Re: Thinking about relocating in Alberta...
Fiona you have such faith in me... I'm flattered!
The Health Professions Act of Alberta states that entry to practice currently is either a diploma or a degree obtained prior to December 31, 2009, and CARNA regulations state that if you are educated elsewhere in Canada you must obtain registry in that province first before registering in Alberta. So if you finish you education in Quebec, you have to write and pass the CRNE, register with OIIQ, then apply for registration here. It can all sort of be done at the same time, but you have to do it all. I don't think you'd be able to transfer into the diploma program here in enough time to finish before the entry to practice changes, because they're turning people away. There's a lot of information available online at:
http://www.nurses.ab.ca/registration...nts%202007.pdf
As Fiona says, there are differences in education programs, and CARNA should be able to tell you if the program you're attending is acceptable. Keep after them!! There is a baccalaureate for registered nurses program at both U of A and U of C that is two years long (full-time study) but can be done on a part-time basis.
(I only just learned last night that the Grant McEwan diploma program has essentially no peds content... they get a bout three days of clinical in the intermediate care nursery at the Misericordia, and that's it! One of my coworkers has a daughter in the program who wanted to do her practicum in our PICU and or patient care manager was delighted to facilitate it until CARNA told her they wouldn't allow it due to the lack of peds content in the program... that THEY approved!! Apparently the Grant McEwan program is only meant to turn out med-surg nurses!)
Okay, back to Chablis' issues... There are dozens of communities that would fit your criteria... dozens. Affordability might be a problem in some of them, but property values in lots of areas in Quebec are close to what they are here. I'd stay away from places like Fort MacMurray ( where a fire just left 300 MORE people without homes in a market where the prices are ridiculously high and availability drastically low and people live in their travel trailers!), Grande Prairie (which also has an availability problem), Calgary and Edmonton. But places like Vegreville, Vermilion, Cold Lake (there's a great place to live! If I could go back there I would...), Lacombe, Stettler, and others all would be good. For the mountain view you could look at Edson, Rocky Mountain House, Pincher Creek, Fort McLeod, Claresholm, High River... there are a lot of choices.
As Fiona says, things are booming in Alberta, and as all good things much come to an end, so must a boom. I don't think it's likely to bust in the near future, as happened with the NEP. (We were living in Cold Lake then and it was awful... we moved to Montreal. How's that for irony?) Conditions are different this time around, and I don't see us as being on the bubble yet. If I had a crystal ball, I could be more convincing, but I really don't want to have the power to see the future. Make your decisions based on the best information you can get and look at your own personal needs, and you'll be okay.
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