If you are putting the paperwork together for a clearance, chances are good that the company intends to hire you, as the costs of getting an employee a clearance means that they will only do so if they have a use for you. Secrets don't take all that long, so it is possible they may wait for the full clearance to come in, especially if they would have no other role for you should it be denied. So unless you get denied, I would think that you will be hired once they receive either the interim or full clearance. I have never had a company put in for a clearance unless they intended to hire me. This means that things look good, and you will likely get your clearance so the company can have you start, although you don't actually have your clearance so you won't be able to access classified information yet. Typically though they will wait for what is known as an interim clearance, basically a simple background check that will be issued in a few weeks. It has been my experience, that companies will hire you and have you start while the paperwork is in process. It is hard to say if they will have "hostility" to you or not, that will depend on the reason you did not start with them after they applied for the clearance. That said, if you have had one before, companies are more likely to take the chance on you getting one again.Ĭlearances are very expensive, although the lower level secret or government trust (non DoD type, but still government) will cost less. If you go to another company that does not need the clearance, no upkeep will happen and if you don't use the clearance within the expiration period, it will expire. If you are fired or otherwise leave the company, I am not sure exactly what they call the status of the clearance at that point, but for all practical purposes it is active (or idle or something, but readily re-activated) for 2 to 5 years depending on the nature of the clearance. The new FSO will just "transfer" (lack of a better term) the clearance over to them. If you are not offered a position, but were granted the clearance, you will be able to apply at other positions with the same clearance requirements. Once you are given the clearance, it is yours, you are the one cleared, not the company. The ID card features a Wild Rose, Alberta’s provincial flower.īoth cards include an image of an Albertosaurus, a dinosaur whose name honours Alberta, where its remains were first discovered.Having gotten and let expire a few clearances over the years, I can answer a few of these. The driver’s licence design depicts Castle Mountain and the Bow River in Banff National Park to reflect Alberta’s connection to the Canadian Rockies and the Prairies. The designs use a fine line technique that is difficult to replicate. New cards will be issued at the time of renewal. Your current driver’s licence or ID is still valid until its expiry date. This newer technology also makes them less expensive to make than the old cards. The cards are the first in North America to integrate this combination of design and security features to provide the best possible protection from fraud. updated designs to reflect Alberta’s landscape and history.updated security features that make the cards harder to alter or replicate.Alberta’s new driver’s licence and ID cards include:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |