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"nonpaying" Definitions
  1. not making any payment : not required to pay
  2. not providing pay

35 Sentences With "nonpaying"

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

Together with nonpaying users, about 20 million use the service every month.
She was on the verge of stardom when she took this nonpaying gig.
"I'm sure I wasn't the only nonpaying customer," he said with a laugh at the time.
Landlords were stuck with nonpaying tenants, and they fear that new voucher programs could bring similar problems.
They also note that the NRCC helped many of the nonpaying members get elected in the first place.
But unions are still required by law to represent nonpaying workers at the bargaining table and in grievances at work.
The company has undertaken efforts to streamline guidelines for all of its stores surrounding how to engage with nonpaying patrons.
The company has also undertaken efforts to streamline guidelines for all of its stores surrounding how to engage with nonpaying patrons.
After a test run with about 1,500 nonpaying subscribers, the site and the classes will now come under scrutiny from paying customers.
Hospital emergency rooms have been forced to close, in part because so many poor, uninsured, nonpaying patients, including immigrants, are provided with free care.
In fact, Invitation Homes' securitized bond model assumed a 94 percent paying-occupancy rate, putting pressure on the company to evict nonpaying tenants right away.
The guidelines for employees at the Philadelphia store where the April incident happened were for employees to ask nonpaying guests to leave — not call the police.
Mr. Reitman has had three prestigious fellowships since he finished his Ph.D., the current one nonpaying, but fellowships are default positions for people who don't get jobs.
Among the nonpaying guests was Zhang Bin, president of the Beijing-based China Cultural Industry Association, a promotional agency under the control of China's minister of culture.
But he was saddled with nonpaying tenants, he said, and then later learned that the building was actually a one-family home that could not be subdivided.
The guidelines for employees at the Philadelphia store where the April incident happened were for employees to ask nonpaying guests to leave — not to call the police.
However, Starbucks' decision to open up its doors and patios to nonpaying customers drew complaints that Starbucks stores would turn into havens for drug users and the homeless.
The staff reportedly called 911 because Starbucks does "not allow nonpaying people from the public to come in and use the restroom," Philadelphia Police Commissioner Richard Ross told the Philadelphia Inquirer.
A manager reportedly called 911 because Starbucks does "not allow nonpaying people from the public to come in and use the restroom," Philadelphia Police Commissioner Richard Ross told the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Laszewski, who is an Obamacare opponent, said that would lead to hospitals dealing with many more uninsured people coming through their emergency rooms, and having to eat the costs of covering those nonpaying patients.
Three years ago, she publicly feuded with the company, apparently over its policy of making all music available even to nonpaying users; she pulled music from the platform and did not reinstate it until June.
In December, BuzzFeed News, Columbia Journalism Investigations, and ProPublica reported that Match Group had no policy in place to screen nonpaying members, and subsequently exposed users to registered sex offenders on most of its apps.
"A judge may sentence a nonpaying parent to jail and enter a judgment for past due child support," according to what Annette Hernandez,  director of communications at the Office of the Attorney General told People Chica.
One month before their wedding, the Detroit native left his six-figure job as General Motors vice president to work for a year to in the nonpaying role as head of the National Alliance of Businessmen.
In the same email, an Alabama state representative for the Knights warned McAtee's council that if it didn't cover the nonpaying member's dues, its members would all lose their benefits and the council would be suspended.
A spokesman for DC Water explained to WAMU that the company was within its rights to shut off water to any nonpaying customer, though adding that such an option was only taken as a last resort.
But when patients don't pay for their hospital care, those costs are shifted to government and private health insurers, who are charged higher rates by hospitals to make up for the losses they incur from nonpaying patients.
In the letters, membership records manager Kevin Brady tells McAtee that the Knights had changed its policy on quickly suspending nonpaying members out of consideration for people who couldn't pay dues for temporary reasons like military deployment or illness.
Eventually, another Western Pennsylvania native, Sal Sunseri, then the Michigan State linebackers and special-teams coach and now a linebackers coach for the Oakland Raiders, told McAdoo that he could assume some of the thankless, nonpaying, quasi-clerical duties in the football program.
Billboard will give the same weight to YouTube streams as it does to those from Apple, Spotify or any other platform: 1,250 clicks from a paying subscriber — or 3,750 clicks from a nonpaying user — are counted as the equivalent of one album sale.
And yes, this is a feature that you'll have to pay for — nonpaying users (like me) will see a "check read status" button in their conversations, but tapping on it just takes you to a page where you can sign up for a paid membership.
More orthodox physicians took him as an empiric. He prescribed enormous doses of drastic medicines to nonpaying patients, and, for dysentery, paper boiled in milk. The bookseller Henry Lemoine sold a "bug-water", to which Marryat lent his name.
The new site was auto-refreshed in real-time as new posts were created, and nonpaying members were at first permitted to start threads, but that quickly changed. The DataLounge webmaster explained in introducing the redesigned site that the transition was largely dictated by the effect of tabbed web browsing, which resulted in users constantly using their browsers' refresh function and overloading the servers, sending the site into constant Primetime mode. Shortly after launching V6, however, the webmaster reinstituted Primetime, in part due to a rapid proliferation of racist trolls. (DataLounge's anonymity has made it a troll target from the beginning, but the site has seen a significant uptick in disruptive/offensive posts over the past decade.) Another major site redesign was phased in during 2014 and 2015.
The study of collective action shows that public goods are still produced when one individual benefits more from the public good than it costs him to produce it; examples include benefits from individual use, intrinsic motivation to produce, and business models based on selling complementary goods. A group that contains such individuals is called a privileged group. A historical example could be a downtown entrepreneur who erects a street light in front of his shop to attract customers; even though there are positive external benefits to neighboring nonpaying businesses, the added customers to the paying shop provide enough revenue to cover the costs of the street light. The existence of privileged groups may not be a complete solution to the free rider problem, however, as underproduction of the public good may still result.
In 2000, the state of Tennessee revoked the driver's licenses of 1,372 people who collectively owed more than $13 million in child support. In Texas non-custodial parents behind more than three months in child-support payments can have court-ordered payments deducted from their wages, can have federal income tax refund checks, lottery winnings, or other money that may be due from state or federal sources intercepted by child support enforcement agencies, can have licenses (including hunting and fishing licenses) suspended, and a judge may sentence a nonpaying parent to jail and enter a judgment for past due child support. Some have taken the view that such penalties are unconstitutional. On September 4, 1998, the Supreme Court of Alaska upheld a law allowing state agencies to revoke driver's licenses of parents seriously delinquent in child support obligations.

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