English
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 3,374
We agree here, Lori. My point is that it doesn't matter if the employer tells the pilot that he/she is not an employee. If they participated in the training, there is a training record/history to be disclosed. Some airlines do not pay during training. Using that criteria, some people believe they do not have to disclose their employment - the reasoning being, that if they weren't paid, they weren't employed. I'm giving the other side of the argument, that the lack of a paycheck does not indicate the lack of an employer/employee relationship. The existence of an employer/employee relationship doesn't even matter when it comes down to PRIA matters. If a pilot participates in training, and/or was an employee, it must be reported on a future employment application.
Is that right? That is the conclusion I reached when I looked into PRIA matters.
Is that right? That is the conclusion I reached when I looked into PRIA matters.