From LMIA Daycare Job to PR in BC: Our Real Path After the One-Month Trial

In the last post we wrapped up our One-Month Trial Living in BC. This time, I’m documenting the route we personally chose — LMIA Daycare Job to PR in BC. Instead of studying first, we found a daycare owner willing to support an LMIA, then followed a structured process: LMIA → employer-specific work permit → Canadian work experience → PR options.

👣 Why We Chose the LMIA Daycare Job to PR in BC Route

  • 🎯 It matched my background in Education and met real childcare demand.
  • 🤝 A supportive employer provided faster access to the labour market than returning to school.
  • 🧭 It kept multiple PR doors open (CEC via Express Entry, or BCPNP with a qualifying job offer).

🏫 Finding the Right Daycare Employer for LMIA

🧩 Fit First, Paperwork Second

  • 🧒 Duties were aligned with ECE (NOC 42202) and met provincial wage/hour standards.
  • 📋 The owner understood LMIA basics — proving labour need, offering prevailing wage, and maintaining compliance for possible audits.

💵 Wage Level & Stream (High-Wage vs Low-Wage)

  • 🧮 LMIA classification depends on offered wage vs provincial median. Guidance was updated in 2025.
  • 🧾 The employer followed ESDC’s official LMIA requirements for the correct stream.

🛂 LMIA → Work Permit → PR: Our Timeline

✅ Step 1 — LMIA Approval

  • 🧩 The employer applied for an LMIA supporting my daycare/ECE role with documented wage, duties, and schedule.

✅ Step 2 — Employer-Specific Work Permit

  • 🪪 With a positive LMIA and job offer, I applied for an employer-specific work permit and began accumulating Canadian work experience that may support PR later. (Note: Caregiver pilots differ — most do not require LMIA.)

✅ Step 3 — PR Paths We’re Targeting

  • 🏅 Express Entry (CEC/FSW): We plan to use Canadian work experience; job offer details still matter for eligibility. (IRCC paused extra CRS points for job offers in 2025, so we focused on language, experience, and PNP.)
  • 🌲 BCPNP (Skills Immigration): With an eligible, full-time, indeterminate position and an employer meeting BCPNP standards, we’re keeping this as a parallel route.

🧭 Our Compliance Checklist (What We and the Employer Track)

  • 📑 Offer & Duties Match: Title, NOC (42202), hours, and wage must match the LMIA letter and job contract.
  • 🗃️ Employer Records: Keep LMIA letters, payroll, recruitment proofs, and retain for 6 years as per IRPR rules.
  • 🧭 Non-Compliance List Check: Verify that the employer is not on IRCC’s non-compliance list.
  • 🧮 Wage/Stream Rules: Reconfirm median wage thresholds before renewal.

🧱 Pitfalls We Avoided on the LMIA Daycare Job to PR in BC Route

  • 🚫 Assuming a job offer = automatic CRS boost. Since 2025, extra CRS points for job offers were removed — we prioritized language scores and PNP readiness.
  • 🧩 Mismatch between duties and NOC. We kept daily tasks consistent with ECE responsibilities.
  • 📬 Paperwork drift. We logged everything (contracts, pay stubs, schedules) in shared folders for PR filing.

📅 60-Day Action Plan (Copy-Ready)

🗓️ Days 1–15

  • 📂 Finalize LMIA documents; confirm wage vs provincial median and correct stream.
  • 🧭 Employer posts required ads / completes ESDC recruitment steps.

🗓️ Days 16–30

  • ✉️ LMIA decision → submit employer-specific work permit using LMIA number and offer letter.
  • 🗃️ Start record-keeping (contracts, pay stubs, schedules, employer letters).

🗓️ Days 31–60

  • 🏫 Begin work; track duties under NOC 42202. Gather references and maintain logs.
  • 🎯 Plan PR timeline: set target for language tests, EE profile, and/or BCPNP registration.

🪶 Thank You for Reading!

If you enjoyed this post, you might also like my previous story — Why I Decided to Immigrate to Canada. It shares the personal reflections that led me to pursue permanent residency as an Early Childhood Educator in BC.

📚 Want more hands-on ECE classroom content?

If you’re also interested in deeper ECE practice tips (play-based learning, daily routines, small-group strategies, teacher language, etc.), visit our broader content hub: Cornerstone Nest – ECE Articles.

📚 Sources / References


⚠️ Disclaimer: This article is based solely on my **personal experience** navigating immigration steps in BC as an ECE professional. I am **not** a certified immigration consultant, lawyer, or licensed expert. The information presented here is for general educational purposes only and should **not** be interpreted as professional or legal advice. Immigration laws and policies change frequently, and individual circumstances vary. Always consult **official IRCC / BC PNP resources** or a **certified immigration professional** for advice tailored to your situation.

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