Former RAF pilot Prince William has started training for his new role with Bond Air Services
The Duke of Cambridge, pictured here during a visit to south London on Friday with the Duchess of Cambridge, will start his job barely a month after becoming a father for the second time
As if preparing for fatherhood second time around
wasn't challenging enough, Prince William has also started a new job.
The Duke of Cambridge, 32, has officially started
work with the company that operates the East Anglian Air Ambulance service,
according to Daily mail
He's now working for Bond Air Services, which runs
air ambulance and police aviation operations and is training so he can start flying
rescue missions in the summer.
Kensington
Palace said in a short statement: 'The Duke of Cambridge has today started
work as an employee of Bond Air Services.
'Over
the coming months he will undertake job-specific training before he begins
piloting missions for East Anglian Air Ambulance during the summer.
'The
mandatory training will involve simulator, aircraft and in-flight skills training.'
William
has begun work a few weeks ahead of the birth of his second child and is likely
to take paternity leave, as he did for his first child Prince George, who was
born in July 2013.
A
spokesman for Bond Air Services would not discuss the length of the leave the
Duke could receive but added: ‘Like other pilots, he will be entitled to
paternity leave.’
He
said: ‘He has come to do a job as a professional, a pilot, and we’re very happy
he’s going to be a pilot.’
William
passed his Air Transport Pilot's License exams in March, completing 14 written
exams on subjects including the principles of flight and navigation.
The
second-in-line to the throne will work with medics responding to emergencies
ranging from road accidents to heart attacks.
The stint
will be William's main job, although he will also continue to take on royal
duties and engagements both in Britain and overseas.
His new
role was announced shortly after he touched down in Tokyo for a seven-day tour
of Japan and China in February.
It's
thought that he, the Duchess of Cambridge and their two children will relocate
to Anmer Hall on the Sandringham estate in Norfolk.
The Grade
II listed Georgian pile has reportedly undergone a £1.5million refurbishment,
with the driveway re-routed and new trees planted to offer the family more
privacy.
The
prince has completed seven and a half years in full-time military service after
beginning his career with the Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) and later
served with The Royal Air Force, with his final posting as an RAF Search and
Rescue Pilot.
The royal
left operational service in the Armed Forces in September 2013.
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