> monetary requirements, which are actually quite low
Technically, yes - you are required to hold only €4,500 as an "investment" in the business you create. In reality you will need a lot more. My wife and I spent about €40k to move over which is inline with what others on the DAFT program have said they spent.
What was your final motivator to depart [mine: crony capitalism e.g. healthcare setup]? Were ya'll's companies already established, or created in the moving process? Citizens, yet [spekin de Dutch yet eh]?
Lastly: is living in Maastricht similar to living in a US state panhandle (e.g. benefits of: border shopping; tax reasons). What drew ya'll south (V.e.g: Amsterdam)?
Any suggestions/websites for a single electrician that's been thinking about DAFT for over a decade? My own would be YouTuber Not Just Bikes (expatriated to Utrecht for traffic engineering).
Our main motivator was that we watched our grandparents grow older and just stop moving. I absolutely love America, but you do spend the majority of your time sitting. I'm not inactive, I do ultras, I hike, etc. But that doesn't make up for the fact that we're just always sitting - at home, at work, in the car. We wanted to live somewhere that would force us out of that.
> Were ya'll's companies already established
I had an LLC I used for contracting in the US, but the DAFT visa required setting up a new Dutch corporation.
> Citizens, yet
We're currently applying for our first visa renewal. Next time we'll be elligible for PR. Citizenship would require us to give up our US citizenship and I don't want to do that.
> is living in Maastricht similar to living in a US state panhandle
It kinda is. We don't have a car, but we do have neighbors that only grocery shop in Germany because it's cheaper.
> What drew ya'll south (V.e.g: Amsterdam)?
I just couldn't imagine living anywhere so flat and so far from forests / mountains. We still don't have proper forests in Maastricht, but I can be in the forests of Belgium or Germany in 20 minutes.
> Any suggestions/websites for a single electrician that's been thinking about DAFT for over a decade?
No websites, but just as someone who has tried to hire an electrician in both countries it seems like the shortage is greater here. It really seems like you could just come over and have a lot of work.
The nice thing about DAFT is that after 5 years, I believe you can get EU permanent residency, not just Dutch permanent residency. Basically gives you the right to live and work anywhere in the EU like a citizen. There are continuous residency requirements to meet eligibility, but a lawyer I talked to about DAFT told me that they're not super strict about it.
I appreciate your perspective, from having lived DAFT experience.
>We're currently applying for our first visa renewal. Next time we'll be elligible for PR.
Good luck (shoe-in, correct?)! As PRs, would you still then need to remain self-employed (forever)?
>electrician shortage
I've run my own residential electric shop, on/off for two decades, but eventually want to get into industrial controls.
Definitely need to look into licensing/reciprocity.
>It really seems like you could just come over and have a lot of work.
Sidework would be an eventual hustle, but honestly I'd have to learn about local wiring practices and wouldn't want to be independant in a new AHJ/system. If I dafted it'd be in an adjacent careerpath. I'm honestly looking into engineering programs, abroad (possibly pre-DAFT).
>couldn't imagine living anywhere so flat and so far from forests / mountains
It's raining here in Appalachia. Soft little pitterpatters upon my tin roof.
Thanks for chatting. I've bookmarked your website for further inspiration =D
> As PRs, would you still then need to remain self-employed (forever)?
Nope, once we get PR we have the same rights as citizens except: we can't vote in national elections, and we can't leave the country for too long without losing the residency permit.
> I've bookmarked your website for further inspiration
> Please don't use HN primarily for promotion. It's ok to post your own stuff part of the time, but the primary use of the site should be for curiosity.
I also think the old epochconverter UI was dated. I'll switch to yours
I seem to remember Gates talked about how we would soon have cheap enough storage that a person could record every conversation they ever have for this reason. This was in his '95 book 'The Road Ahead' or maybe I'm remembering it wrong
This is awesome, but it'd be great if you allowed for apps that we wanted to use more, not less.
I installed it and added my language learning app hoping to be able to use the API to report if I've studied enough. Unfortunately, it assumed I was trying to use this app less and immediately locked it.
You can set it up in the Twilio studio without having to write code. I'm not 100% positive, but I seem to remember there was a template for it and I just had to fill in the details
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