SupersonicMax said:
I'm not saying they can't deny it or that releasing is a right. Read again.
Yes, releases have been denied. However, is it really in the organisation's interest to keep an unhappy member?
ASKING for a release is a right. If the other party agrees to you backing out, nope, don't see anything wrong.
Nope, nothing in the QR&O section of releases that I can find says that asking for a release is a right. Besides, who cares? It can be your 'right' to ask all you want, that doesn't mean they have to agree.
And yes, if the org needs people then it is in their interest to keep people in. Hopefully that person has to integrity and intestinal fortitude to buck up and do their job properly.
Anyways, this is getting silly. I'll sum it up for you;
YES - you can release anytime from the CF
YES - you can leave with a 'good' release
NO - that is not a guarantee
YES - you will be forced to pay back school fees and such if you release before your 'pay back' date
NO - you shouldn't release before your contract is up unless you have a VERY good reason
All right, when you ask for a release during your contract and it is granted, you will be released under Item 4c (Voluntary Release, On Request - Other Causes). Where's the "Black Mark?"
All in QR&O Vol1 Chap 15
In this case, when someone asks you at a job interview and you say "because I got my free degree and training and then left". Unless, of course, you lie.
Oh, and if you keep asking them to release (because it's your 'right') they can release you for being 'unsuitable for further employment'. It has happened (from how it has been explained to me by, oh, they people who've done it). It's not guarenteed that they will release you under a voluntary release, especially after you've got that free degree....expensive training and then once you hit a unit you up and leave (people aren't stupid). A lack of integrity is a valid reason to boot someone. Anyways, you can believe what I say or not. Getting a release before your contract is up is NOT a guarentee and NOT a good idea.
People with 25 years in and who decide to release will get it without an issue. A 27 year old (assuming you went to school at 18) who just finished his last day of obligatory pay back service and then wants out will, and I can this with certainty, not be looked at favorably. Maybe it's different with pilots.