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Paul1Perth

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Everything posted by Paul1Perth

  1. $1.2m for a two bedroom flat:eek:
  2. I heard the guy from AHPRA say that there are bridging courses that are available and acceptable for someone wanting to get registered here. Would be an awful lot cheaper and less hassle than moving back to the UK for a while. If the courses are recommended and designed by AHPRA I would think that they would have a hard time turning down registration if you went that route.
  3. Last few days there has been a lot of discussion on the radio following St John's revelation that they are shipping in a lot of Irish nurses, some of which might be stuck in the registration quagmire. I heard a guy from AHPRA being grilled last night, trying to justify the changes. I think all this has happened without the government minister for Health knowing much about it and he sounded pretty embarrassed when he was on a few days ago. He says they are going to sort it out and get AHPRA moving. Would be nice to think he's true to his word. Good sign that it's getting a bit of air time though.
  4. But wherever he chooses ain't going to be Sydney with everything it's got going for it. He must have wanted to move away from London for some reason.
  5. Mate, what are you after? $700 a day should be fine for a great lifestyle in Sydney. Just because you've been used to creaming it in London in the rat race, relax a bit and be prepared to take a bit less.
  6. If you choose to follow twitterers advice rather than applying mate go for it. From your wifes quals and experience I would be looking at applying for a permanent residency visa. Don't even bother with the holiday one. There are people on twitter, facebook and all those social media sites that would argue black is white if they thought it was going to wind someone up. That's a lot of people's idea of fun these days.
  7. You're most likely right with the age thing davlap. I know interviewers and employers are not supposed to choose based on things like age etc. but in the real world they do. They might be able to get a younger person, with more up to date skills at a lot cheaper price than a 50 year old with experience would expect. It's tough to take I know and I hope the job pans out for you.
  8. Ocean Beach in Denmark is one of my favourite beaches. Great to learn to surf, waves break out a long way and don't dump like the beaches round Perth. You can have a long ride with sand underneath you once you learn to get up. Might be a bit big surf for small kids but you have to be careful with young kids and water wherever you go in Aus. Winters are a lot cooler and wetter than Perth but might be on a par or even better than Melbourne. I like both places for a couple of weeks get away but don't know whether I would choose to live there. I prefer being near Perth and Freo and still be near a really nice beach.
  9. Sorry to hear about your lad davlap. Tough times with kids that age. Don't take it personal that he blames you for everything that is going wrong for him, a lot of teenagers do that. Hopefully he will grow up a bit in the next few years and he'll come round. Panel beating is a good job to have, better money in that than baking and better hours. As long as he sticks at it he should be fine. Good luck.
  10. Didn't your wife like Sydney davlap? I would much prefer living there than Melbourne.
  11. It's a developed country ironman and if you have proof of what you are saying you stand a very good chance of compensation. If it's just a hunch though you might be totally wrong. Usually it's so hard to find out why you didn't get the position. I was out of work 5 months when we first came, no explanations from anyone why I wasn't getting the job. You just have to keep trying.
  12. I think the "local experience" argument is a bit overplayed. There are jobs where local experience can be important but the bigger companies with technical jobs tend to have the same selection criteria that you would find in the U.K. might even turn out that it's an expat that's interviewing you and it could be an advantage. Certainly happened to me. I went for an interview and the interviewer had been to the same place as me for an interview when we left uni. Turned out we had both been interviewed at a software company in London. Gave us something in common and I got the job. Judging by your quals and experience I think you will be fine. Good luck.
  13. There's only one way I'd work in Karratha and that's if it was a well paid FIFO position where I could get back to Perth for some R&R. TerryDXB summed it up very well. I didn't like Birmingham when I was at Uni there but I prefer it to Karratha.
  14. Sounds like a good idea to go for a WHV in your situation Dave. You sound like you've got some good skills under your belt, wouldn't call it experience yet till you've had a job for a while. If you have family in Bris and you could stay with them for a while you could have a bit of time to look round and then look for jobs. You might even get someone to sponsor you if you want to take the emigration thing further.
  15. I would guess you may be right about the ethnicity. It's obvious your first language is not English by your writing and there is usually a fair amount of writing to do in an IT job, some of it technical. If you can't write good English that would be a drawback. It is an English speaking mainly Caucasian country after all. If I were to re-locate to India or Africa I might have the same problem finding a job there. Looks like you've managed to get contracts to see you through a couple of years so hopefully something will come up. Things are still a bit quite after Christmas.
  16. A friend of mine at work has just resigned from our company for the second time. He lives in Canberra and Defence have had a freeze on recruitment for a long time. They have quite a few IT projects and have tried putting their own personnel in charge thinking it would save money. They must have realised that it's costing twice as much as the guys in charge might be good at running a squadron of pilots or something but they now very little about IT and dealing with sub-contractors. My friend tells me they have finally bit the bullet and started setting people on contract. He's got one paying $90 an hour for a year, probably be renewed after that. Too good to turn down. Forgot to mention, the first time he resigned was to take up a contract with Dept of Defence in Canberra and work were so desperate to get him back they said to let them know when that contract stopped, which it did about 6 months ago.
  17. I think you are right when you say people that struggle to find work in IT have little to no experience. I suppose there are a few around who have been unlucky but with your experience I don't think you would have a problem for long. I don't know who to contact but NBN co. might be interested in seeing your resume. Good luck.
  18. The guy in question was after So min 5 years experience, with good quals, most people would be doing that stuff after a degree and then wants people to be impressive in front of clients. Those types would be in demand and I reckon min $120k. Different if you're looking for a new graduate to train up or someone to sit behind a desk and write code. Quite a few of those around. A lot of them you wouldn't let near a customer though. They would be maybe $80-$100K. More for a team leader senior programmer.
  19. If you've managed to get your first job experience in the UK then it's going to be much the same here mate. Get as much experience and quals as you can and stick at it. Take every opportunity to learn as much, in as broad an area you can. CISCO are good quals to have, universally accepted, good to get some microsoft server, latest version, linux/unix, networking, security, all desirables. Get yourself on linkedin and start spreading the word. Try and get to know people and the jobs will follow. Good luck.
  20. What's normal rates? There are a few developers getting made redundant from our place at the moment, some of them are good.
  21. I'd start sending your resume round a few agencies and see what they come up with. They might find you a job quickly.
  22. Been said before graham, but ignore Wendees posts, god knows what motivates that type of response, other than to stir people up. There seems to be a lot of negativity about Perth in particular for some reason. I see it from the same posters all the time though and they have an axe to grind. There are plenty of people living a fabulous lifestyle in Perth that don't ever bother with sites like this, they are here and happy with their lot. Wouldn't worry about the job front too much, if your a reasonable sort of character and get on OK with people where you work at the moment there's no reason why you won't get on with your boss and workmates here. A lot of them will be poms anyway, so you'll have a lot in common. If you like hot, sunny weather, beaches, clean, uncrowded City with fantastic river frontage, sport of any kind but water sports in particular, you'll love it.
  23. Why look for negatives? If you do that you might start looking and focusing on them and think "xxx was right". Just get here, do your own thing and see what you reckon.
  24. <p><p>Same to you and yours LS. Have a great Christmas. Are you getting anything nice? I'm stuck, as usual, for what to get my missus. She mentioned getting something herself when she's browsing round the shops. We've been together long enough to know that a lot of money can be wasted buying stuff neither of us really wants. I'll have to get some surprises though.</p></p>

  25. Couldn't help but notice in the OP's post their signature had They are moaning about how hard they are doing it and unless that flat is a friends and they are just doing them a favour, it looks like our OP is doing it so tough that they have an investment property. Could be wrong but interesting to find out.
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