Theres a tuition assistance program for my college through my job. The way it works is I complete a course, pay the school, and the company reimburses me. If you were to take classes one semester, but then submit an application saying you took them the next semester, even though you didn't, would that be illegal? I paid for and passed the classes (which are the requirements for reimbursement), I just don't want to get banned from this service, or worse.
I live in US.
Bump, anyone know?
>>18191086
>knowingly submit wrong documentation
it's called fraud
>>18191086
Why wouldn't you just put the correct semester dates on the application?
>>18191229
Past the deadline for the semester.
>>18191210
But would they care? They were going to pay it anyways, literally no different for their checkbook at the end of the day, and thats what companies care about.
>>18191272
It's called fraud.
I'm sure they will want official transcripts from the school and find out.
>>18191274
Ight. I'm not gonna do it. It is fucking stupid though. Oh well.
>>18191318
Of course it's stupid
Everything having to do wit money is very arbitrary
>>18191318
>>18191086
What part of it is stupid, OP? The fact that you are over the age of 18 and don't know what fraud is? That you're entitled enough to think that "Money is money and they should pay for me anyway even though I don't meet the requirements?"
Tip for you man, drop college now and join a trade. You're obviously too mentally immature to make anything out of whatever degree you might manage to make it through, if any. Do a few years of some labor and maybe you'll gain some proper life perspective.
>>18191403
It worked for me.
Labor is very humbling.
>>18191272
So just ask for an exception. If they agree, you're good. If not, lesson learned.