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If your current job requires you to sign bonds with the employer, then of course you would be aware of being bonded. Bonds can simply be job contracts which will ensure your employment only for a limited period. You would either be released of responsibilities at the end of the contract or get your contract renewed.
A fill time complementary job is a job that has a contract. A contract job may not be for a long period of time and may have a set salary.
You do need to bonded to work for a house cleaning job. It looks better and you have a higher sucess rate of getting jobs.
Maintenance is the type of job where practical knowledge (ie experience) is generally more important than education. It does depend on what type of maintenance job you're looking for though.
Most, yes. You should ask the installer before he performs the job if he is bonded.
When you are asked, 'Have you been bonded previously', on a job application, the employer is asking whether you have been insured. Being bonded means you were insured so if something is broken, lost, or stolen while you are working, it is covered.
A letter confirming the end of one's contract may be given to an employee near the time of their job completion date, or it could be a cancellation of a utility contract. A sample letter confirming the end of a contract may contain information such as the notice period that is required and the reason why the contract is coming to an end.
maybe it matters what job
It means have you joined securely to another thing or job.
it depends on the contract of contrator and the owner
There is nothing you can do if you do not have a job and a contract verbal means nothing legaly.
No most facilities maintenance work on equipment to keep it maintained and most janitorial job are cleaning up area's to maintain cleanness.