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"caseload" Definitions
  1. all the people that a doctor, social worker, etc. is responsible for at one time

354 Sentences With "caseload"

How to use caseload in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "caseload" and check conjugation/comparative form for "caseload". Mastering all the usages of "caseload" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Reuters reports that this brings the total caseload to 130.
And what staff there are may face a larger caseload.
Each has a caseload of maybe 40 clients at once.
Between 2010 and 2016, the caseload has more than doubled.
Nogueras said he has seen a shift in the caseload.
Since 1980, the Board's caseload has fallen by 58 percent.
Her caseload has increased massively over the last few years.
Extra credit is provided if the statutes establish caseload standards.
And we probably have the heaviest caseload in the city.
Remember: Lockdowns and distancing are what suppress the total caseload.
In Switzerland, the confirmed caseload doubled, to more than 143.
By 1963, the annual caseload had fallen to a mere 17.
Their growing caseload is apparent proof they take that obligation seriously.
Reminder: India's caseload remains relatively low, with around 500 people infected.
Reminder: India's caseload remains relatively low, with around 500 people infected.
The court does not begin the term with its full caseload.
On top of all that, the court's caseload is increasing rapidly.
He said the heavy caseload left him frustrated, with failing grades.
She kept up with her caseload by reading transcripts of oral arguments.
We recommend therapists carry a minimum caseload and respond to clients daily.
The SFO's current caseload includes investigations into Barclays, Rolls-Royce and GSK.
He and his eight colleagues have considered a smaller caseload than usual.
Caseload (welfare rolls) declined by nearly 2628 percent from 28503 to 22019.
There weren't the resources to do more without compromising the current caseload.
The US' coronavirus caseload is growing at a rate that mirrors Italy's.
The first priority is to diminish the bloated caseload of pretrial detainees.
Public defenders are notoriously overworked, underpaid, and constantly juggling an overwhelming caseload.
As the caseload has quintupled, much still remains unknown about the illness.
The overall caseload is around 83,000, including 73,000 from the second world war.
Gritton expects to service up to 30,000 new clients, double its existing caseload.
The total caseload is now growing by well over 10,000 daily in Europe.
Certainly, the states that are dealing with the highest caseload can't handle it.
The unprecedented move comes as the global coronavirus caseload exceeded 169,000 on Monday.
We discuss the latest updates with my caseload and she helps me troubleshoot issues.
Today, children impacted by Trump's policy make up 75 percent of the agency's caseload.
The office caseload went up 12 percent with 82,000 defendants in the past year.
Its caseload has grown sharply as more countries have joined the Council of Europe.
In 1995, he assumed senior status on the appellate court, with a reduced caseload.
The court is nicknamed the "rocket docket" for its efficiency handling a heavy caseload.
Now, my caseload is maybe 30 percent Muslim, which is astronomical relative to other practices.
On Thursday, it said the caseload had jumped to 151 infections, including two pregnant women.
The immigration court has never had enough immigration judges to keep up with its caseload.
Taft lobbied Congress to pass the Judiciary Act of 1925, which reduced the court's caseload.
A good ratio is five—no more than seven—[patients] to therapists as a caseload.
She is incredibly well-credentialed and more than equipped to take over the office's public caseload.
Counselors, for example, had an average caseload of 464 students during the 2015-16 school year.
Concerts and festivals set up refillable water stations instead of selling plastic bottles by the caseload.
"My caseload revolves quite a bit," said Eddy Polanco, a guidance counselor for the elementary students.
The memo also outlines the risks to Uber's bottom line should the SIU's caseload become public.
New York will essentially be on lockdown this weekend, after its caseload soared to nearly 8,000.
Morgan Stanley tripled its projected coronavirus caseload to 570,000, up from 200,000 just two weeks ago.
As it handles an increased caseload, the military is being asked to help out at home.
But critical cases made up just a tiny fraction of the total caseload in the study.
"Otherwise it puts a public defender with a heavy caseload in a corner," Mr. Joy said.
The Judicial Conference submits judgeship recommendations to Congress every two years based on caseload and workload.
Since 2011, though, a growing part of her caseload has been looking at chemicals in uniforms.
"There is clearly no justification for the expansion of the court based on the caseload," Orr said.
The Trump administration said it is working to address that caseload with "additional benchmarks" for immigration courts.
And states like Louisiana and Michigan are currently considered emerging hotspots due to their fast-growing caseload.
Italy — whose citizens are completely quarantined — has suffered 3,405 fatalities and has a confirmed caseload of 41,035.
He remained an active judge and accepted senior status, with a lighter caseload, only after turning 92.
He accused Dade security officials of "sabotaging our caseload," and said that action needed to be taken.
News continued to spill over the weekend, pushing up the confirmed global caseload and rolling human toll.
This year, Alabama established new caseload limits, said Chris Roberts, the state's director of indigent defense services.
Dana Leigh Marks, who has served as an immigration judge since 1987, had written about the crushing caseload.
Their budget would be set by Congress, like any other federal agency, based on the overall annual caseload.
In the southern district of Texas, the Operation Streamline caseload is double what it was two months ago.
In addition, there are 322,535 pending cases that have not been placed on the active caseload rolls yet.
The program's caseload dropped by more than 60 percent in the past two decades, even when poverty worsened.
Stilling, he writes, took on their entire law firm's caseload so that Buting could focus exclusively on Avery's case.
A 2008 study by the Court Statistics Project found that misdemeanors comprise nearly 80 percent of America's criminal caseload.
She was asked whether she had any concerns about the smaller regulator being able to handle its burgeoning caseload.
The Justice Department receives such applications, and the president typically issues decisions on that caseload to clear the slate.
Even with all 384 slots filled, every immigration judge would have a caseload of just shy of 1,700 cases.
Walmart says it does not expect the changes to have any adverse effect on the handling of its caseload.
In the field I just didn't see it—I can't recall a meth offender ever being on my caseload.
This shows the major challenge Beijing is facing over the coronavirus even as the caseload itself comes under control.
The country's coronavirus caseload has skyrocketed — more than 41,000 people have been infected and more than 3,400 have died.
Ms. Acevedo quit her job after all of the separated children on her caseload were reunited with their parents.
"The caseload is growing, and the systems by which we would have supported them is diminishing," Ms. Collingwood said.
There was trouble within the Stop Stoning Forever campaign—divisions and disagreements among colleagues—even as its caseload grew.
Chief Boyce said Wednesday that about 40 of the city's 77 precincts needed additional help to meet caseload goals.
Long waits for care are the norm, and trauma, including gunshot wounds, is a big part of the caseload.
One who got hired this month was not experienced enough in criminal trials to take on a full caseload.
Hochhalter can barely handle the current caseload, so they would need at least three or four federal prosecutors, too.
Although the supreme court has given Mr Fachin extra manpower to deal with the massive caseload, that may take months.
The commission in a release said it reduced its caseload by 16 percent in the fiscal year that ended Sept.
And, despite a growing caseload from Iraq and Afghanistan, the staff at the Army Review Boards Agency has steadily shrunk.
There are financial incentives: A judge with senior status continues to get a full salary and can control their caseload.
As a point of reference, Chicago's immigration court, which has a comparable caseload, has twice the number of sitting judges.
Though the caseload was rising during that period, the court was shedding staff: They lost seven full-time permanent employees.
The Department of Justice's Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) faces the largest caseload in history, and is badly backlogged.
I've only just managed to secure a wholesaler who'll only let us buy if we order it by the caseload.
In 85033, voluntary probation accounted for 58 percent of the caseload of probation officers placed in Los Angeles County schools.
It's not easy for him to keep up with everyone, since he has an active caseload of nearly 60 clients.
In Kansas, implementing work requirements for able-bodied, childless adults effectively cut the state's food stamp caseload by three-quarters.
Despite the caseload, the office has one of the most timely and transparent surveillance and reporting systems in the country.
The confirmed Covid-19 caseload has risen rapidly day to day, but here's where things stood as of March 15.
Many of the parents of children on her caseload ended up being deported, ending any hope of a quick reunion.
But even its relatively luxurious medical infrastructure is straining to keep up with a caseload that's doubling every four days.
We're covering Europe's soaring coronavirus caseload, calls to cancel the Tokyo Olympics, and how to host a virtual cocktail hour.
A drop in her caseload has allowed her to begin taking a select number of clients off the wait list.
Rather, the Republicans argued that the District of Columbia Circuit's caseload was so meager that the judgeships should be eliminated.
New York declared a state of emergency, as the state's caseload rose to 105 on Sunday from 89 on Saturday.
It paints a grim picture: the caseload in the US (red) is growing at a rate that mirrors Italy's (black).
The growing caseload diverts the child welfare agency's attention from children and families in real need of support and care.
By 2014, IRAP had two dozen law school chapters and more than 50 law firms tackling a fast-growing caseload.
In nearly two decades the court has won only four convictions, and its caseload has consisted mainly of African leaders.
"My caseload went up from 22017 to 45, to almost 70," one former probation officer in Greater Manchester tells me.
Depending on the caseload and the particulars of their cases, they'll spend anywhere from 20 to 393 minutes with each client.
He's been on the bench since 1987 and took senior status — meaning he can take on a reduced caseload — in 2007.
Global impact With the caseload in Europe approaching 33,000, concerns are growing that the outbreak is past the point of containment.
She is an incredibly well-credentialed attorney with extensive litigation experience, more than equipped to take over the office's public caseload.
Dozens of lawmakers and aides say their offices have been increasingly moving in that direction as the U.S. caseload mounts. Rep.
The high infection rate raises questions about the safety of using ships to expand hospital capacity as the US caseload surges.
Before a change of course, the US needs to come up with more gear and reduce the overall caseload, Inglesby said.
They have a small caseload – only eight at a time – and meet with their clients one to two times a week.
Dozens of countries and international organizations sent health workers and supplies to help hospitals straining to keep up with the caseload.
But patients with upper-respiratory tract infections, pneumonia and skin conditions such as scabies represent the largest share of his caseload.
Eric Simmons, a social worker at one of the nonprofits, Bronx Community Solutions, typically manages a caseload of about 60 defendants.
We need an office with the resources and independence to handle a 50-state caseload, regardless of the party in power.
It also would likely help alleviate the caseload at San Diego and El Paso immigration courts, which have been taking these cases.
The judge's discretion in managing her caseload and the court's "busy docket" weren't legally adequate reasons to dismiss the case, Sessions wrote.
We build software to help police departments prioritize caseload and identify and recover trafficking victims and victims of sexual exploitation of children.
But whereas the number of burglaries has dwindled, officers face a growing caseload of complicated crimes such as fraud and sexual offences.
I mean, we had been accustomed to handling a caseload in the 30s and sometimes in the 40s for misdemeanors every day.
This is a new virus, and best clinical practices about how to treat the growing caseload of infections is scarce and evolving.
Experts say Italy's total confirmed caseload, 1493,2149, could double by the end of the month and surpass China's official tally of 2767,2200.
No, it isn't a caseload of Echo Falls, sadly, but they do a great deal on those down at Majestic Wine anyway.
And then we concluded that it was too fuzzy, in light of our caseload to, in fact, be able to take it.
The agency also announced that it would only hold hearings for those currently detained by ICE officials, a significant drawback in caseload.
More than 1,250 other church members have reported potential symptoms, health officials said, raising the possibility that the nation's caseload could skyrocket.
The young lawyer was brought on to help with a growing caseload that included work for a marquee client, the National Rifle Association.
In some large public hospitals the Medicaid caseload, combined with those who have no insurance whatsoever, account for over half of all admissions.
IHAT's caseload of allegations is now 10 times what it was when the inquiry was first launched — and it's expected to keep rising.
But in December 2015 doctors there noticed their caseload was rising and realised that they had an epidemic on their hands (see article).
Even if a new justice is installed, it probably will be too late to see any real increase in the Court's current caseload.
Last week, the unit added two detectives to bring the total to 21, in order to help with the caseload, Lieutenant McGrath said.
Nationally, the average school counselor had a 464-student caseload during the 2015-16 school year, according to the American School Counselor Association.
I work at an agency with a stressful caseload, but where most of us are committed to doing our best for our clients.
A large part of the Supreme Court's mounting caseload stems from increasingly contentious conflicts between the legislative and executive branches and the states.
"There are others among us who've had similar concerns, just for what their experience in terms of the caseload has been," she said.
For special educators, for instance, Wilson said it's easy to add one's entire caseload to Schoolwork and have progress reports at the ready anytime.
But in New Orleans, where I am in charge of the public defender's office, we simply don't have enough lawyers to handle the caseload.
The retail giant Walmart is restructuring its law department, and a raft of changes have unsettled some insiders responsible for handling its massive caseload.
Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said he believed the newly fortified unit would nearly quadruple its caseload, investigating as many as 231,2125 crashes each year.
Several hospitals in New York are already overwhelmed as the city's caseload exploded past 25,000 last week, Business Insider's Lydia Ramsey reported on Friday.
Meanwhile, the caseload in New York City spiraled out of control, overwhelming hospitals and cementing New York as the epicenter of the U.S. epidemic.
More than 36 other church members have reported potential symptoms, health officials said, raising the possibility that the nation's caseload could soon skyrocket further.
More than 22014,2300 other church members have reported potential symptoms, health officials said, raising the possibility that the nation's caseload could soon skyrocket further.
I have been working in the trenches of the mental health care system for a caseload of several hundred veterans these past seven years.
But although his celebrity clients attract a disproportionate amount of media coverage, they represent less than 211 percent of Mr. Sitrick's caseload, he said.
The Manitoba Interfaith Immigration Council in Winnipeg has seen its refugee claimant caseload increase fivefold in the past year, said executive director Rita Chahal.
The administration still feels a need for more dramatic immediate deterrents, apparently believing that a full catch-up to the existing caseload will take years.
FRStat is the first crossover from theory to practice, made possible by the flexibility, funding, and relatively low caseload at the Department of Defense lab.
Though a minority of those entering, because of its longer duration this group made up the majority of the AFDC caseload at any given time.
The caseload in the U.S. is growing quickly this summer amid a fierce political debate over how to fund a national response to the virus.
Although the island's official count of diagnosed cases is only in the hundreds, Dr. Rullán said he believed the real caseload was closer to 80,000.
The Justice Department has instructed immigration judges to take on a higher daily caseload amid the agency's backlog of cases, according to a new report.
Walton did not provide a timeline as to when he might issue a decision, saying that he is facing a "heavy" caseload at the moment.
And with these significant changes came one more identified deficiency: There simply weren't enough bureau managers at headquarters to handle oversight of the shifting caseload.
Flattening the curveAt issue is whether the US caseload will grow at an exponential rate, like Italy's, or flatten out somewhat over time, like China's.
If federal courts were suffering a caseload crisis, there would be nothing attractive about being a federal judge, and judges would be departing in droves.
Although the prospective caseload may seem substantial, it is small relative to the more than 50,000 fighters the agency reintegrated over the past 14 years.
Because the court has two vacancies, the weighted caseload per active judge is more than 28503, which compares poorly with the nationwide average of 22019.
As the US caseload starts to spike, health experts say it's important for the CDC to begin monitoring cases without a connection to outbreaks abroad.
Until the county could find a replacement, Cleveland would have to pick up his cases, even though the office was already pushing NAME's caseload limit.
Of that caseload, 21 have been confirmed in a laboratory, 21 are regarded as probable Ebola cases, and four patients are suspected of having Ebola.
Government auditors estimate that in 10 years, the SNAP caseload would shrink by about 1.2 million people in an average month if the bill becomes law.
To make matters worse, the law gave states a "caseload reduction credit," which reduces the work requirement for states that see their welfare rolls fall substantially.
Though clinics that treat gender dysphoria—distress caused by a mismatch between felt and perceived gender identity—report a soaring caseload, transgender people are still rare.
Zika has spread to many countries in the Americas, though Brazil bears the heaviest caseload, with estimates of 440,000 to 1.3 million infected as of December.
Immigration judges have faced an overwhelming caseload under the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" policy mandating the prosecution of all migrants suspected of illegally crossing the border.
And the caseload for child and adolescent psychiatric teams has increased by more than half in five years: from 473,900 in 2011 to 28,2000 in 21.
When the family of the twelve-year-old first approached him, in November, Afshar had demurred; he had a full caseload and retirement on the horizon.
The potential impact of Mr. Sessions's zero-tolerance policy toward immigration has been of particular concern to judges who are already grappling with a large caseload.
This week the confirmed caseload jumped from 309 to at least 2,170 cases in 49 states, as well as the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.
The decreased caseload marks a dramatic change in approach for the primary DOJ division devoted to investigating accusations of racial, ethnic, and other forms of bias.
Justice Department spokesperson Kelly Laco declined to comment on the apparent drop in caseload or provide information on the number of active investigations or new cases.
This year's caseload is 210 percent higher than at this time last year, and with more hot, rainy months ahead, the figure is destined to increase.
New Jersey follows in the country with the second-highest caseload at 11,124 confirmed infections while Connecticut has just 1,524 confirmed cases, according to John Hopkins.
By then, two nurse practitioners at the Marshalltown clinic will be licensed to prescribe buprenorphine, taking over her caseload and, she hopes, allowing it to grow.
Although technically semiretired, Judge Kravitch continued to serve on the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals until 2015, handling a full caseload well into her late 80s.
Other close friends, however, suggested she may have struggled with the pressure that came with a heavy caseload and other responsibilities, such as her speaking engagements.
"This can already be considered a threat to the entire nation," Mr. Pokrovsky said, noting that the caseload is increasing by about 10 percent a year.
First, an automatic continuing resolution must stipulate that, in the absence of appropriations bills, spending would continue at the same level — adjusted for inflation and caseload.
A spokesman for the national prosecution authority declined to respond to Arias´ claims of improper prosecution, and said his caseload had been transferred to other prosecutors.
Federal courts sentenced 2,300 fewer offenders to probation in 85033 than in 1980, even though their caseload nearly tripled during that span, The Pew Charitable Trusts found.
I have a caseload of clients with developmental disabilities, breaking down barriers and figuring out how to get them employment, get them out into communities and active.
Janot, for instance, said Dodge's office has filed far less paperwork with Brazil's Supreme Court than would have been expected given the caseload when she took over.
Iran, epicentre of the flu-like disease in the Middle East, saw its caseload grow by 21,20.3067 to more than 10,000, while its death toll reached 429.
Because health care infrastructure is sized to meet the population—393,000 people live in Orleans Parish—New Orleans' soaring caseload could easily overwhelm an already strained system.
Stevens said that pediatricians often refer families to her, as their caseload does not permit the type of individualized behavioral coaching that a sleep consultant can provide.
"How can a social worker not notice when a five-year-old boy on her caseload disappears?" the O.C.A. asked, in a report filed in January, 2014.
Love their understanding of my duty as a mother and knowing I'll still bend over backwards to protect the other 29 kids on my caseload right now.
But opportunistic or abusive claims are unfortunately numerous in the current caseload, particularly among people who seek asylum after having been in the United States for a while.
But detectives interviewed by The Trace and BuzzFeed News, most on the condition of anonymity to protect their jobs, all had the same theory: too high a caseload.
Defense attorney Stephen Crimmins of Murphy & McGonigle said commissioners might be agreeing quickly because their heavy caseload does not allow enough time for deep study of each case.
The review took place in November and December of last year, and focused on the time period from 2014-2017, when the Baltimore Immigration Court caseload nearly quadrupled.
The answer is the reemergence of the Federal Arbitration Act, a nearly century-old statute designed to promote private arbitration and help ease the caseload of federal courts.
The first hearing dates are not until June, Handfield says, because the courts are backed up and there are not enough lawyers or judges to handle the caseload.
As we ramp up the number of tests performed in the United States, we may find that our caseload is only a week or so behind the Italians.
Greece and the Czech Republic announced that all schools and universities would close, though each country's caseload is in the dozens, far fewer than some of their neighbors.
The immigration courts are currently authorized to hire up to 384 judges, but to address the backlog and create a manageable caseload, they need more like 600 judges.
For example, he says that my court, the 11th Circuit in Atlanta, optimally should have 56 judges, even though we expeditiously administer our current caseload with 12 judges.
The big question the growing caseload and these travelers raise — arguably the most important question about this outbreak — is whether the virus is spreading from person to person.
It also means emergency operations capabilities, which allows you to estimate caseload and send out rapid response teams to find cases, trace them back, isolate, and stop spread.
Refugees fleeing in historic numbers – particularly the Syrian caseload – are destabilizing neighboring countries, changing the domestic politics of U.S. allies and threatening the integrity of the European project.
Here's what she wrote in September 2017, after the Labor Department asked the public to comment on the revised overtime rule: I have 60 children on my caseload.
Ultimately, Dr. Satchi signed a contract with Mama Mia Pediatrics in northern Las Vegas, a working-class area that has been struggling to handle a swelling patient caseload.
It will also include county-level data about the daily number of people being held in a given jail pre-trial, for instance, or a court's annual misdemeanor caseload.
At Choices Medical Services, Schrage has watched the caseload grow from five cases to 217 in the first quarter of 282 alone compared with the same period last year.
Officials cited a high caseload to explain why they had failed to investigate hundreds of cases, which, in some instances, left dozens of underage rape victims high and dry.
USCIS says it is working to put in place "enhancements in training and technology" to deal with the added caseload and also transition some of the case management procedures.
"I have to write IEPs for my caseload, give input for other students' IEPs, figure out what skills or concepts my kids need to be addressed in," Kay said.
To handle the expanded caseload, Dearborn County officials spent $11.5 million to double the size of the local jail and approved $11 million more to expand the county courthouse.
A large aquarium filled with koi runs across the back wall, by a black steel staircase leading to a downstairs lounge where Fiji water is served by the caseload.
Local newspaper Corriere della Sera reported that Italy's death toll has reached 475,405 — an uptick of 427 deaths from a day prior — while its caseload has surged to 41,035.
Texas lost 7.4 percent of WIC participants — and some offices in heavily Spanish-speaking communities there say they are considering laying off employees because of the drastically decreasing caseload.
But his thinking evolved as the American coronavirus caseload soared past 1,600 this week, with public health officials warning the country to expect a spike in the coming days.
We're covering the surging coronavirus caseload in Europe and the United States, Joe Biden's victories in the latest Democratic primaries, and how to score goals in the Champions League.
The ABA model act conveys, among other things, that children should have well-trained, client-directed attorneys and that attorneys should have reasonable caseload limits to ensure quality representation.
Only a sliver of the caseload concerns sexual or marital disputes, he argues, and only jirgas in illiterate backwaters produce the sort of decisions that end up making shocking headlines.
Epidemics normally decline as quickly as they arise, so the peak of the disease - which is spread by contaminated food and water - should be roughly half the eventual total caseload.
Third, while poor nations continue to bear the overwhelming brunt of the world's refugee caseload, wealthy nations are simultaneously stepping back from their commitments to resettle the most vulnerable refugees.
During the 2015-16 school year, there were 110 family-assistance workers responsible for helping the 32,16 students in city shelters — giving them an average caseload of 000 children each.
Florida health officials are stepping up their fight against the Zika virus as the number of locally transmitted cases rises to 2628, doubling the caseload from 28500 days ago. Gov.
S.C.I.S. continues to adjudicate the pending naturalization caseload, which skyrocketed under the Obama administration, more than doubling from 303,230 in September 225 to nearly 2725,000 by the beginning of 2017.
New vacancies will continue to open up as judges reach retirement age and become eligible to take senior status, meaning they can still get their salary but take a reduced caseload.
For instance, WFP has a certain caseload of, say, a million people they serve in South Sudan for a monthly ration of so much kilo calories for a family of five.
Read: Being a kid is a "negative factor" under Trump's new immigration rule As the court's caseload mounted, the number of sitting judges stayed the same, fluctuating between four and five.
My caseload included a 6-year-old girl, Cathy, who as an infant was placed on a farm in the care of an elderly woman also caring for another foster child.
Even temporary assistance for needy families falls short, as states are required to engage only 50 percent of their able bodied temporary assistance for needy families caseload with the work requirements.
He'll first have to stuff them into the bottleneck of the immigration courts, where there are too few judges and lawyers for a swollen caseload, and fill detention cells to bursting.
At best that means disruption of ordinary life will continue well into the spring; at worst, it could mean chaotic scenes of hospitals overrun as the caseload and death roll rise.
The administrative machinery of the court — which generally consists of a few clerks in addition to court officers and judges — clearly was not constructed with this sort of caseload in mind.
In 2000, Democrats added three seats to the Court of Appeals, arguing that the court's caseload justified the expansion, but also setting a precedent that Republicans are now eager to reverse.
That will mean time to focus back on his own caseload, which includes more than a dozen Camp Fire-related deaths, and to cope with the sense of loss he's been avoiding.
So, if you're poor and you don't have money, you get a public defender that's overwhelmed, has a caseload of way too many people and is going to plea-bargain you out.
For Anastasia*, one of the biggest frustrations in her job at a health care nonprofit isn't her caseload, it's finding the stamina to attend the obligatory luncheons, birthday parties, and holiday shindigs.
However, the total NHS caseload at BMI Healthcare dropped by 4.4 percent year-on-year for the 5 months to the end of February due to "stringent demand management strategies" Netcare said.
In 2010 the public defender's office of Orleans Parish (coterminous with the city) employed 78 lawyers; since its budget fell by a third, it has 42, for an annual caseload of 20133,000.
FBI Director Christopher Wray said at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing earlier this month that white supremacist-related cases now make up the majority of the agency's caseload for domestic terror arrests.
The Navy's caseload has grown as the Justice Department has handed it cases that can't be prosecuted in civilian court but may be offenses in the military justice system, the Post reported.
The opening brief, an opposition brief and a reply would total about 2500,214 words, which means each judge would be reading about 2000 million words connected to his or her annual caseload.
This will have the unfortunate effect of requiring the ITC to handle a larger caseload, diverting its resources away from other trade priorities and diverting the Commission away from its intended mission.
His year as a clerk, beginning in the summer of 1993, gave Judge Gorsuch a privileged look at the court's workings and a crash course in its unrelenting caseload and internal politics.
"One experienced lawyer in the St. Louis City office stated that more and more clients are saying, 'I feel sorry for you because you have such a high caseload,'" the 2009 report concluded.
The crippling of the health and sanitation systems has enabled cholera to take hold with unprecedented speed, with about 650,000 people infected since late April, five times the global cholera caseload in 2016.
" Mattingly said the memo offers "short-term solutions to manage the growing caseload with the resources the agency has available," and that the new priorities reflect "the present state of the immigration system.
In an open letter to the governor, Public Defender Director Michael Barrett says funding for his office has been "repeatedly cut," and that the caseload exceeds the budget to hire additional public defenders.
So did GIs during World War II; the War Department bought them by the caseload and sent them to Europe and the Pacific because they didn&apost melt and seldom broke during shipping.
The caseload of all levels of courts went up significantly following the recent reforms, while changes to judicial procedure in 2014 had already declared that judges should bear "lifetime responsibility for case quality".
When a lawyer from the canvassing board in Palm Beach County said they had made a decision because they were worried about being sued, Walker jumped in with a joke about his caseload.
In a given year, judges complete only about 35 percent of their caseload—which means that even if no new cases are added, it will take years to get through the existing ones.
On the Continent alone, the caseload rose in Italy to 903,858 from 3,089; in Germany to 2000 from 280; in France to 220 from 228; and in the Netherlands to 22018 from 21980.
As the state's coronavirus caseload has increased, so has the criticism of DeSantis, making him an inevitable target for Biden in a state Trump must carry in order to win the White House.
Andrew Cuomo demanded the federal government take dramatic action to send thousands of stockpiled ventilators immediately to his state first, saying the Empire State's immense coronavirus caseload threatened catastrophe in days without it.
Globally, the total caseload has now passed 380,000, with more than 16,500 deaths, according to figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking figures from the World Health Organization and additional sources.
Japan issued travel warnings against Britain, China, the United States and other countries this morning, amid a surging coronavirus caseload and calls for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to declare a state of emergency.
Early signals from New York and Seattle are alarming: both cities are already reporting intensive care unit bed shortages and looming ventilator shortages, weeks before the estimated peak of the projected coronavirus caseload.
Then last fall, the Missouri Supreme Court justices disciplined an attorney with a large caseload they said risked client neglect and later told a public defender she must ask permission before denying additional cases.
At the end of 224, the court had 2142,113 pending cases, and by December 211 the pending caseload jumped to 211,22018, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse database, or TRAC, at Syracuse University.
The state's judicial districts have the nation's highest caseloads, and the Judicial Conference of the United States says Texas needs at least nine new judgeships to meet the growing federal criminal and civil caseload.
"The problem has always been that is has a very large and somewhat unwieldy geographic area and caseload, so the question is whether there's an effective way to deal with those appeals," he said.
"EOIR is pleased with the results of the surge of immigration judges to detention facilities and the potential impact it has on the pending caseload nationwide," said acting Director James McHenry in a statement.
The cardinal's evocation of mercy can just as easily be seen as an attempt to clean the archdiocese's abuse caseload and balance sheets against the day that bill, the Child Victims Act, becomes law.
In a statement, the Walmart spokesman Randy Hargrove said Walmart's caseload would not be adversely affected by the restructuring, and that one reason for the changes was to better support the company's legal needs.
It requires expanded training of public defenders; the presence of a lawyer at a defendant's first court appearance, where a judge takes a plea and sets bail; and the establishment of reasonable caseload standards.
Since other parts of the federal government frequently refer civil rights cases to the Justice Department for prosecution, the lower caseload could be partly due to reduced activity outside of the civil rights division.
Bryan Gee of Idaho State University says a large proportion of his caseload as a pediatric occupational therapist is children on the autism spectrum, and sleep is a big concern for many of them.
There have been bigger application spikes in the past, such as in 2007, when the caseload swelled to 1.4 million and the agency was able to work through the backlog by the following year.
While the crisis of criminal defense is usually cast in terms of caseload, very few people acknowledge that public defenders often abandon their ethical and professional obligations because there is no consequence to doing so.
Steven Chester, who served from 2011 to 2014 as deputy assistant administrator in EPA's enforcement office, said the fiscal 2017 caseload may only reflect the Trump administration's desire to finish those cases started by Obama.
This chart, adapted by my colleagues Dylan Scott and Rani Molla from work by John Burn-Murdoch of the Financial Times, compares how the confirmed caseload in each country has evolved since the 100th case.
Under a program called Adult Home Plus, some residents were assigned a "care coordinator" with a caseload capped at 12 to meet with them four times a month and wrangle the myriad services and providers.
If Evans leaves her apartment's premises, her temperature is taken Even now as cases of coronavirus decline in China, Evans' life doesn't look much different than a few weeks ago when the caseload was growing. 
Limiting the rate of case increase will be key in ensuring that the US health care system — which is already stressed due to a difficult flu season — has time to prepare for a similar caseload.
In order for the Court to keep pace with its considerable caseload and projected workload increase, the Court has the immediate need for swift action by the President and Congress to fill the vacant judgeships.
Former members of the EPA's Criminal Investigation Division told the AP that the reason for the decreased caseload stemmed not from a lack of leads, but rather a lack of resources to pursue those leads.
But he said the Constitutional Court - which has recently been bogged down by an increased caseload - may have been a good choice if Ponce's intent was to stall the sale of Nutrien's stake to Tianqi.
And with a caseload too big for the full-time public defenders to keep up with, Michael Barrett found just the one: Jay Nixon, Missouri's Democratic governor, who has continually cut the budget for the department.
The decision, which comes under SFO Director Lisa Osofsky who took the helm last August pledging to review the agency's caseload, weed out weaker cases and propel others forward, underlines the difficulties of prosecuting senior executives.
Read: Jeff Sessions wants to remove immigration judges who aren't deporting people fast enough Baltimore's immigration court is relatively small, but it has been operating with a caseload similar to that of a large immigration court.
The impact: Immigration courts have seen their caseload expand by almost 100,000 during the current fiscal year as a result of the Trump administration's policies, significantly adding to a backlog that began during the Obama years.
India's coronavirus caseload is relatively low, at around 500, but officials fear that if the virus hits as it has in the U.S., Europe and China, it may become a far bigger disaster than anywhere else.
As the coronavirus caseload rises in states across the country, the lack of statewide action is drawing more alarms from mayors and other municipal leaders, including some elected Republicans, in the red states' biggest metropolitan areas.
Finally, Mr. Carrillo said, the sheer volume of issues the attorney general's office deals with means that while battles with the federal government might be more attention-grabbing, they're actually a sliver of the office's caseload.
That is especially true in light of my diverse caseload at the Court, which includes a variety of pending matters that might appeal to different judicial ideologies, or that have no clear ideological angle at all.
Expedited Removal Proceedings Section 235(b)(21625) of the Immigration and Nationality Act was supposed to reduce the immigration court's caseload by restricting asylum hearings to aliens who have a credible fear of persecution or torture.
The US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit -- known as the DC Circuit and dubbed the country's "second highest court" -- handles a distinctive caseload testing the power of federal regulators and the executive branch.
In a decision last month, Sessions mandated that immigration judges increase their daily caseload to a minimum of three hearings per day, a move that was criticized at the time as "micro-managing" the jobs of judges.
It is also a busy federal district with a diverse and bustling caseload that happens to sit across the river from the media capital of the country, so its judges' rulings receive a level of national attention.
If suddenly on April 13 lots and lots of people head back to work -- many of whom may be asymptomatic carriers of the virus -- it's a near certainty that the caseload will go higher, maybe much higher.
The findings have not been made public, but a person familiar with the review said that OSHA's San Francisco office, which handled the bulk of the Wells Fargo complaints, faced a particularly high caseload-to-staff ratio.
Over the last 20 years, the national TANF average monthly caseload has fallen by almost two-thirds — from 4.4 million families in 1996 to 1.6 million families in 2014, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
However, just weeks after the new manual took effect, Congress allocated $8.5 million more in funding to the Office for Civil Rights, which Ms. DeVos had sought to cut, in order for the office to manage its caseload.
This means these officers can do more than shuffle the files of 100 people on their caseload and instead provide interventions such as motivational interviewing that addresses the attitudes and behaviors of those most at risk to recidivate.
In the Central African country of Cameroon where I lived from 2007 to 2009, I worked with two doctors, barely out of their 20s, who managed a caseload of 203 HIV positive children out of two tiny rooms.
During his time at the FBI, Mueller, who was sworn in as director shortly before the September 11 terrorist attacks, largely presided over the bureau's shift to counterterrorism operations that now dominate a significant portion of its caseload.
More than 60 percent of the latest deaths occurred in the northern region of Lombardy, whose hospitals have been reeling under a staggering caseload that has left intensive care beds hard to find and respirators in dire supply.
America's Covid-19 death toll now passes 2,800 and the caseload exceeds 157,200 cases, But through much of the time that the number of cases was growing, the White House offered no coherent national response to the crisis.
By comparison, the US caseload is fairly small: As of Saturday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said there were 22 confirmed and presumed positive cases in the US, not counting cases in which people were repatriated.
Here's what she wrote in September 2017, after the Labor Department asked the public to comment on the revised overtime rule: I have 60 children on my caseload ... I am accountable to greater than 180 people every day.
And while the AFDC's caseload never became majority black—250 percent of AFDC families were nonblack—the face of poverty in popular media had become black, allowing Taylor to represent a group toward which white Americans were growing resentful.
The combined global caseload stands at 25,123 as of Monday morning, with the death toll passing 2127,271, according to figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking cases reported by the World Health Organization (WHO) and additional sources.
As of Saturday afternoon, 2628,28503 people in the U.S. have been diagnosed with COVID-22020 and 51 have died, though many testing kits have not yet become widely available, leading some experts to estimate the caseload is much higher.
And while the state's high caseload has put him on the front lines — and the front page — he may ultimately be judged by the final toll of the crisis, which he has said could last six months or more.
However, Fauci also said that President Donald Trump was no longer considering a quarantine on New York, New Jersey and Connecticut — despite its increasing caseload — and had instead issued a travel advisory for the region surrounding New York City.
Despite receiving record levels of asylum claims this year, Mexico's Refugee Commission (COMAR) currently faces its lowest budget in seven years, and the caseload of asylum seekers so far this year already amounts to more than twice last year's number.
Europe could be next In Europe, where countries are enacting strict shutdowns to try to bring the rapidly escalating caseload under control, such cash transfers would be unprecedented, according to Carsten Brzeski, chief eurozone economist at the Dutch bank ING.
The staggering caseload in Italy topped 24,700, even as the entire country has been locked down for a week, an escalation that is only likely to increase, raising urgent questions about how overloaded hospitals, particularly the hard-hit north, will cope.
There are exceptions, but Republican leaders have been far more likely to resist the most aggressive social distancing measures, emboldened by President Donald Trump's initial rosy outlook and a smaller early caseload in their more rural communities across middle America.
As a result, Democratic appointees in active service — that is, not counting senior judges who usually carry less than a full caseload and whose assumption of senior status creates a vacancy — constitute just over half of the district and circuit courts.
And yet, other close friends, like Marilyn Mobley, an official at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, said that Judge Abdus-Salaam had a heavy caseload and was in demand as a speaker and may have had trouble handling the pressure.
Democrats point to Waverly as a case in point of their concerns: Nominated 14 months ago, the Nashville attorney was expected to fill a seat on a court facing a "judicial crisis" because the caseload is too large for the judges to handle.
At Walter Reed, where most of our patients were combat-injured active duty soldiers and marines — young men in their 20s with crew cuts — the therapists had gotten into the habit of identifying our patients by their injuries when discussing our caseload.
Another option is the Open Path Psychotherapy Collective, a national collective of providers who leave room on their caseload for patients that pay between $30 and $50 per session (up to $80 for couples therapy), plus a $49 one-time membership fee.
In remarks on the Trump administration's immigration priorities in December, he specifically noted the increased caseload in the immigration court, delays in completing removal proceedings, and the Obama administration's policy of closing cases with no resolution on removability or relief from removal.
But in September, Moorer was officially nominated for Alabama's Southern District, in Mobile, making way for Brett Talley, one of Trump's more controversial choices, to be offered the seat in the capital with an arguably more significant caseload, including voter redistricting challenges.
" Public health officials are united in arguing that eliminating as much person-to-person interaction as possible is necessary to control how quickly the coronavirus spreads so that the health care system can manage the caseload — what's being called "flattening the curve.
So far this year, more than 166,000 cases of the flu have been reported through September, a sharp increase from 91,000 for all of last year and more than double the average caseload in the last five years, according to the Immunization Coalition.
The reforms included lower caseload limits and better training for overworked lawyers in those counties; and the assurance that every defendant is represented by a lawyer at his or her first court appearance, where the judge takes a plea and sets bail.
"Given the Arizona Bar proceedings involving Mr. Martinez, I felt it was important to assign him a caseload that would be more flexible and allow him to take time when needed to focus on resolving these complaints," a statement from Chief Deputy Rachel Mitchell said.
Doctors treating addicts with drugs like buprenorphine will now have to provide information on their annual caseload of patients by month, the number of patients provided behavioral health services and referred to behavioral health services, and the features of the practitioner's diversion control plan.
If the Trump administration abides by the Flores settlement — and for now, they aren't saying they plan to violate the agreement — then families would need to be released after 20 days as they wait for a backlogged immigration system to work through its caseload.
The government generates mountains of data — on migrants arriving, families assembling at the border, requests for asylum, the caseload of applicants, overtime worked by border patrol agents, the cost of deploying National Guard troops to the border, attempted crossings intercepted, cases of disease, and more.
Doctors treating addicts with drugs like buprenorphine will now have to provide information on their annual caseload of patients by month, the number of patients provided or referred to behavioral health services, and steps they are taking to prevent drugs they prescribe from being misused.
As the country's coronavirus caseload has skyrocketed — more than 15,000 people have been infected and at least 1,000 have died — healthcare workers on the front lines are confronting a worst-case confluence of a contagious new virus, an aging population, and shortage of hospital beds.
Story at a glance In a response to the large caseload of coronavirus patients confirmed and emerging on the U.S. West Coast, five University of California medical centers are in the process of launching in-house testing for the coronavirus that causes COVID-19.
In the elementary school, 60 percent of students are below the poverty line, and the school had to hire many support staff members, including a social worker whose caseload swelled to 40 this year, to help students and families meet basic needs and manage hardships.
With California Attorney General Xavier Becerra's penchant for challenging Trump's agenda, the 9th Circuit's caseload of liberal causes isn't likely to shrink, said Chris Kang of the liberal group Demand Justice, who oversaw the selection and vetting of judicial nominees in the Obama White House.
Directors of the local centers have managed this caseload with the tools they have, in part by seeing to it that would-be clients get educational materials or online resources right away, to give them something to study while they wait for an appointment.
Structurally, to give the inspector general and Department of Public Integrity a critical mass of personnel and ongoing caseload, Congress could begin by transferring into it the Public Integrity Section of the Justice Department, which currently handles federal criminal investigations and prosecutions involving state and local governments.
Meanwhile, the number of US infections raced up to at least 0003,900, including 70 deaths, up more than 500 cases in a day and up from a caseload of 457 a week ago, showing how the crisis, which may not reach its peak for weeks, is accelerating.
So he cited the 20133 testimony from Ron Haskins, a George H.W. Bush welfare reform adviser who once spoke highly of the 1996 reforms to TANF — which added work requirements and fundamentally altered the funding structures of the program — for prompting a decline in the caseload.
Although the Supreme Court is the highest court in the land, its caseload, which was not huge to begin with, has become even smaller in recent years — declining from about 150 cases a term in 1980 to just 79 in the term that ended in June.
In addition, the bipartisan Child Welfare Oversight and Accountability Act was introduced in 2017, proposing enhanced enforcement of child welfare law, strengthening reporting requirements for child maltreatment fatalities, requiring multidisciplinary public annual reports on fatalities, and encouraging states to adopt guidelines for caseworker training and caseload limits.
"This message is to notify you that, in response to shifting priorities and the continued influx of cases at the Southwest Border, both the Newark Asylum Office and the Sub Office in Boston will be diverting a greater number of staff to the APSO caseload," the letter stated.
ATLANTA — Faced with the United States' surging coronavirus caseload and mounting public fears, college sports executives have discussed in recent days whether to reduce the number of venues at which games are played during the N.C.A.A. men's and women's basketball tournaments that begin in less than two weeks.
But after noticing that none of the major dollar-store players had their websites well configured for online retailing (Dollar Tree, for example, sells items by the caseload), serial entrepreneurs David Yeom and Brian Lee hatched up the idea for Hollar, an online dollar store that launched late last year.
Out of more than 22008,21999 active and senior federal judges (those who receive a full salary but take a reduced caseload), 16 percent will be 80 or older by the end of 2017, and 39 will be at least 90, according to a database provided by the Federal Judicial Center.
If Little had died, his case would have been assigned to one of Baltimore's homicide detectives, who generally get around eight cases per year — nearly triple the optimal caseload for a homicide unit, which needs the bandwidth to painstakingly comb through intelligence and canvass the streets for evidence and witnesses.
An executive memo just released by Attorney General Jeff SessionsJefferson (Jeff) Beauregard SessionsDOJ should take action against China's Twitter propaganda Lewandowski says he's 'happy' to testify before House panel The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy MORE promises to reduce the crushing caseload in immigration courts nationwide.
After the resignation of Eric T. Schneiderman, who quit his job on Monday amid allegations of physical assault, she inherits the agency's sprawling caseload — much of its most notable efforts directed at the White House — while also needing to restore calm to an office unnerved by its sudden brush with scandal.
According to a backgrounder on Trump's plan to deal with the backlog, the immigration court had a backlog of 28500,6900 cases as of December 2628, and the pace of caseload increases is accelerating: Trump's plan is to more fully utilize immigration court resources and increase the number of immigration judges.
Like SPS, the organization's caseload is climbing: The SBHK is even preparing to handle the influx of youth-in-crisis by bringing counselors from the hotline to chat apps, developing an app for cell phones and tablets with a chatroom function, and creating an animated AI (an animated robot) training package for schools.
The settlement agreement includes an elaborate fraud detection system, in which the independent claims administrator, BrownGreer, audits not only a random sample of 10 percent of all filings but also any claims that contain warning signs of fraud, like a diagnosis by a doctor with a suspiciously heavy caseload of NFL retirees.
While he said his 234-person staff is "nearing its limits" with the present caseload, Lauber encouraged other countries to reach out to Switzerland for assistance as he seeks to undo Switzerland's reputation as a place to hide illicit money in the country's famed banks - and return it to its rightful owners.
And the memo does have a scholarly cast, consisting of a lengthy discourse about a purported "caseload crisis" that has led judges to take quality-compromising procedural shortcuts like delegating work to staff members, omitting oral argument, and writing casual "unpublished" opinions that decide the case at hand without setting a precedent for other cases.
Under Mr. Lipsey, the Sun Newspapers, in the Omaha area, won the Pulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting (a category since discontinued) in 1973 for disclosing that Boys Town was still soliciting contributions even though it had accrued hundreds of millions of dollars in assets and its caseload of abandoned and handicapped youngsters had shrunk.
Lichter says that given their caseload and the amount of time it takes to get into and out of Artesia, the only way they've been able to do this work at all is that they're able to have computers and a mobile printer/copier on hand to type up notes, print out documents, and fact-check clients' claims.
"In determining an appropriate refugee ceiling for 2019, the administration will consider the entire humanitarian caseload, legal and illegal — including asylum-seeking refugees, non-asylum seeking refugees and other categories such as special immigrant juveniles, unaccompanied alien minors, temporary protected status and other related programs," the official said in a statement, provided on the condition of anonymity because the deliberations were continuing.
The OCR's caseload has increased as awareness of campus sexual assault has grown, and in conjunction with a 2011 Dear Colleague letter from the OCR that informed schools that sexual violence, including rape, sexual assault, and sexual coercion, among other offenses, constituted sexual harassment under Title IX. According to the OCR's budget request for 2018, in 2009, the department received 11 complaints about sexual violence at colleges.

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