dwellselectric
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- Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Question if I was to go for my master license would I still be able to work for my boss? He has his master license as well
You sure could, but some who are going to remain employees prefer not to go that extra step for professional liability reasons.dSilanskas said:Question if I was to go for my master license would I still be able to work for my boss? He has his master license as well
mdshunk said:You sure could, but some who are going to remain employees prefer not to go that extra step for professional liability reasons.
When it comes to professional liability, I know that lawyers will name anyone in a suit who have credentials that show they should have known better. You may be interested to know that there is insurance available to an employee who's worried about this, and it's pretty cheap. Along the lines of nurse's malpractice insurance, who are also employees generally.480sparky said:Why would an empoyee with a Masters' be liable? The boss is the one in business... signing the contracts, buying the insurance, pulling the permits....
mdshunk said:When it comes to professional liability, I know that lawyers will name anyone in a suit who have credentials that show they should have known better. You may be interested to know that there is insurance available to an employee who's worried about this, and it's pretty cheap. Along the lines of nurse's malpractice insurance, who are also employees generally.
mdshunk said:You sure could, but some who are going to remain employees prefer not to go that extra step for professional liability reasons.
dSilanskas said:Well thank you for your input. I just want to get my masters ya know :-)
dSilanskas said:Well thank you for your input. I just want to get my masters ya know
brantmacga said:i continued working for my employer about 6/mo. after I got my EC license. It wasn't an issue. If you think you should have insurance, it is cheap. $1M liability costs me just under $500 a year.
j_erickson said:There is absolutely no drawback in getting your master's and many benefits. Get it.
satcom said:When i started out I got when of those $500 policies and then discovered i had no real coverages,
mdshunk said:When it comes to professional liability, I know that lawyers will name anyone in a suit who have credentials that show they should have known better........
dezwitinc said:I don't know for sure but is it legal for a master to employ a master in Mass?
satcom said:For $500 that must be some insurance coverage, does that cover high voltage, and underground work, errors and omissions, completed operations, usually the $500 policies are wiring within building policies that covers next to nothing. When i started out I got when of those $500 policies and then discovered i had no real coverages, the policy i needed cost $3500 and it was a min contractors libality policy, not a wiring within buildings policy.
Then if he intends to work for some commercial accounts, he will need workers comp policy, which will vary from state to state and annual income adustments.