Bruce_the_vii Bruce_the_vii:
I checked the statisitcs and Winnipeg is experiencing low unemployment and Regina even lower. I believe Saskatchewan and Manitoba did not go into recession with the world down turn. These are natural immigration places at this time. With low unemployment comes the threat of wage inflation, the problem of bottle necks in the economy and the possibility to improve the bottom. It's very interesting, exciting to me, that these cities become the bell weather of a better economy and a better society.
Its very exciting to me too. I have brought this up before in this forum. I was a very poor ambassador in those conversations. The New York Times article about my province makes me extremely proud though.
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“From the moment we touched down at the airport, it was love all the way,” said Olusegun Daodu, 34, a procurement professional who recently arrived from Nigeria to join relatives and marveled at the medical card that offers free care. “If we have any reason to go to the hospital now, we just walk in.”
“The license plates say ‘Friendly Manitoba,’ ” said his wife, Hannah.
“It’s true — really, really true,” Mr. Daodu said. “I had to ask my aunt, ‘Do they ever get angry here?’ ”
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“Because we are from the third world, I thought they might think they are superior,” said Anne Simpao, a Filipino nurse in tiny St. Claude, who was approached by a stranger and offered dishes and a television set. “They call it friendly Manitoba, and it’s really true.”
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Most are required to bring savings, typically about $10,000, to finance the transition without government aid. While the province nominates people, the federal government does background checks and has the final say. Unlike many migrant streams, the new Manitobans have backgrounds that are strikingly middle class.
“Back home was good — not bad,” said Nishkam Virdi, 32, who makes $17 an hour at the Palliser furniture plant after moving from India, where his family owned a machine shop.
He said he was drawn less by wages than by the lure of health care and solid utilities. “The living standard is higher — the lighting, the water, the energy,” he said.