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What kind of qualification/job experience does he have?adnan1991 wrote: He is a full time wheelchair user so is looking at either Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Finland as they are supposed to be ok for wheelchair users and believes more speak english than France, Spain or Italy.
Well, I don't want to rain on his parade, but has he researched his job chances in those countries at all?adnan1991 wrote:He is a paralegal in commercial law and has done alot of CSR work around disability. Unfortunately he doesn't speak any other European language which is an area of concern when looking for work.
I can only speak for the German rules regarding health insurance but in general: an EHIC is for a specific person, not their family members.adnan1991 wrote:
Also, he has a EHIC and wants to know if his spouse would get free or reduced delivery charges at the hospital or would he have to pay full wack?
I'm living and working in Denmark now and I safely say without fair of contraception that EVERYONE speaks PERFECT English here so it's no barrier.ALKB wrote:What kind of qualification/job experience does he have?adnan1991 wrote: He is a full time wheelchair user so is looking at either Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Finland as they are supposed to be ok for wheelchair users and believes more speak english than France, Spain or Italy.
Does he speak any German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, or Finnish?
Do they say 'fear of contradiction' for 'fair of contraception' ?Wanderer wrote:I'm living and working in Denmark now and I safely say without fair of contraception that EVERYONE speaks PERFECT English here so it's no barrier.ALKB wrote:What kind of qualification/job experience does he have?adnan1991 wrote: He is a full time wheelchair user so is looking at either Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Finland as they are supposed to be ok for wheelchair users and believes more speak english than France, Spain or Italy.
Does he speak any German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, or Finnish?
But Danish is is very similar to English in it's written form, I've never had any lessons in it and I find it fairly easy to read. However spoken Danish is impossible to follow, none of the words sound like they should!
The bus stop near Kobenhavens Central Railway Station is called 'Hovedbanegården', they say it something like 'Hooveberngowan'. I like in 'Sydhavn' - they say 'Soovn'.....
Scandinavians are generally really good at speaking English but would that translate into a possible job for a paralegal for UK commercial law who doesn't speak Danish at all?Wanderer wrote:I'm living and working in Denmark now and I safely say without fair of contraception that EVERYONE speaks PERFECT English here so it's no barrier.ALKB wrote:What kind of qualification/job experience does he have?adnan1991 wrote: He is a full time wheelchair user so is looking at either Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Finland as they are supposed to be ok for wheelchair users and believes more speak english than France, Spain or Italy.
Does he speak any German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, or Finnish?
But Danish is is very similar to English in it's written form, I've never had any lessons in it and I find it fairly easy to read. However spoken Danish is impossible to follow, none of the words sound like they should!
The bus stop near Kobenhavens Central Railway Station is called 'Hovedbanegården', they say it something like 'Hooveberngowan'. I like in 'Sydhavn' - they say 'Soovn'.....
So does that mean that if he actively looks for work but fails to find anything, he could use the SS route. He plans on getting his driving licence converted, joining clubs, library etc to show he has moved etc.RETENTION OF WORKER OR SELFEMPLOYED STATUS
EU citizens retain the status of workers and self-employed persons in the following circumstances:
if they are unable to work as the result of an illness or accident; or
if they are in duly recorded involuntarily unemployment and have registered as job-seekers with the relevant employment office; or
if they have embarked on vocational training.