Yes, a volunteer can be "fired" or dismissed from their position by the organization they are volunteering for. While volunteers are not paid employees, organizations have the right to set standards and expectations for volunteer behavior, performance, and conduct. If a volunteer fails to meet these expectations or engages in inappropriate behavior, the organization can choose to terminate their volunteer status.
Fort Sumter - a tiny US Army garrison on an island in Charleston harbour. When the Confederate artillery fired on the fort, Lincoln called for volunteer troops for the Union, and the war was on.
Lincoln's appeal for 75,000 volunteer troops after the Confederate artillery fired on Fort Sumter.
There is no cost for a volunteer because a volunteer does it for nothing. They volunteer for what ever it is.
Answer If you can possibly avoid answering the question about your last job and you being fired from it, do so. New employers want to know as much as they can find out about new employee's but don't volunteer any information that is not directly asked.
I belive it is volunteer led.
volunteer janne ronkainen
Vol is an abbreviation for Volunteer
Tennessee is the Volunteer State.
A Volunteer
Volunteer Military
The past tense of 'volunteer' is 'volunteered.'
The States that had remained loyal to the USA, under its newly-inaugurated President Abraham Lincoln, who called for 75.000 volunteer troops after the Confederates had fired on the Union garrison at Fort Sumter.