It's sort of a little thing, but when something strikes me as patently unfair it rankles me.
Something I recently learned....
Massachusetts RN licenses are renewed every 2 years, expiring on your birthday of the even years.
First time licensees: If your birthday occurs earlier than three months after the time you take the boards, your license expires on your birthday in the next even year. For example, if someone's birthday were on October 7 and they took the boards today on July 8, 2008, their birthday would be less than three months after the date of their test and their license would expire on October 7, 2010. If someone took the test the same day had a birthday of October 9, their birthday would be more than three months after the test date, and their license would expire on October 9, 2008... thus only lasting three months and one day.
Both people paid the same price for their license ($150.00 is what I paid, plus the Pearson Vue costs). Not only that, but the first time you renew your license, you don't need to earn continuing ed credits. You do from the second renewal onward. So the second person in my example would need to start earning CE credits three months after they first get a license, while the first person doesn't need to do it until over two years later.
My birthday is December 31 and I took the boards in June. I had no option to take them in October since I start my first RN job in August. All of my classmates who have already passed the test are fortunate enough to have birthdays such that their licenses don't expire until 2010 while mine expires on 12/31/2008.
Anyway, it is what it is and what can you do about it anyway? I just needed to vent about it.