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Previously on "Certify Documents against Originals"
Unfortunately we lack the French language different terms for yes "si" (disagreeing with somebody's "no") and "oui" (agreeing with somebody even if they said "no" IIRC), so I can see that my "yep" was ambiguous.
They'll be the ones working out of Central government departments then. Not my definition but the official one from the CSI (no, not that CSI).
But if it makes you happy
I was agreeing with you.
Unfortunately we lack the French language different terms for yes "si" (disagreeing with somebody's "no") and "oui" (agreeing with somebody even if they said "no" IIRC), so I can see that my "yep" was ambiguous.
Civil Servants are, by definition, permanently employed by the Crown: in practice they are ultimately working for a Minister of the Crown.
That excludes the Armed Forces, the Police, Local Authorities, the Health Service, Parliament and - perhaps a little counter-intuitively - the Monarch.
HTH...
Yep. Approx 8% of public sector employees are civil servants.
Civil servant = employed by the council or gov't .. no?
State school with non outsourced catering = run by the council / gov't = civil servant. QED?
M
No.
Civil Servants are, by definition, permanently employed by the Crown: in practice they are ultimately working for a Minister of the Crown.
That excludes the Armed Forces, the Police, Local Authorities, the Health Service, Parliament and - perhaps a little counter-intuitively - the Monarch.
Civil servant - dinner person at the school...? (permanently employed part time)
Ltd Co director
"Manager" of a Ltd Co - so the "Manager" of your local Ye olde bun shoppe?
Member of a trade association - well that limits things!
Very few ner-do-wells in the above list! Very hard to become one of the approved people eh!
M
Dinner person at school is not a civil servant. But it is a broad list.
chairman or director of a limited company
civil servant (permanent)
director, manager or personnel officer of a VAT-registered company
journalist
manager or personnel officer of a limited company
member, associate or fellow of a professional body
licensee of a public house
Hard to argue against anyone from that list certfiying a doc. Yes I am bored today.
Not exactly a restrictive list is it?
Civil servant - dinner person at the school...? (permanently employed part time)
Ltd Co director
"Manager" of a Ltd Co - so the "Manager" of your local Ye olde bun shoppe?
Member of a trade association - well that limits things!
Very few ner-do-wells in the above list! Very hard to become one of the approved people eh!
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