.
WickedheartParticipant[quote=EconProf]So let’s see. You’ve got brand new tenants (so no record of regular payments yet), they should have paid this month’s rent over 3 weeks ago, and you are new to the landlording game.
You are sooo underwater. You have already taught this lying tenant you are a pushover. They have now even less incentive to perform than they did on July 5, when you should have served a 3-day notice to pay or quit.
PatientlyWaiting has given you some good points and pitfalls above. Basically, I would go straight to an eviction attorney who does nothing else–they are cheapest and fastest.
I’ve had hundreds of tenants, evicted dozens–some by myself and some with an attorney. You cannot imagine the mines you can step on, especially with professional tenants, which your description tells me you have now.
Also, don’t take any advice from people not experienced in this field. Some posters here think they have to throw out lengthy opinions on every issue.
If you are going to stay a landlord–and maybe its not for you–get some of the many books on the subject and read them thoroughly. [/quote]This is by far the best advice here. My parents had a rental property for over 30 years. My parents had some “professional tenants” once. These people knew how to game the system. It took 8 months and an attorney to be rid of them. And it wasn’t pretty after they left.
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