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Sean Mitton Canadian Expat Network Founder
(Veronica Henri/Toronto Sun)
Sean Mitton Canadian Expat Network Founder (Veronica Henri/Toronto Sun)


Canadian Expat Network in the News
By Sharon Lem, Toronto Sun

Back bacon, poutine and real

beer

href="http://www.torontosun.com/news/torontoandgta/2010/06/30/14569841.html">face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">How Canadians in the U.S. will be

celebrating nation's birthday

Shawn Danko will be barbecuing

Montreal steamies, frying Canadian back bacon, serving poutine and putting

Labatt Blue on tap at his Memphis restaurant.

Jeremy Eves will be attending a

Canada Day banquet at the Canadian consulate in Houston.

And Sean Mitton will be raising a

glass to toast Canada's birthday from a Canadian-owned bar in Raleigh,

N.C.

Although the trio live in the

southern United States, they're devoted and proud Canadians who will celebrate

Canada's 143rd birthday regardless of where they live.

Danko, who hails from Montreal,

moved stateside a decade ago for a job. In 2005, he decided to branch out on his

own and opened a restaurant and bar named the Kooky Canuck.

"I'm expecting 300 people to come

celebrate Canada's birthday. It's very important to me because I'm Canadian and

since I won't get to spend it with my family back home, I like to do something

special each year in Memphis to make it feel like home," Danko says, adding he

hired Canadian singer Val Halla to perform at the party.

Danko, 41, who lives in Memphis

with wife Lana and daughter Alexa, 14, says he misses public transportation, the

wide variety of ethnic foods and the clothes shopping.

Jeremy Eves, 35, of Chatham, moved

to Houston three years ago with his wife, Claire. They now have a two-year-old

daughter, Luca.

"I think it's very important to

stay in touch with other Canadians living outside of Canada," says Eves, who

formed the Canadian Club of Houston, which has 1,000 members. "We need to

maintain and connect to people you're familiar with, and get together to share

ideas and have a connection to home. It especially helps when you're

homesick."

Whenever Sean Mitton misses Canada,

he just clicks onto the website he created three years ago to connect with

fellow Canucks who live abroad (canadianexpatnetwork.com).

The 41-year-old Georgetown native,

who moved to Raleigh in 1999 as part of the technology boom, estimates there are

2 million Canadians living in the U.S. and 750,000 living elsewhere in the

world. Citizenship and Immigration Canada says it does not track the figures

since Canadians can go into most countries without a visa for up to six

months.

Mitton says he when he first

arrived in America, he knew nothing about expatriate issues such as banking,

health care and green card and visa issues.

"On my website, I try to help

fellow Canadians who have moved to the U.S. learn about cross-border tax

planning, how to file your taxes in terms of financial planning and how to

maximize that," Mitton says.

"When you move to another country

and you don't have an existing network of friends to help, it's nice to connect

with Canadians who have a common heritage and culture and who are supportive and

help each other out," he says.

Mitton started celebrating early,

joining a pre-Canada Day party with Ottawa native Kim Macies, 42, who moved to

Fayetteville, N.C., to be with her American husband.

"I see myself as an ambassador for

Canada," Macies says. "I've been hosting a big Canada Day party each year and I

put photos up … of Don Cherry, Mike Myers, Donald Sutherland and Stephen Harper

and asked my American friends to name the prime minister and they all said it

was Don Cherry.

"It's a whole different culture

especially down in the South," Macies says. "I do believe Canadians did it right

with multiculturalism and we embrace diversity. It's not that way everywhere you

go in the U.S."

Our multiculturalism isn't the only

thing Macies longs for stateside.

"I do miss the convenience of Tim

Hortons, the people knowing what I'm talking about when I want Smarties, an Aero

bar, a beavertail, hockey or skating on the Rideau Canal," she says.

 



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