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Wages advice

  • 14-09-2015 4:23pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12


    Hi all, Im an aussie whos married to an irish lass and we have a 15 month old...

    Long story short, wifey wants to move home. im a paramedic in australia and have been offered a hob in ireland that pays 12 euro an hr and approx 30-40hrs a week...

    Question i have is this... Is 12 euro an hour enough to live on comfortably? I earn a decent wage here and we are quite comfortable but have no family hence the idea to move....

    Thanks for your input


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,908 ✭✭✭Alkers


    What's required to become a paramedic? Where is the job? If it is in Dublin, you could earn that working retail after a few years, not a very good income at all.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,238 ✭✭✭✭Dial Hard


    WestOzpara wrote:
    Question i have is this... Is 12 euro an hour enough to live on comfortably?


    It's just under 25k gross, which is on the low side but doable ("comfortably" might be stretching it) depending on your circumstances. Will you be living in Dublin? Paying for childcare? Will she be working too? All those things are going to be huge factors.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12 WestOzpara


    Dial Hard wrote: »
    It's just under 25k gross, which is on the low side but doable ("comfortably" might be stretching it) depending on your circumstances. Will you be living in Dublin? Paying for childcare? Will she be working too? All those things are going to be huge factors.

    At this point in time my wife is studying to be an aged care worker. Here in austrlaia she can basically walk into a job... In ireland not so sure.. If she does childcare will have to be paid for
    Looking at west of ireland mostly mayo and galway.
    Have to be registered as a paramedic in irelnad. I have rego as an advanced paramedic which is the highest band. Degree qualified and 10 yrs experience. Thanks


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 53,063 ✭✭✭✭tayto lover


    12 euro an hour is chicken feed.
    You would struggle to survive on that with a wife and child.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,267 ✭✭✭Elessar


    WestOzpara wrote: »
    Hi all, Im an aussie whos married to an irish lass and we have a 15 month old...

    Long story short, wifey wants to move home. im a paramedic in australia and have been offered a hob in ireland that pays 12 euro an hr and approx 30-40hrs a week...

    Question i have is this... Is 12 euro an hour enough to live on comfortably? I earn a decent wage here and we are quite comfortable but have no family hence the idea to move....

    Thanks for your input

    You're an AP?! 12/hr is scandalous. I presume this is a private company? You'll have to get into the HSE or Dublin Fire Bridage to really use your skills and earn a decent income. They are state owned and run the ambulance services. They only recruit through national campaigns every so often. Keep an eye out on publicjobs.ie Only through them will you actually respond to emergency calls, the private companies are just patient transfers and event medics.

    EDIT: Pre-hospital care is a race to the bottom here except if you're in the national ambulance service (HSE) - even then it's not terrific. I would take serious reconsideration of your move just on the career front. Care work is also low paid.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12 WestOzpara


    Elessar wrote: »
    You're an AP?! 12/hr is scandalous. I presume this is a private company? You'll have to get into the HSE or Dublin Fire Bridage to really use your skills and earn a decent income. They are state owned and run the ambulance services. They only recruit through national campaigns every so often. Keep an eye out on publicjobs.ie Only through them will you actually respond to emergency calls, the private companies are just patient transfers and event medics.

    EDIT: Pre-hospital care is a race to the bottom here except if you're in the national ambulance service (HSE) - even then it's not terrific. I would take serious reconsideration of your move just on the career front. Care work is also low paid.

    Thanks all for the advice!!
    I put an application in for NAS and they require i fly over for a prqctical exam, an interview and an exam... These are all done about 2 months apart and apparently cannot be changed despite the fact id have to fly over 3 times and thats not financially viable. I was then told that until i physically live in the country i cannot be offered a position if they are indeed avaliable. Seems stupid to leave my cushy well paid job and risk moving and not getting into NAS. And privates (it is a private comapny) dont pay much as stated here...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,489 ✭✭✭dissed doc


    That level of salary will lead to a very tight living in Ireland, around €1700 nets per month. The west is cheaper than Dublin for sure, but that is not a lot for a family of 3.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 130 ✭✭PolaroidPizza


    Ireland is not immigrant-friendly...especially when it comes to recognising foreign qualifications. Be prepared to wait about 12 months for the Dept of Health to recognise your qualifications if you want to stay in in a similar profession....and then you have the fun part of competing with Irish for the scarce healthcare jobs. it isn't widely admitted, but irish employers will nearly always prefer to hire one of their own.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,165 ✭✭✭stargazer 68


    12 euro an hour!!! OP Im a secretary and Im on 15 an hour!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 130 ✭✭PolaroidPizza


    also, keep in mind that you cannot use your Australian driving license here, so living in a rural area would not be an option in the short term. It would take a few months and a lot of money to get an Irish drivers license.

    actually...I was completely off the mark with this. I was thinking of Canada.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,295 ✭✭✭✭Mrs OBumble


    also, keep in mind that you cannot use your Australian driving license here, so living in a rural area would not be an option in the short term. It would take a few months and a lot of money to get an Irish drivers license.

    Rubbish. Aussies have been able to do license trade-in here for ages. It's a straight exchange (no testing, lessons, etc), with one extra form to sign if your license was from Victoria.


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