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Ed,On the one hand, you signed it. You made an agreement with your eyes wide open. They fulfilled their end of the bargain; why do you want to renege on your end? How are you going to explain not fulfilling your contract at your next interview.. and the one after that?
If you must, ultimately you need a lawyer. An agressive lawyer. A lawyer who would argue that a stop sign is unconstitutional. Find a good, agressive lawyer who specializes in contracts. But as I said, I think it will say more about your character if you tough it out. How much longer do you have, and how bad is it, exactly?
On the one hand, you signed it. You made an agreement with your eyes wide open. They fulfilled their end of the bargain; why do you want to renege on your end? How are you going to explain not fulfilling your contract at your next interview.. and the one after that?
If you must, ultimately you need a lawyer. An agressive lawyer. A lawyer who would argue that a stop sign is unconstitutional. Find a good, agressive lawyer who specializes in contracts. But as I said, I think it will say more about your character if you tough it out. How much longer do you have, and how bad is it, exactly?
These training contracts.... Too bad it does not protect the pilots from being furloughed before the 2 yrs are up.
There have even been companies brash enough to go after pilots for training contracts after they took another job while furloughed.
Integrity? Simply an unfair labor practice. Training is a cost of doing business.
To answer you Hammer, if "taking care of your family" is a valid excuse for your actions, then crossing a picket line would be cool too. After all, a scab just wants to put bread on the table, also. Ditto for drug dealers, burgulars, and child-porn producers. Care to defend any of that?
This guy expressed no desperation to take care of his family, only a desire to "get out of" his agreement. (See title of thread.) If I were a future employer, I'd be worried that he suddenly develop the need to "take care of his family" after I trained him. That's why I advised him to stick it out if at all possible.
But even as a regular line pilot, I say that it's only because of actions like that -- bailing on employers after training -- that we have these %#X@ contracts in the first place. He signed it. Unless there's a breach by the employer, he should either do his time or pay it off like the rest of us.