roca: If I were you, the minimum I would accept, is your currently salary in the US. Not because salaries are lower in Poland it means that you have to work for a low salary. Now that you have some experience working in the US, the idea should be to go upwards not backwards. The company MUST value that, if not, f*ck it, I am sure there would be another company which will.
You're living in dreamland chap.
They likely don't care that he's a foreigner, as (judging by the salary) - it's not a high level job where you need to paying the going rate to attract the best. Experience in the US doesn't really mean anything in the grand scheme of things.
wielki pan: sorry mr d, but this not true, apart from getting a tank full of cheap fuel, plus another 40 odd litres in containers, you also buy vodka,cigarettes and sweets at never to be repeated prices....only draw back is the wait at border control...
With respect to vodka and cigarettes - it's not worth it when (as a border-zone resident, which is defined as living up to 50km from the border) you can only take half a litre of spirits and 40 cigarettes across. And trust me, having crossed that border a fair few times, they can and will search those people thoroughly. Normally, those from distant places get an easier time, but those living close to the border (so-called "ants") will get a thorough, proper control.
And if I recall rightly, as a border zone resident, you can't import fuel in containers too. To add to it - Ukrainian fuel isn't that cheap (not cheap enough to make it worth the huge wait) - and the Russian/Belarusian bureaucracy at the border is amazingly lengthy and tedious, making sure that it's not worth going across for it.
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