attorney or not?

Nurses Recovery

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I been involved with the PNAP program since August of 2010. I just received an agreement in the mail from the VRP. This is almost 7 months later. I am reluctant to sign this agreement. I've read so many posts from this site about getting an attorney. I don't know if an attorney would do any good at this point being i'm already in a contract with PNAP. Why is the VRP just now sending me a contract? I did call a few attorneys and this is some of the responses I got.....

One attorney, who appears to know what he's talking about said to sign the contract, there wasn't anything I could do at this point. The problem I see with this guy was he was on vacation at the time of the phone call, so I don't know if he was rushing this or not.

The next attorney who claims to work in this area of law in the great state of PA, didn't know the terms i was using....VRP, PNAP. Is this a red flag or what? This one told me to send them a $500 retainer and the will begin work on the matter.

I want to know if I have to sign this contract... if not signing it puts my license in jeopardy.... if not signing it makes the PNAP contract invalid.... This is what I guess the lawyer will answer after I "show them the money". Right?

Here's another dilemma.... I just received permission to return to work and was offered a position. I don't want any of this to cause "waves" so to speak. I would like to hear other's experiences on these contract matters!

By the time you're signing a contract, I cannot imagine what you would need an attorney for. Unless there is some part of the contract that you think is unreasonable...

Is it just one page long? If so, it is part of PNAP. I recieved the same thing. I'm also from PA and have been with PNAP about as long as you have. Have you had alot of different case managers?

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