And it replaces a lot of what has been sort of onerous scheduling and onerous and dis-coordinated and stuff like that.
|
|
Then something strange happened — the thing that is making this all seem so silly — the small details became onerous, so onerous that they became the main event.
|
|
With the most onerous levies — those set for Sept.
|
|
With the most onerous levies — those set for Sept.
|
|
Also, it takes a lot of time and is onerous.
|
|
Many people view budgeting as a negative or onerous process.
|
|
It is needlessly onerous and expensive to start a business.
|
|
They have to set up these incredibly onerous compliance programs.
|
|
"The cost of child care is incredibly onerous," she said.
|
|
That's the most onerous sentence anywhere in Europe right now.
|
|
For contemporary art, the added expense would be too onerous.
|
|
This would require that onerous state mandates be removed. 2202.
|
|
Pruitt and Trump think they're too onerous for car manufacturers.
|
|
Prosecutions are inevitably onerous, requiring wiretaps, informants and good luck.
|
|
Paying for a growing number of retirees becomes more onerous.
|
|
Proponents say such steps are necessary and are not onerous.
|
|
Those can be onerous requirements for older people in pain.
|
|
The problem was that the weight of bronze is onerous.
|
|
Ms. Lynd, a cancer survivor, said her costs were onerous.
|
|
That still leaves Europe's elected officials with an onerous task.
|
|
This was particularly onerous for the poor, who move often.
|
|
At the time, he argued those rules were too onerous.
|
|
Mr. Maduro has blamed onerous American sanctions for the crisis.
|
|
Tracking the product in the commercial system is very onerous.
|
|
Florida's system of criminal fees is notoriously onerous and complicated.
|
|
That's a steep fall, but not a historically onerous one.
|
|
Construction of Christian churches is subject to onerous government restrictions.
|
|
But negotiating the world of airline rewards can be onerous.
|
|
But the process was onerous and costly, so few bothered.
|
|
This responsibility, the $18 trillion industry claims, is too onerous.
|
|
But the compensation structure is less onerous for the brand.
|
|
Explaining his investment strategies and other issues is onerous work.
|
|
Republicans took a huge step by ending ObamaCare's onerous mandate.
|
|
The disclosure we are proposing is not onerous or burdensome.
|
|
These onerous scheduling proposals do not align with employees' interests.
|
|
Today, getting a doctor's appointment is annoying but not onerous.
|
|
Now, that vast project — however onerous — will continue without him.
|
|
Onerous though it is, however, the act also achieved a lot.
|
|
In her day, the life of an Oxford academic wasn't onerous.
|
|
Are the terms of Spotify's new billion-dollar debt round "onerous"?
|
|
Two days later, Musk accepted a settlement with more onerous terms.
|
|
"The licensing agreements with leagues are onerous and complicated," Flagg said.
|
|
Since the process is onerous, the decade-long span makes sense.
|
|
Republicans promised to cut taxes and rollback onerous job killing regulations.
|
|
Such a ban would amount to onerous form of price control.
|
|
By some measures, air travel has become more onerous since 1970.
|
|
Additional onerous reporting requirements would limit their flexibility to do so.
|
|
However, the process of swapping advisors is often an onerous one.
|
|
Still, according to the current Administration, the cuts were too onerous.
|
|
Managing endangered species is expensive, and the regulations can be onerous.
|
|
Never should it be forgotten how onerous it is to forget.
|
|
"We will impose more onerous actions if problems persist," Google said.
|
|
Ignoring a subpoena is contempt of Congress, but process is onerous.
|
|
Since not all chores are equally onerous, the value keeps shifting.
|
|
But the approval process for laboratory-developed tests was proving onerous.
|
|
The final version of the tax overhaul eliminated more onerous proposals.
|
|
In recent years, those financial pressures have grown only more onerous.
|
|
The FDA has also made post-approval study requirements more onerous.
|
|
It targets regulations that bankers found the most "onerous," Cramer said.
|
|
These are the least onerous solutions to a growing national crisis.
|
|
We are working through quite a burden of onerous contract provisions.
|
|
As music, it is onerous agitpop — an egregious case of bothsidesism.
|
|
These don't sound like a particularly onerous criterion but they are.
|
|
The application process was onerous and dragged on for over two years.
|
|
Well she created this new quarter, this review process that was onerous.
|
|
The registration is not particularly onerous, though there is a processing fee.
|
|
Medical-device makers cite onerous licensing procedures and seed firms lengthy approvals.
|
|
Officials said that would make the rules less onerous for drug companies.
|
|
We need to make it far easier, much less onerous, to vote.
|
|
But life under ISIS was brutal for many and the rules onerous.
|
|
Finding an alternative foundry would require onerous tweaks to the chips' design.
|
|
But he was not successful in reforming the state's onerous legal system.
|
|
The pixelated newsstand was intended as an antidote to Apple's onerous terms.
|
|
Both say privatization will free the firm of some onerous legal obligations.
|
|
Proponents argue that current regulations are out of date and overly onerous.
|
|
Put it like that, and Disney's terms seem a little less onerous.
|
|
The ACA's onerous and costly mandates have made health insurance more expensive.
|
|
Recognizing how onerous these new regulations are, Dodd-Frank must be overhauled.
|
|
Most onerous planning restrictions reflect the difficult political economy underlying urban growth.
|
|
It imposes onerous regulatory tests on big companies who want to merge.
|
|
Petty corruption and an onerous bureaucracy frustrate the aspirations of young entrepreneurs.
|
|
The expansion will add to the already onerous financial burden on Takata.
|
|
People in rainier regions had complained that the cutbacks were too onerous.
|
|
The platform even contained a libertarian swipe at onerous professional licensing rules.
|
|
American businesses also would be freed from onerous regulations and compliance burdens.
|
|
The process takes several months, but I didn't think it was onerous.
|
|
But this isn't a factor for children, making their freezes less onerous.
|
|
Mourinho did, drawing attention to United's injury problems and its onerous workload.
|
|
Those include structured negotiations with unions and workers and onerous new taxes.
|
|
Inside Saudi Arabia, the rules were — and remain — particularly onerous for women.
|
|
And they say applying to the FDA's compassionate use program is onerous.
|
|
They are overly complicated and make participation too onerous for too many.
|
|
USCIS also began issuing more frequent and onerous Requests for Evidence (RFEs).
|
|
Ballot access laws in Montana are particularly onerous for a new party.
|
|
Those who support right to try laws say that process is onerous.
|
|
The onerous treatment has caused many futures commission merchants to cease operations.
|
|
The rule can be more onerous for some players than for others.
|
|
"They're grateful for the rollback of what we all considered onerous regulations against industry; onerous overreach by EPA (Environmental Protection Agency)," Heitkamp said of the regulations then-President Barack Obama imposed before leaving office, which Trump and Congress nullified.
|
|
But others say sending packages through these companies can be onerous and expensive.
|
|
The first, and most personally onerous, was the abandonment of a chronological timeline.
|
|
Delaying that already lengthy, onerous process isn't an option the city should consider.
|
|
In return, northern countries insisted on stringent austerity measures and onerous structural reforms.
|
|
Japan even has a word for suicide induced by onerous school rules—shidoshi.
|
|
Investors remain skittish about the industry, and accessing American stock markets is onerous.
|
|
He even considered introducing wild elk, but the bureaucratic hurdles seemed too onerous.
|
|
Critics characterized the regulations as overly onerous and said children disliked the meals.
|
|
Up until now, the process of becoming a commercial drone pilot was onerous.
|
|
The result would be to make abortion as onerous to get as possible.
|
|
That's nearly the most onerous in the world, according to the Tax Foundation.
|
|
The report also says the consumer bureau failed to consider "less onerous" alternatives.
|
|
The burdens placed in their way make even trying to vote too onerous.
|
|
It could use its annual stress tests to make capital rules more onerous.
|
|
If that regulation becomes too onerous, though, drone developers will go jurisdiction shopping.
|
|
Apple News+'s onerous revenue-sharing deal puts publishers in the same pickle.
|
|
Just because it's such an onerous way to live, essentially, or to divorce?
|
|
The planning rules for such establishments are far less onerous than for pubs.
|
|
Taxi drivers point to onerous costs they must pay but Uber does not.
|
|
Just because you're technically covered doesn't mean you can't face onerous medical bills.
|
|
But for years, Uber employees couldn't get out except at very onerous terms.
|
|
But Maggie Thunder Hawk, 56, worried that officials would eventually introduce onerous restrictions.
|
|
It must deal with its weakening economy without worsening its onerous debt problems.
|
|
But the trade war complicates China's deeper problems with its onerous debt levels.
|
|
In Arkansas, Iowa and North Dakota, Republicans have added onerous new identification requirements.
|
|
Republicans assert that doing this would free people from an onerous government mandate.
|
|
Facebook, Google and Twitter claim that policing their networks would be too onerous.
|
|
Some insurers defy the law, imposing arbitrary treatment limits or onerous authorization requirements.
|
|
Application process 'onerous' The nomination process is widely considered to be a challenge.
|
|
But onerous budget cuts have hamstrung the agency's ability to bring the case.
|
|
Avoiding wildfires is onerous in fire country that's becoming more prone to fires.
|
|
Such firms argued that the rules were too onerous and stifled broadband investment.
|
|
As small businesses increase their headcounts, onerous regulatory requirements begin to phase in.
|
|
They also assert, more broadly, that such regulation is onerous and stifles innovation.
|
|
Judgment that is disconnected from help becomes onerous and creates a dysfunctional community.
|
|
But we want it to be fair and equal and not excessively onerous.
|
|
Workers aren't being replaced by machines, they're being "released" from onerous, repetitive tasks.
|
|
Offshore platforms, in contrast, are typically registered in jurisdictions with less onerous rules.
|
|
The Tusk proposal gives Britain leeway to distance itself from policies it finds onerous.
|
|
McConnell has rightly opposed legislation that federalizes elections or imposes onerous burdens on states.
|
|
Development there would likely also face onerous state regulatory hurdles and potential public opposition.
|
|
Heat and disease were the worst of it, but Corbin's terms were onerous too.
|
|
ESMA Chair Steven Maijoor said this week that conditions for delegation were not onerous.
|
|
"I think this is something far more serious and far more onerous," he said.
|
|
I can't say I've ever found the grocery checkout line to be terribly onerous.
|
|
Ms Speier has introduced a bill to overhaul a tangled and onerous reporting procedure.
|
|
It has the highest level of poverty and peculiarly onerous tax procedures for businesses.
|
|
Comedy may be less onerous, but pontificating about the Way the Universe Works ain't.
|
|
Cutting itself off would be an onerous task that could have myriad unintended consequences.
|
|
Apple recently offered several major newspapers onerous terms on a planned news subscription service.
|
|
That readiness to comply will be lacking if obligations appear to be unfairly onerous.
|
|
But let's not forget that we're celebrating an agreement that is onerous and draconian.
|
|
States argue that the rules are onerous and represent and overreach of the EPA.
|
|
Onerous regulations make it hard for small businesses to grow bigger and more efficient.
|
|
As the roll of retired lifeguards has grown, the city's obligation has become onerous.
|
|
Secondly, for those companies not exempt, the filing requirement could not be less onerous.
|
|
Supporters of Right to Try laws say that process is onerous and time-consuming.
|
|
The following are five ways to make paying taxes from abroad less onerous: 1.
|
|
Tercas itself was subsequently salvaged under more onerous terms and sold to another bank.
|
|
It's simple, inexpensive and convenient and makes this new F.F.L. plan seem purposefully onerous.
|
|
The fall in crude prices has made the oil-for-loan agreements more onerous.
|
|
For DMX, that makes his one-year prison term seem a little less onerous.
|
|
It is also why the co-op board approval process is often so onerous.
|
|
Representatives of the car industry complained that the carbon dioxide limits were too onerous.
|
|
Mr. Otellini underestimated the iPhone's sales potential and viewed Apple's price demands as onerous.
|
|
But other experts said that Judge Contreras's requirement was not particularly onerous for companies.
|
|
But because of the onerous certification process, few primary care clinicians offer the medication.
|
|
The new State Department requirement was still less onerous than that imposed by China.
|
|
Second, it's letting states impose onerous rules like work requirements on people seeking Medicaid.
|
|
Nationally more than nine out of 10 credit unions don't use these onerous clauses.
|
|
Denel has also started talks with existing customers to cancel or renegotiate "onerous" contracts.
|
|
On a party-line vote, Republicans in the Senate decided that was too onerous.
|
|
Once there, she said, she found onerous working conditions and lower-than-promised pay.
|
|
The industry is trying to cast this "gainful employment rule" as onerous and unnecessary.
|
|
However, terms for borrowers would be more onerous than they would get at banks.
|
|
"They can't afford the onerous cost [of tax compliance and taxation]," Richardson told me.
|
|
Republicans have traditionally opposed them as being onerous for business or expensive for government.
|
|
Farmers complain that compliance is onerous because the program is especially complicated to administer.
|
|
It's possible that Delta and Aeromexico will be able to negotiate less onerous conditions.
|
|
Interest rates can be in the double digits, and qualifying for the loans is onerous.
|
|
He cited onerous reporting requirements, "farce" shareholder meetings and the threat of potentially "crippling" litigation.
|
|
Problems of bad data would be even more onerous in a country of 1.3bn people.
|
|
The 2015 Gear S2 appears to no longer be supported by Samsung's onerous software stack.
|
|
Costs have risen, laws are onerous, and the Communist Party is inserting itself into boardrooms.
|
|
In a rush to sign headline-grabbing deals African leaders often agree to onerous terms.
|
|
Demir said the latest sanctions bill did not impose very onerous new sanctions on Moscow.
|
|
Another privacy scandal could prompt American regulators to enact onerous rules that hamper digital giants.
|
|
It may also be because having a female body has become more onerous for children.
|
|
Some smaller cities - with less onerous regulations - have tacitly loosened policies to boost the market.
|
|
They also suffer from onerous restrictions on freedom of movement and the freedom to marry.
|
|
That's a process that I wish I could go faster, but it hasn't been onerous.
|
|
Maybe it's enough to have the access without taking on the onerous and costly responsibilities.
|
|
It warned last week that onerous changes to U.S. visa rules could affect its earnings.
|
|
Planning for these scenarios and putting safety measures in place may sound expensive and onerous.
|
|
The uncertainty surrounding the FCC's onerous rules has also slowed the introduction of new services.
|
|
The Bolivian terrain is onerous and cumbersome to navigate, with far too much to do.
|
|
Requiring such onerous diligence would "dampen the vigour and limit the variety of public debate".
|
|
The process for workers to remove the union and install a different one is onerous.
|
|
By eliminating this onerous, Congress would level the fiscal playing field between the three services.
|
|
He says the way these requirements have been applied has grown more onerous over time.
|
|
Taking away someone's income is a hugely onerous thing, and we don't take it lightly.
|
|
D. card that reduces typically onerous, integrative processes—such as doing taxes—to quick work.
|
|
They insist that they'll do better on their own terms to avoid potentially onerous rules.
|
|
Because of fuzzy, complicated language, it is not clear how onerous these rules will be.
|
|
"No other forms of permissible identification are subject to these onerous requirements," the release states.
|
|
Researchers cited other studies that show the fines often add to already onerous financial obligations.
|
|
You and I both signed some very onerous moral clauses in our most recent contract.
|
|
They also hurt borrowers, whose loan payments become more onerous if there is no inflation.
|
|
In 2017, the government passed laws that the industry complained would be costly and onerous.
|
|
Smaller manufacturers were particularly concerned that the new requirements would be too onerous and expensive.
|
|
They contend that for individual investors, the proxy voting system is onerous, frustrating and broken.
|
|
Mr. Trump had long argued that the agreement was excessively onerous and hampered American businesses.
|
|
Faced with such an onerous registration process, many gun owners opted to surrender their firearms.
|
|
Opponents say AB 1250 would add conditions so onerous that contracting would become virtually impossible.
|
|
Small businesses, and thus the middle class, should benefit if current onerous regulations are reduced.
|
|
What they clearly do want is a relaxation of the parts they consider most onerous.
|
|
The exclusions that have been granted last The process has proved onerous for Metal Partners.
|
|
Many experts inside and outside Cuba consider the tax burden on successful small businesses onerous.
|
|
Broadband companies have fought the rules, calling them too onerous and saying they discourage innovation.
|
|
But Mark thinks that coal can grow again if unshackled from onerous federal environmental regulations.
|
|
She resented new rules that made it more onerous for her to get the pills.
|
|
He is said to dislike long, complicated briefings and to find reading policy papers onerous.
|
|
In so many ways, mass-produced kosher foods have made the holiday far less onerous.
|
|
One is obviously these rooms where you wear the headsets, which are heavy and onerous.
|
|
Ross said on Tuesday that Dodd-Frank puts regulatory requirements on banks that are too onerous.
|
|
Third-party presidential runs are notoriously onerous and expensive, and Mr. Webb was potentially facing competition.
|
|
Finally, onerous terms are often instituted, in which companies agree to unnecessary exclusivity or impossible goals.
|
|
Some observers have been quick to blame onerous regulation, like the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
|
|
Anglin posted this notice on The Daily Stormer, claiming the city's requirements were onerous and unconstitutional.
|
|
We are right to delegate this onerous task to professionals in law enforcement and the military.
|
|
If the conditions China imposes on foreign multinationals are too onerous, they can refuse to invest.
|
|
Scrapping the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be more onerous, with Democrats girding for a fight.
|
|
Another worry is that companies will have to comply with onerous extra rules after issuing CDRs.
|
|
Either sale might be so onerous to execute, however, that it would probably stop the merger.
|
|
Trump characterized his move as repealing an onerous government regulation and streamlining the infrastructure approval process.
|
|
Firms operated largely free from onerous rules (blocking pornography featuring children has been the main exception).
|
|
Trying to raise new debt with the user base shrinking would likely come with onerous terms.
|
|
So are the island's onerous business permits, including half a dozen different certificates of tax compliance.
|
|
Many entrepreneurs agreed to onerous terms to get a unicorn-esque valuation and that's really hard.
|
|
It has proposed onerous "opt in" requirements for broadband service providers' collection of non-sensitive data.
|
|
That was always going to be an onerous test to such an inexperienced commander-in-chief.
|
|
And right now, it's really onerous because we assume everybody has these W-2 stable jobs.
|
|
For one, the tax regime in North Dakota is more onerous than in Texas, analysts said.
|
|
That will certainly be more onerous for committees than counting up the "right" sort of papers.
|
|
Banks have pushed to move away from the annual schedule, saying the lengthy submissions are onerous.
|
|
But the industry argued that other elements of the regulations were onerous and could hamper safety.
|
|
Hardly the sort of onerous regulatory burden that would impede capital formation as the Chamber claims.
|
|
Before he signed with the Yankees, he already carried the onerous tag of having damaged knees.
|
|
Localities could demonstrate progress by streamlining "by right" housing approvals that avoid onerous discretionary review processes.
|
|
N, chalking up a victory in the onerous struggle to win over watchdogs across the globe.
|
|
The rules were less onerous when ANZ picked up these stakes before the global financial crisis.
|
|
Unfortunately, corrupt officials have options to select companies from countries with less onerous (or no) provisions.
|
|
Defending oneself against litigation is onerous even for those with the financial means to fight back.
|
|
"Clearly, this was not as onerous as people thought," said Marc Chaikin, CEO of Chaikin Analytics.
|
|
HB22015 mandates that abortion providers must meet several onerous requirements in order to remain in operation.
|
|
Tonga is due to start an onerous principal repayment schedule of its Chinese debt in September.
|
|
These constraints would be particularly onerous, they argue, if the transgender student were a young child.
|
|
The child in her lap studied Jimmy Ray, as if making some sort of onerous decision.
|
|
Some investors have been understandably skeptical about the whole "handing out $5,000" model without onerous ISAs.
|
|
President-elect Donald J. Trump has vowed to unravel regulations that have been onerous for businesses.
|
|
More: New York City officials introduced new programs aimed at protecting taxi drivers from onerous loans.
|
|
There were moments when the lifestyle became so onerous that Mr. McGarry would quit using drugs.
|
|
Some secretaries of state called that too onerous and costly, and the pilot program came out.
|
|
However, a particularly onerous provision is often ignored: the proposal to eliminate the medical expense deduction.
|
|
Many governments have hesitated to impose onerous measures in the absence of a crisis-level outbreak.
|
|
The firm hoped that would help with the difficulty of juggling onerous working hours with motherhood.
|
|
Another is that states have complained that the Obamacare application rules are too strict and onerous.
|
|
Heinemeier argues the complaint process can be onerous, and leaves enforcement entirely up to the victims.
|
|
Such onerous reforms would be even more difficult without buy-in from the population, analysts say.
|
|
Thus far, Congress has successfully rescinded fifteen onerous Obama-era rules through the Congressional Review Act.
|
|
No, Joy-Ann Reid, this wasn't the result of some onerous interference by the White House.
|
|
Some business leaders say it is preferable to onerous regulation or a cap-and-trade program.
|
|
Last August Airbus SE pulled out, partly due to what it cited as onerous security requirements.
|
|
This person said it took weeks to finish an application process that they described as onerous.
|
|
Mr. Buffett began demanding such onerous terms after learning hard lessons from his investment in Salomon.
|
|
The administration views many of them as onerous to fossil fuel companies and other major industries.
|
|
Even in the show, The Wire, teachers chafed under 'onerous' requirements of 'teaching to the tests.
|
|
On July 2700th five state agencies warned local governments that boosting employment "has become more onerous".
|
|
" She added that the administration's goal was "to get states out from under Obamacare's onerous rules.
|
|
These onerous, if well intentioned, restrictions will surely come with costs to American companies and consumers.
|
|
In general, he has pledged to roll back what he considers onerous regulations on U.S. businesses.
|
|
If its sales exceed €6m—a threshold unchanged for 20 years—it faces more onerous tax procedures.
|
|
But many other places do not have the capacity to carry out the onerous computer-modelling required.
|
|
He laid the once-mighty industry low with onerous regulation, especially the hated Clean Power Plan (CPP).
|
|
Less onerous grand-slam doubles tournaments could attract more high-profile singles stars to enter them, too.
|
|
On the agenda: A bid to end the onerous tax treatment of digital currencies such as Bitcoin.
|
|
Lawyers have the onerous task of working out which of those pieces need to stay in place.
|
|
But the US government's long history of undermining tribal sovereignty makes the fight that much more onerous.
|
|
Per person, Muslims had about four times as many mosques, which are not subject to onerous restrictions.
|
|
PDVSA's difficulty with paying creditors and service providers makes pulling itself out of that hole more onerous.
|
|
A parliamentary inquiry is considering whether the state should intervene on behalf of leaseholders with onerous contracts.
|
|
Bastos wants to dilute onerous local content requirements for loan approvals, with new guidelines announced in June.
|
|
We've put bills on the President's desk to repeal Obamacare and block implementation of onerous EPA rules.
|
|
In 2016, he is pockmarked by an onerous contract, which he can no longer live up to.
|
|
Removing only certain routes from the agreements, such as from Dallas, would be "less onerous," Baker said.
|
|
If its regulations are too onerous, enough safe assets may not be produced by the private sector.
|
|
But critics said the process to be granted religious exemptions was onerous and needed to be changed.
|
|
With and without Congress, Trump can also repeal and roll back some of the most onerous regulations.
|
|
"The rights of the petitioners were violated (by) imposing onerous conditions on the site visit," he said.
|
|
Efforts to unwind some of the deal's more onerous regulations are welcomed, but that is not enough.
|
|
It's not that onerous, and sometimes I wonder what the value is, then, in having two vacuums.
|
|
To boost growth, he promises to free the economy from "onerous" government regulations and to cut taxes.
|
|
The economic downturn has forced manufacturers to cut costs to remain afloat amid onerous taxes and bureaucracy.
|
|
More onerous, charities must find an official sponsor from a list to be issued by the government.
|
|
It requires PREPA ratepayers to continue to live with an onerous debt load they cannot afford. Gov.
|
|
Mac Thornberry (R-Texas), for example, would free family-owned businesses from the currently onerous tax obligations.
|
|
The cosmetics industry, which manufactures sunscreen, has balked at what it considers the FDA's onerous testing requirements.
|
|
He said some rules, like the "Volcker Rule" ban on proprietary trading, could be made less onerous.
|
|
Providing the things society deems important does not require imposing onerous labor regulations on firms and workers.
|
|
Grappling with compliance and the costs involved has become a onerous task for most banks and brokerages.
|
|
I think the process of getting certified to ride a motorcycle in many states is too onerous.
|
|
Corruption, an uncompetitive workforce, poor infrastructure and onerous regulations are likely to persist for the foreseeable future.
|
|
Singling out one segment of the internet ecosystem for special and more onerous treatment is flawed policy.
|
|
Maybe the feds ask for banks to provide more disclosure or somehow limit a particularly onerous practice.
|
|
The commission claimed that the requirement violated the Americans with Disabilities Act because it was so onerous.
|
|
He said that the current system — in which people with records must petition courts — is hardly onerous.
|
|
I think what happens is its so onerous and so complicated, to make a choice is exhausting.
|
|
Perhaps most concerning, more than a third of participants quit, suggesting that the exercise program was onerous.
|
|
They're subject to leaks, data breaches, increasingly onerous or precision, or wrongheadedly targeted, marketing, and so forth.
|
|
"New York City's cost of doing business is really high and can be onerous," Mr. Durant said.
|
|
And if they can shape a bill that isn't too onerous, they might be O.K. with it.
|
|
This was a regulatory necessity if the Max was to escape onerous reclassification as a new airplane.
|
|
Taking the "L" from my mother's name "Lynn" was a sentimental nod and didn't feel too onerous.
|
|
His onerous cap charge made him a prime candidate for restructuring, but so did his declining performance.
|
|
TRAP laws' real agenda is to invent bogus, onerous requirements that prevent more doctors from providing abortions.
|
|
In the end the government backed away from a complete ban, but it has imposed onerous restrictions.
|
|
For innocent individuals, getting seized property back can be a long, onerous, and often prohibitively expensive process.
|
|
But by 26, the financial strain of children attending yeshivos at $230,000 a year grew too onerous.
|
|
The Education Department has started dismissing hundreds of civil rights complaints that investigators deem onerous or unnecessary.
|
|
But some homeless people have complained about safety issues and onerous restrictions at some of those operations.
|
|
I suppose asking for $39 is slightly more onerous to the brain and hands of your cashier.
|
|
Was this letter an attempt to take the bootheel of increasingly onerous sanctions off North Korea's throat?
|
|
So, what do you imagine ... You don't think there'll be more onerous regulations, or regulations at all?
|
|
There are ways individuals can make the process less onerous, without having to resort to a calculator.
|
|
The HomeKit ecosystem had been plagued by lethargy due to the sometimes onerous restrictions Apple placed on manufacturers.
|
|
Some of this may be due to the threat of onerous immigration policies coming from the Trump administration.
|
|
This decision has implications for the broader business community and particularly anyone battling onerous regulations from federal agencies.
|
|
But there has been no open sign of resistance to the loyalty campaign—onerous though it sometimes is.
|
|
But his proposals — particularly any based on religion — will face significant resistance and could prove onerous in practice.
|
|
If you're not, you will need to install several pieces of helper software, and it gets really onerous.
|
|
Automakers have argued the rule is onerous, forcing them to invest heavily in building hybrid and electric vehicles.
|
|
Hellerstedt, a case that struck down onerous Texas regulations that impeded a woman's ability to obtain an abortion.
|
|
The company's designation as a systemically important financial institution isn't onerous, costing only $150 million extra a year.
|
|
But Washington's new rules are still less onerous than China's, which require not only notification but prior approval.
|
|
The WeWork deal is structured to avoid SoftBank having to consolidate it or take on onerous lease obligations.
|
|
He will face challenges, however, pursuing his reform agenda from a divided Congress and an onerous government deficit.
|
|
Probably a small enough number that it wouldn't bee too onerous for Twitter to inspect all of them!
|
|
Laundering lobbying through a think-tank, which offers tax advantages and less onerous disclosure requirements, can seem attractive.
|
|
Under the soft power model, the Cool Girl persona might be a tool, but it's an onerous one.
|
|
But one high enough to encourage pricey moonshots may prove too onerous for the rest of the economy.
|
|
With the court's narrower view of a supervisor, it's increasingly onerous for harassment victims to file discrimination lawsuits.
|
|
Tariffs and quotas are supposed to support domestic dairy industries, and are more onerous than in other sectors.
|
|
Hedge funds' trading systems are deeply enmeshed with their brokers, and switching providers can be an onerous process.
|
|
But few casual labourers are likely to fulfil the still-onerous conditions that must be met to qualify.
|
|
Doing so risks passing up an unprecedented opportunity to protect millions of Americans from ObamaCare's most onerous provisions.
|
|
Proponents of desalination contend the changes have been onerous and are slowing the march toward a desal future.
|
|
This directly conflicts with President Trump's campaign promises of removing onerous regulations and red tape on U.S. businesses.
|
|
The lawsuit suggests she was unable to pay back her last loan because the rate was too onerous.
|
|
The "compromise" bill that was signed into law Thursday removes some of HB2202's onerous public bathrooms provisions.
|
|
Pre-emptive, voluntary measures have historically been a way that companies seek to avoid more onerous future legislation.
|
|
But in the past few years restrictions on what people can say or write have grown more onerous.
|
|
As an investment bank, Goldman had not sought out deposits and the onerous regulation that comes with them.
|
|
Eliminating its onerous mandates would have restored jobs, reduced bureaucratic waste in healthcare, and increased access to care.
|
|
The annual tax dance is an onerous process often taking hours of a small business owner's valuable time.
|
|
The McKinsey report estimates that onerous housing costs rob California of $20143 billion in economic output a year.
|
|
They ignore how strikingly similar this argument is to those Republicans use to justify onerous voter ID laws.
|
|
"It's just the level at which they presented, it seemed like it was going to be excessively onerous."
|
|
For their part, most Republicans argue that the net neutrality rules are unnecessary and onerous for broadband providers.
|
|
Poorly drafted, inconsistent or onerous taxes can sharply deter investment and result in less economic growth and innovation.
|
|
In a world chock-full of investment strategies, choosing the right one can be an overwhelming, onerous task.
|
|
In addition, Basel III capital migration is entering its final phase with capital requirements at their most onerous.
|
|
Republicans made the elimination of onerous Obama-era regulations an early priority, but the effort has since stalled.
|
|
If E.U. regulations were as onerous as British critics say, those rules would hurt all 28 member countries.
|
|
It may, for instance, decide to use its annual regulatory stress tests to make capital rules more onerous.
|
|
Yes, ineffective management, incompetent coworkers, unfulfilling work, onerous workloads, and long commutes can take a major mental toll.
|
|
Ivanka Trump said last week that she failed to register because of the Empire State's "onerous" voting rules.
|
|
The cost of care has become so onerous that some people have ditched going to the doctor altogether.
|
|
To do so, they had to meet some pretty onerous requirements, specifically garnering 5,000 signatures each from voters.
|
|
"Reviewing these disclosures was an onerous lift for us," the commission's communications office said in a recent email.
|
|
But such transplants are an onerous and dangerous therapy, with a mortality rate as high as 20 percent.
|
|
Tehran's regional meddling was particularly ambitious from 2012 to 2015 — just as sanctions were at their most onerous.
|
|
In Detroit, those companies see President Trump as their best chance for finally ending onerous California car requirements.
|
|
Ajit Pai, who succeeded Wheeler as chairman this year, has argued that the regulations were unnecessary and onerous.
|
|
Here are a few tips that take some of the hard labor out of the most onerous tasks.
|
|
Public patience with economic hardship is wearing thin; the political cost of the government's "resistance economy" is onerous.
|
|
He has cut the number of refugees and created new procedures that make processing visa applications more onerous.
|
|
Over the years, Airbnb has extended rules around exercising stock options to make the "golden handcuffs" less onerous.
|
|
It can shed the debts, lease obligations or onerous supplier contracts that might have gotten it in trouble.
|
|
Some Republican lawmakers, who often say the CFPB rules are too onerous, are pushing to repeal the rule.
|
|
Pumping breast milk is an onerous chore, but luckily, breast pump technology is improving by leaps and bounds.
|
|
Both Didi and Uber had cheered the rules, which were not as onerous as an earlier draft version.
|
|
"Those who consider the present system onerous should reflect on this point," said Taylor, a former bank CEO.
|
|
The ACA subjected small group plans to onerous new rules that, strangely, didn't apply to large-group plans.
|
|
He's simply rolling back onerous regulations, as promised, and sticking it to the global elites on climate change.
|
|
The truth: Trump is wrong: There is an extensive, onerous screening process for refugees who come to America.
|
|
Although politicians and lobbyists often refer to taxes and regulations together as onerous burdens, taxes are a separate issue.
|
|
These types of documents should be easy to read to completion and require consent rather than onerous opt-outs.
|
|
Under Obama, businesses lacked confidence to invest for the future, so assaulted were they by onerous and costly regulations.
|
|
Other internet and online advertising firms have criticized the European rules known as General Data Protection Regulation as onerous.
|
|
Since the slowdown has taken hold, Ms Sitharaman has scrapped the most onerous of new taxes and compliance rules.
|
|
For the union's smaller members, this is both an honour and an onerous obligation, requiring the government's full attention.
|
|
Men are often presented as bumbling babysitters instead of caretakers — that onerous task nearly always falls on the mother.
|
|
A favourite excuse for foot-dragging is that onerous regulation risks "carbon leakage" to countries with laxer emissions rules.
|
|
Creating one is easy, tracking it with inventory and your reporting often can be super onerous for the operator.
|
|
Shares of partnerships are excluded from financial-market indices; holders of such shares also face onerous tax-reporting requirements.
|
|
"The odds favor Trump's solution being even more onerous for large financial firms than the status quo," Seiberg said.
|
|
But the less onerous rules apply only in Kurilsk and a few other spots, not including the island's port.
|
|
The state relaxed what she perceived as overly onerous restrictions on who could manage or work in a lab.
|
|
Apple executives have refused, saying it is an onerous request that puts the security of its customers at risk.
|
|
There would be opposition among bipartisan coalitions in Congress, making the effort more complicated and the oversight more onerous.
|
|
Andrew Cuomo, the mayor's frequent tormentor, has offered millions of dollars in aid, which could have onerous strings attached.
|
|
It suggests they believe these are onerous rules that may well present problems for the petitioners before being overturned.
|
|
These restrictions have led to some abortion clinics closing because they found it too onerous to come into compliance.
|
|
Without a new limit, farmers would be forced into a Chapter 11 filing, which is more costly and onerous.
|
|
Rouhani has asked for patience and promised to work towards eliminating the onerous sanctions that are still in place.
|
|
Keeping tabs on returning IS fighters is more onerous than preventing someone leaving for Syria in the first place.
|
|
More than half of Texas' 41 abortion clinics were forced to close as a result of these onerous restrictions.
|
|
"I am pleased that California has agreed not to enforce its onerous Internet regulations," Pai said in a statement.
|
|
"This would neither impose an onerous burden on the states nor disturb the finality of state convictions," he said.
|
|
When criticized by her opponent for cutting those deals, she said her negotiations helped stave off more onerous proposals.
|
|
Macri also has eliminated capital controls and cut onerous export taxes as a way of improving the investment climate.
|
|
And that's because onerous financial regulations kept banks from lending to small entrepreneurs and individuals, thus impeding employment growth.
|
|
They take out auto loans, sign up for medical exams, and get help with New York's onerous licensing system.
|
|
These regulations were so onerous that many banks had to walk away from their small and mid-size clients.
|
|
But some manufacturers, like Mary Kay, oppose the bill because they argue that its provisions would be too onerous.
|
|
Damien Thorn, the title character of A&E's new horror series "Damien," is subject to a particularly onerous punishment.
|
|
This could get particularly onerous in the Northeast, where it's common to cross state lines on the daily commute.
|
|
However, Juul and similar products may generate a not-insignificant amount of e-waste, as they're onerous to recycle.
|
|
Short-term, limited-duration plans are not subject to ObamaCare's onerous regulations and, consequently, are priced far more competitively.
|
|
They also often will seek to impose onerous conditions, like demanding certain "public interest" concessions, that discourage broadband deployment.
|
|
As recently as 2016, Justice Kennedy sided with the court's liberals in striking down onerous state restrictions on abortion.
|
|
Political operatives are courting donors, calling potential candidates and developing legal contingency plans for overcoming onerous ballot qualification laws.
|
|
While refusing to end this onerous mandate, the task force opposes the post office's efforts to raise new revenue.
|
|
Scaling down our ideas of what we "must have" won't result in onerous changes to the way we live.
|
|
But hustling from studio to studio in Manhattan as she was nursing or doing the school run became onerous.
|
|
Missing those will make coming back out of this economic crisis much more onerous when the novel coronavirus subsides.
|
|
He has also stood up to his regional powerhouse, diplomatically pushing back on financially onerous Chinese projects in Malaysia.
|
|
Economic development experts agree that the corridor needs to strip away these types of onerous zoning and business regulations.
|
|
The loans should come with conditions - though not too onerous, or companies will risk failure rather than take them.
|
|
On the plus side, the new rules for inherited I.R.A.s did away with one onerous feature: required minimum withdrawals.
|
|
A solution will require protection against onerous contracting regimes for all Americans, whether farmers, iPhone owners or the Pentagon.
|
|
Farming's regulatory regime has made one of the nation's most respected and essential professions one of the most onerous.
|
|
In today's deregulatory political climate, we should be considering options to improve and lessen onerous regulations, such as Sen.
|
|
"He&aposs been at this long enough and under such onerous circumstances that one can believe in the transformation."
|
|
In the onerous aftermath of the war, dignitary harms and forced austerity ultimately turned the tide against European solidarity.
|
|
Years of civil discord and government corruption have resulted in poverty, economic inequality, high crime rates and onerous taxes.
|
|
So they developed an onerous registration process and ruled out marketing the country as a mecca for pot tourism.
|
|
Insurers are responding with similar strategies to tackle low investment yields and onerous capital requirements in the Dutch market.
|
|
French unions defend the measure as protecting workers from employers who might otherwise return to more onerous workplace conditions.
|
|
Now ISIS would have to rely on an onerous network of secondary routes through the deserts to the south.
|
|
"What they've done is make it so administratively onerous for doctors' offices that they hit fatigue," Dr. Harper said.
|
|
Very few people own guns in the UK. And if you want to own one, the restrictions are onerous.
|
|
Under its onerous weight and with little hope of refinancing it, Toys R Us hired restructuring advisers in 2017.
|
|
But I started to think about the onerous effort it took for escapees to journey from "Midnight" to Windsor.
|
|
The Republicans say the current standard imposed by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) is too onerous for businesses.
|
|
Employers who use E-Verify contend that they struggle to attract enough workers to perform menial, physically onerous jobs.
|
|
But he was never arrested, and ultimately it proved too onerous to send him back to a specialized school.
|
|
But the EU, in collaboration with the International Monetary Fund, ignored their votes and imposed its own onerous debt extension.
|
|
Skeptics also cited onerous risk and compliance systems which, combined with staff retention incentives, will dent the expected net returns.
|
|
These include onerous filing requirements and the knowledge that routine business decisions may become the subject of caustic public debate.
|
|
But many older people would like a less onerous workload than they had at their peak, perhaps working part-time.
|
|
Bernie Sanders's platform is that we can solve our most onerous economic problems if we just tax "The Man" more.
|
|
This stage of the NAFTA talks has centred on just how much more onerous the revised deal's conditions should be.
|
|
The original TPP agreement was seen as particularly onerous on Vietnam, which be forced to make significant reforms, analysts said.
|
|
But what seems like a cute, magical touch on the first tooth can become onerous by the fourth — or 14th.
|
|
Last month, Floridians voted on Amendment 4, a ballot initiative that removed some unusual and onerous taxes on solar installations.
|
|
In 2017, the government passed laws to reform the mining sector that the industry complained would be costly and onerous.
|
|
Finally, Japanese schools and businesses have some onerous grooming rules, stipulating even sock colour—but things seem to be changing.
|
|
But the state compounds its inherent issues with problems of its own making, like poorly maintained roads and onerous regulations.
|
|
He said 99Designs could have afforded to pay the higher office rents in San Francisco, but the terms were onerous.
|
|
Prospective bidders for the kingdom's state-owned grain mills have complained of an unwieldy sale process and onerous ownership rules.
|
|
So using policies like data localization, content controls, and onerous technical standards that can be used to discourage foreign investors.
|
|
"The cost of medicines for Mexican families is onerous," Cofece President Alejandra Palacios said at the event in Mexico City.
|
|
But if so, there's no reason whatsoever to impose onerous regulations on startups trying to offer new products and services.
|
|
Some Fitch-rated banks said the scheme looks too onerous and this is likely to reduce their willingness to participate.
|
|
Disruptions to short flights would be less onerous, though the airline forecast it would cover only 85 percent of those.
|
|
It's also planning to impose onerous and lopsided privacy restrictions that will harm innovation and consumer choice in online services.
|
|
Britain's retail banks are "somewhere in the middle", wanting some rules made less onerous for domestic-focused lenders, bankers said.
|
|
In exchange for a licence to operate, drivers had to accept onerous legal requirements which few have complied with since.
|
|
Many feared his ideological leanings would lead to an overly activist agency, rewarding favored constituencies and pushing through onerous regulations.
|
|
Because being president is proving so hard, Trump has delegated many onerous duties for which he's supposed to be responsible.
|
|
Bombardier booked a $500 million "onerous contract" charge related to that Delta order and a separate deal with Air Canada .
|
|
"That Gamer Agreement is grossly oppressive, onerous, and one-sided," Tenney's lawyers alleged in the complaint filed on his behalf.
|
|
These bureaucratic hurdles would be particularly onerous for low-income citizens or citizens living in rural or geographically underserved areas.
|
|
Many states make eligibility and enrollment in Medicaid onerous for patients and families struggling with low incomes and poor health.
|
|
And Sternlicht, chief executive of Starwood Capital Group, just moved from Connecticut to Florida, having tired of Connecticut's onerous taxes.
|
|
If the Keys referendum receives a "no" vote, Parry said, starting over in a new location would not be onerous.
|
|
Israel bans same-sex couples from using a surrogate, and many heterosexual couples consider the process too onerous and expensive.
|
|
Since most business associations oppose onerous regulation — including heavy-handed environmental legislation — the left maligns these groups as anti-environment.
|
|
It is also surprising that there are no federal rules preventing states from issuing student loans with such onerous terms.
|
|
CAATSA does allow for a presidential waiver, subject to congressional review but the terms are too onerous to be meaningful.
|
|
Restrictive zoning and onerous regulations — all burdens imposed by local jurisdictions — are the real culprits for the US's affordability problems.
|
|
This includes the overly burdensome registration process, redundant protocol reviews, lack of adequate research material and unnecessarily onerous security requirements.
|
|
Democrats worry the new requirements will prove too onerous for some of the very beneficiaries in need of the assistance.
|
|
But it was not enough for a range of reasons (including not taking over Yahoo's onerous stock commitments to employees).
|
|
AI and deep learning will ease the onerous work around engineering and give humans more time to exercise their creativity.
|
|
She is currently three-months pregnant, which makes her ten-hour shift in the oppressive factory environment even more onerous.
|
|
But the danger is that those same requirements could be much more onerous for a tiny upstart company to uphold.
|
|
" Asked what parts of the list were the most onerous, he said: "On permitting, there are a lot of things.
|
|
The New York Times reported that the new terms for the settlement were slightly more onerous than those originally offered.
|
|
Even in countries where abortion is more readily available, women may face onerous restrictions like Uruguay's five-day waiting period.
|
|
Stephen Miller, Trump's immigration aide, has always wanted to trade DACA in exchange for some onerous restrictions on legal immigration.
|
|
Defenders said the changes were intended to prevent voting fraud, but opponents said they were onerous and harmed minorities disproportionately.
|
|
I never viewed training as some onerous duty I had to carry out while praying fervently for another space mission.
|
|
He has also stood up to his giant neighbor, China, diplomatically pushing back on financially onerous Chinese projects in Malaysia.
|
|
At later stages, success depends in large part on getting individuals to abide by onerous restrictions for the common good.
|
|
Advocates say the program ensures California students can actually get abortions without having to make an onerous journey off-campus.
|
|
"I see lots of times where contracting is the only way to get around an onerous hiring process," Stier said.
|
|
It would allow the Yankees to shed the onerous new penalties for repeat offenders that go into effect next year.
|
|
Firms that rely heavily on debt are bracing for a big fight if the curbs on deductibility prove overly onerous.
|
|
Finding charities and nonprofits who would be willing to speak to me proved a more onerous task than I anticipated.
|
|
"AmerisourceBergen's actionable-wrongdoing requirement imposes an onerous burden on stockholders that goes beyond the standard established in Seinfeld," Laster wrote.
|
|
If the government discovers onerous provisions in these deals, they could either be re-negotiated or terminated, Guevarra told Reuters.
|
|
Fair Game This is the party line: Banks aren't lending nowadays because the regulatory burden they face is too onerous.
|
|
Mr. Trump's announcement restored onerous American sanctions on Iran, including penalties for foreign companies that do business with that country.
|
|
Now it faces a reckoning with the U.S. decision to pull out of the nuclear deal and reimpose onerous sanctions.
|
|
Requiring masks is more than onerous, said Peter Piot, the director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
|
|
They would add more compliance costs as public companies are already arguing the costs of being public are too onerous.
|
|
Fortunately, the Trump administration has begun dismantling onerous regulations by a pace of 16 regulation rollbacks for each new regulation.
|
|
Even the most onerous part of skiing — clomping around in the boots to get to lunch — had been pain-free.
|
|
As an organization's systems, processes, employees and regulations change, the path from start to completion becomes that much more onerous.
|
|
Their challenges, they say, are homegrown: California has too few licensed cannabis businesses, too much taxation and overly onerous regulation.
|
|
The best systems are those with limited and efficient governments that incentivize investment and spending through less onerous tax regiments.
|
|
But there's no hesitation to impose fees, expensive training requirements, ID requirements, and onerous background checks on prospective gun owners.
|
|
The regulations are too onerous, they say, and hurt the industry's ability to innovate and tailor their services to consumers.
|
|
The telecom industry is backing the drive for legislation to replace the FCC's rules, which broadband providers found too onerous.
|
|
Despite the concern for potentially onerous regulation in the future, cryptocurrency supporters say they welcome the interest from the government.
|
|
Over the last six years, insurance company executives have bitterly complained that federal insurance regulations were extremely prescriptive and onerous.
|
|
That move was condemned by the U.S., which accused the Hungarian government of placing "discriminatory, onerous requirements" on the institution.
|
|
The restrictions were onerous but not absolute; residents were sometimes permitted to leave during the day and return at night.
|
|
Others said they didn't report to Facebook because the process was onerous or they'd heard that it wouldn't change anything.
|
|
The lawyers call this minefield of onerous paperwork an "invisible wall," designed to make legal immigration as difficult as possible.
|
|
The application process became more onerous after the city petitioned the state to give them more leeway to deny shelter.
|
|
It also identified India's customs procedures as a hurdle to manufacturing and asked the government to make them less onerous.
|
|
The State Department has already moved to implement the president's "extreme vetting" directive by imposing new, onerous visa application requirements.
|
|
But they complain that the rules are onerous, particularly the tediousness of documenting virtually anything that happens on the farm.
|
|
That's before the onerous process of applying for jobs, or seeking benefits, or managing your health comes into the picture.
|
|
Shedding the onerous label of being a Systemically Important Financial Institution marked a milestone both for MetLife and the insurance industry.
|
|
Most onerous of all is Samsung forcing its Bixby camera-assisting features on me every time I open the camera app.
|
|
That has allowed trading giants and brokers subject to less onerous regulation to take the lion's share of the commodities market.
|
|
Similarly, new threats may emerge through the use of systems that will complete tasks normally too impractical or onerous for humans.
|
|
He doesn't think the sector will get very onerous regulation and believes oil services companies will start talking about price increases.
|
|
The most onerous part is continually upgrading the shell, a process that can get pretty intensely competitive with other crabs around.
|
|
Cohn said business leaders are telling the White House that onerous regulations, high taxes and crumbling infrastructure are impediments to prosperity.
|
|
The move to find alternatives to pre-trial detention includes easing onerous bail conditions that disproportionately affect minorities and indigenous people.
|
|
They are less keen on protracted review times, onerous rules and the reams of paperwork required to sell drugs in China.
|
|
The executive, who declined to be named while discussing client matters, said the due-diligence process was particularly onerous in China.
|
|
But the thin third-party app support, iffy fitness tracking accuracy, and sometimes onerous Samsung software keep it from being great.
|
|
Apple, in particular, was called out for allegedly making an exclusivity deal with Qualcomm in order to avoid its onerous terms.
|
|
Others would determine that only EU-based entities are eligible to invest in the securities, and impose various onerous disclosure requirements.
|
|
They upheld these statutes, even when they had the effect of making abortion more costly, time-consuming, or onerous to obtain.
|
|
Margins would be driven down, even as they continued having to abide by onerous banking regulations and hold balance-sheet risk.
|
|
In the Twitter era the concern over making certain that financial information has "broad distribution" appears to be the least onerous.
|
|
Because each medication may have its own PAP and eligibility requirements, signing up for these programs is "onerous," according to Mackey.
|
|
They sometimes prefer not to alert their superiors to outbreaks because to do so would require implementing onerous disease-control measures.
|
|
Bombardier booked a $500 million "onerous contract" charge related to that Delta order and a separate deal with Air Canada (AC.TO).
|
|
The group, which says it opposes onerous government regulation, notes that 2015 set a record for pages of new federal regulations.
|
|
It is not clear how onerous this will be or whether any banks will need to raise capital as a result.
|
|
"If fingerprint background checks were so onerous, Uber would have left Houston a long time ago," said one lobbyist, Laura Morrison.
|
|
Microsoft said it would comply with the ruling, which will require the paid-for service to adhere to more onerous regulation.
|
|
A Chamber of Commerce executive claimed before it was enacted that it would put "onerous burdens" on companies to collect data.
|
|
Ghana rejected a $3 billion oil infrastructure loan, due to onerous terms and a requirement that Chinese contractors build the project.
|
|
You would think that a Republican president would be in no rush to defend a Democratic predecessor's onerous rule burdening business.
|
|
But community banks and credit unions lack capacity and often face legal hurdles and onerous collateral requirements to handle public funds.
|
|
While thousands of small businesses chafe under heavy-handed regulation and onerous tax policies, many mega-corporations take a different view.
|
|
He also said he would go after corporations that try to stash money overseas in order to avoid onerous tax burdens.
|
|
Facebook has a clear incentive for courting conservatives: It sees Republicans as crucial allies in the fight to avoid onerous regulation.
|
|
Shares in Ladbrokes rose to 11-week highs after the CMA's findings, which were less onerous than some analysts had feared.
|
|
Unfortunately, the only way Congress can realistically prevent any of these onerous rules from taking effect is via the appropriations process.
|
|
It plans to issue a proposed rule in a few weeks that aims to make payday loans less onerous for borrowers.
|
|
He then intended to pursue graduate studies at the University of London, until onerous conditions were attached to his enrollment there.
|
|
They considered race days an onerous waste: all the travel, the waiting around, and the emotional stress for two quick runs.
|
|
It is ironic that, in an age in which those onerous obstacles have been removed, black enterprise has stagnated and declined.
|
|
Sanger said onerous regulations could make it more difficult for competitors to enter the market, ultimately benefiting big corporations like Facebook.
|
|
Long before he became president in January, Jair Bolsonaro argued that protections for Brazil's indigenous peoples were onerous and economically restrictive.
|
|
Clinton in the Democratic primary contest, said in a recent interview that he thought the 15 percent criteria was too onerous.
|
|
The commission claims Google acted anti-competitively by forcing onerous contracts on companies that used its search service on their sites.
|
|
The bill would also impose onerous new restrictions on some asylum applications that, if enacted, may violate U.S. humanitarian treaty commitments.
|
|
Democrats have argued that the measure, which is approved by the National Rifle Association, is too onerous to have any impact.
|
|
Trying to clean data going backwards is onerous, expensive and often fails to answers the questions you really want to ask.
|
|
Instead, the President's onerous and retroactive inversion rule is a misguided attempt to address a symptom, not cure the whole illness.
|
|
A fourth argument for lowering the corporate tax rate from 22019 percent to 21 percent is that 35 percent is onerous.
|
|
Layton blames what she considers onerous FCC regulations, not the free market, for creating a costly and unequal internet for consumers.
|
|
The incoming administration has a large task ahead: reversing the myriad of onerous government regulations enacted over the past eight years.
|
|
It's also prohibitively onerous to see incident reports (records that document accidents, injuries, and fatalities in national parks) that predate 2013.
|
|
It turns out that the kind of agriculture that early humans practiced was onerous and involved a tremendous amount of work.
|
|
Making it costlier and more onerous to comply could discourage farmers from making necessary improvements like buffer strips and grass waterways.
|
|
These onerous preconditions for writing and mothering and being a wife had to be brokered all by herself, all for herself.
|
|
The European Union has its own onerous data protection laws and each member state has its own laws concerning patient information.
|
|
If that doesn't sound onerous, bear in mind that if you can pay bail, you are generally released without any conditions.
|
|
Debts become more onerous over time, and consumers and businesses have incentive to hoard cash rather than spend or invest it.
|
|
But as seductive as these investments are, they can trap investors with onerous restrictions like high capital requirements and longtime commitments.
|
|
Still, Ms. Carmena has defied predictions that she would destroy the economy by placing onerous restrictions on private businesses and investment.
|
|
These are gains that could be achieved with a combination of positive incentives like tax credits and not-too-onerous regulation.
|
|
Jesse Eisenberg and Imogen Poots play a young couple trapped in a housing project and given an onerous task: child rearing.
|
|
Jesse Eisenberg and Imogen Poots play a young couple trapped in a housing project and given an onerous task: child rearing.
|
|
The penalties under the collective bargaining agreement that was ratified last December are particularly onerous for habitual scofflaws beginning in 268.5.
|
|
Media is in a particularly onerous spot with people declaring whatever they feel is contentious or slight to be fake news.
|
|
If the Hippocratic oath is to do no harm, today's doctors' onerous hours and bureaucratic responsibilities put them in serious jeopardy.
|
|
Never mind which kind of artist, for it is such an onerous thing to have to deem oneself this or that.
|
|
What stops them rising higher are the onerous demands of Swedish regulators and politicians plus the risk of rising household indebtedness.
|
|
More important, the costs of isolating Eritrea became too onerous for Ethiopia as it struggled to contain mounting unrest at home.
|
|
Struggling families that fail to pay school lunch fees are driven further into poverty by debt collectors and their onerous fees.
|
|
Costs for families in the top 10% of income — with a median income of $260,200 — would be higher, but hardly onerous.
|
|
Nonetheless, much of this bill would just duplicate what is already done, but with far more numerous and onerous analytical mandates.
|
|
The concentration of cases there has given the government greater confidence in imposing the onerous measures on cities in the region.
|
|
It also fails to address digital trade restrictions and China's onerous cybersecurity regulations that have hobbled U.S. technology firms in China.
|
|
The legislation "removes the most onerous and medically unnecessary restrictions on a woman exercising her right to choose," Virginia state Sen.
|
|
I recommend bringing your own sunscreen — and bug spray (though the restrictions on liquids for carry-ons can make this onerous).
|
|
Barack Obama's health reform imposed red tape, such as a switch to electronic medical records, that some smaller hospitals found onerous.
|
|
"They want to increase the subsidies, they want to make the penalty more onerous and they want the public option," Rep.
|
|
Analyzing far-flung datasets became onerous without a tool like Alloy that allowed for grabbing data and mapping its various relationships.
|
|
But when it comes to guns, there's no hesitation to impose fees, expensive training requirements, ID laws, and onerous background checks.
|
|
Without annual games against Ohio State, Penn State and Michigan, it offers a less onerous path to the conference title game.
|
|
" It's "going to create a very, very onerous balance of payments problem for them going forward especially if oil goes high.
|
|
That distinction would be onerous for ISPs to implement and would lead to individual ISPs defining "sensitive" in their own ways.
|
|
Still, many pension managers have remained invested in hedge funds, convinced that their portfolios will help them meet their onerous obligations.
|
|
When shoppers stopped showing up, retailers were all left suddenly with onerous, unprofitable real estate, magnifying the pain of plummeting sales.
|
|
They should also be increasingly onerous, including significant financial penalties and potential jail time for higher-ups who covered up abuse.
|
|
"It is also possible that the government could allow people to enlist but impose such onerous conditions that few would enlist."
|
|
In short, he could continue to be a reality TV star, playing president but not really doing anything dangerous or onerous.
|
|
Though the bill has been cast as a way to help community banks out of onerous regulation, progressives like Massachusetts Sen.
|
|
"We don't know what the length would be and it could have some very onerous conditions," such as holding another referendum.
|
|
But even just repealing the massive bill is proving onerous as Republicans debate the merits of doing so without a replacement ready.
|
|
Kymriah is a highly effective, one-time treatment with a follow-up that is far less frequent and onerous than traditional therapies.
|
|
In exchange, the venture firm would remove its right of first refusal clause and other terms that the Snapchat founders considered onerous.
|
|
This would mean far more onerous rent obligations for those receiving federal assistance that are likely to disproportionately impact families with children.
|
|
Guillier told the gathering that his government would speed up Chile's environmental permitting process, which many have accused of being too onerous.
|
|
Regulators have slapped penalties on the bank, the most onerous of which was capping its assets at $463trn, their level in 2017.
|
|
Leave supporters, on the other hand, argue that it will help boost the economy by eliminating onerous regulations that have dampened growth.
|
|
That avoided "onerous requirements" on companies, said Christopher Poe, assistant director for automated vehicle strategy at the Texas A&M Transportation Institute.
|
|
But steadily escalating sanctions eventually made it too onerous for the Chinese drillers to meet the obligations of their contracts with Tehran.
|
|
They say that in addition to the long hours and low wages, they are forced to work under onerous and degrading conditions.
|
|
This suggests that the potential cost to the group of providing support to the subsidiaries, if required, would not be too onerous.
|
|
The Republican commissioners also just generally believe that making companies fill out compliance forms and follow rules is onerous and prevents innovation.
|
|
The onerous terms of a $1bn loan Spotify took from TPG and Dragoneer, two investment firms, may have also played a part.
|
|
A series of hearings in Congress raised the specter of onerous new rules without ever quite convincing anyone that regulation was imminent.
|
|
It is now above 50% of GDP in almost half of the region's countries, and the cost of servicing it is onerous.
|
|
Some cities have proposed rules too onerous for the scooter companies, forcing them to decide whether to stick around or pull out.
|
|
However, other analysts said such cash releases could continue, with Barclays pointing to "longevity trends not being as onerous as once expected".
|
|
They would have to apply for a schedule 1 license, an onerous process, according to Laura Bohn, professor at Scripps Research Institute.
|
|
As explicated by CNN contributor Rachel Sklar, the online nondisclosure agreement volunteers are required to sign seems like a truly onerous document.
|
|
At the same time, the two ride-hailing companies have ceased operations in Austin because of regulations they feel are too onerous.
|
|
As EF's demo-day shows, the tech startup scene is getting more competitive, and the qualifications to get into it more onerous.
|
|
Defaulted borrowers rack up onerous fees that can increase the amount owed and lengthen the time if takes to repay the loan.
|
|
But H&R Block CEO Bill Cobb said Tuesday he supports discussions to make the 74,000-page tax code much less onerous.
|
|
His bill, the Financial Choice Act, is a market-based attempt that would peel back the most onerous Dodd-Frank regulatory layers.
|
|
To start up as an Uber driver in Calgary, it would cost up to $600 Canadian—a bill deemed far too onerous.
|
|
To thrive, it needs an educated workforce; effective, but not onerous, regulation; good access; a decent airport nearby; and plenty of electricity.
|
|
While this is a good start, one major costly, onerous and unnecessary regulation was left on the list – the prepaid card rule.
|
|
It was 2012, Workday had just gone public and the two were talking about the onerous but exciting process of starting companies.
|
|
Women are often tasked with collecting fuel and water, both roles made more onerous and dangerous by the effects of climate change.
|
|
So states are betting that by switching to those tests, they can have higher participation rates — and stem complaints about onerous testing.
|
|
They also said new regulations should avoid being as onerous as the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regulations imposed in Europe.
|
|
When his school stopped assigning homework, Ms. Rivera tried enrolling Damian at other charters, but the deadlines were past, the applications onerous.
|
|
That could change if Republican-led state legislatures move quickly to pass more onerous barriers for women to obtain the medical procedure.
|
|
But given their ability to afford onerous regulation, Big Tobacco could be the only player left standing in the e-cigarette market.
|
|
Many of America's small business owners find it too onerous, too risky and too costly to offer retirement options for their employees.
|
|
To implement the law, federal agencies set up reporting requirements, often onerous, to document whether funds are being used for authorized activities.
|
|
But the onerous registration process and split primaries are not the only tool of voter suppression and disenfranchisement that New York uses.
|
|
Talk of effectiveness suggests that law is simply a consideration, one that can be discarded when it proves too onerous or irritating.
|
|
Banks complain that more onerous regulations have hamstrung their ability to play their traditional role in lubricating activity in the bond market.
|
|
It makes debt more onerous because you have to pay it back with money that will be more valuable the next day.
|
|
When Pruitt took over, multiple automobile trade associations complained that the comment period had been rushed, and that the requirements were onerous.
|
|
In fact, the federal government alone has hired nearly 3,000 new full-time employees to enforce compliance to the onerous new regulations.
|
|
To what extent do onerous restrictions on small-dollar loans facilitate legalized redlining and discrimination against those Americans already struggling the most?
|
|
Applicants facing a take-home project that's onerous to complete need to think deeply about whether they're a fit for the company.
|
|
Even if single payer is ruled out, failure to control costs will likely lead to onerous new regulations throughout the healthcare sector.
|
|
Opposition parties and other critics say President Yoweri Museveni's government imposes onerous taxes to fund wasteful spending while failing to stem corruption.
|
|
And those in the industry claim the paperwork is so onerous and expensive, it would put most vape companies out of business.
|
|
For example, many women who get surgery drop out of radiation treatment, reporting that it's too onerous to go daily, he says.
|
|
" Ajit Pai also issued a statement on the matter, saying he was pleased California was staying implementation of "its onerous Internet regulations.
|
|
The paperwork to research controlled substances is onerous, and sometimes hundreds of drugs need to be screened to find one that works.
|
|
Despite a 2016 Supreme Court case that blocked some of these most onerous Targeted Regulation of Abortion Provider (TRAP) laws, many remain.
|
|
PDG filed for bankruptcy protection in February after citing a severe cash crunch and onerous debt of 7.3 billion reais ($2.33 billion).
|
|
The banking industry supports the rollback the rule, claiming the burden on lenders to determine borrowers' ability to repay is overly onerous.
|
|
On Thursday, the Supreme Court made the printing of census forms — a job held by one company, R.R. Donnelley — even more onerous.
|
|
The agencies allow employers to tap into a more flexible work force — and avoid some of the region's more onerous labor costs.
|
|
It should be noted that most of these people have jobs; it's the onerous reporting procedures that are having their intended effect.
|
|
Those corporate giants long have opposed the more onerous rules put in place by Pai's predecessor, former Democratic FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler.
|
|
To protect the inquiry, Mr. Rosenstein has agreed to meet increasingly onerous demands from Mr. Trump and his allies on Capitol Hill.
|
|
Wage stagnation, onerous regulatory hurdles, and, above all, housing supply not keeping up with demand have led the nation to this junction.
|
|
The colors have to be approved by the board as historically accurate, a requirement that Ms. Woodbridge did not find too onerous.
|
|
It's not clear who Musk was encouraging to use "less onerous masks," but healthy people do not need to wear a mask.
|
|
Extreme heat on the ground also affects airport workers; loading and unloading luggage and servicing planes between flights could become more onerous.
|
|
But critics claim that conditions needed to trigger payouts are far too onerous, preventing or delaying the arrival of much needed help.
|
|
Some students say the visa process for entering the United States is onerous, especially considering the uncertainty about how regulations might change.
|
|
A recovery looks likely next year if the government revamps rules related to home sales contracts that are onerous for the sector.
|
|
In exchange, the venture firm would remove its right-of-first-refusal clause and other terms that the Snapchat founders considered onerous.
|
|
President Trump's absolutely best economic policy so far has been his relentless rampage against onerous, burdensome, costly, prosperity-killing regulations on business.
|
|
And they should reform voting laws to ban onerous voter ID requirements, re-enfranchise ex-felons and automatically register everyone to vote.
|
|
And then there's the fear that serving customers' homes is too onerous a task in itself, Oppenheimer & Co. analyst Brian Nagel said.
|
|
And while swiping an A.T.M. card may not exactly seem onerous, bankers think going card-free will be a hit with consumers.
|
|
But Republicans see the rules as onerous and argue that free markets will ensure a "free and open internet" without such regulations.
|
|
Many of its stores are connected by onerous leases to malls, which have suffered decreased traffic and sales as consumer patterns change.
|
|
That might sound un-American, but Americans already have many such obligations, including more onerous ones like paying taxes or jury duty.
|
|
This is a cycle that feeds itself rather than an onerous tax code that feeds upon itself and depresses innovation and growth.
|
|
Serco said its expectations were unchanged for 2017, when onerous contract provisions are expected to be a drag on free cash flow.
|
|
The labor crunch leads the obstacles to closing that gap, including rising materials prices, the limited availability of land and onerous regulations.
|
|
Republican supporters of the legislation said the regulations, created during the final days of the Obama administration, were onerous and stifled innovation.
|
|
Many of those venues would struggle to survive even without onerous regulations because the property market is among the world's most expensive.
|
|
At the heart of the industry's confidence is the Fed's stress test, an annual ritual that banks have complained is overly onerous.
|
|
He helped the young model with onerous tasks like setting up a monthly budget and got her thinking about long-term objectives.
|
|
Representative Gaetz is correct in his opinion that federal hurdles to clinical cannabis research are unduly onerous and ought to be abolished.
|
|
But I'm one of those people that I really feel it is onerous to have to charge this thing every single day.
|
|
Republican lawmakers, who often say CFPB regulations are too onerous, want to nullify it in Congress, and the industry has already threatened lawsuits.
|
|
In particular, the White House and the Fed have worked to tailor capital rules to be less onerous on regional and community banks.
|
|
Morgan Reed, president of industry group The App Association, argues that yesterday's ruling could result in onerous lawsuits that won't ultimately help consumers.
|
|
KJ's father was convicted of identity theft, but it was an onerous process for Patterson to try to clear her son's credit history.
|
|
The character's testiness and onerous insistence on having things just the right way comes across as increasingly ridiculous as the film goes along.
|
|
Optimists hope equivalence could not just form the basis of a feasible deal, but might even allow Britain to remove some onerous regulations.
|
|
Mainland companies heading offshore could find the requirements onerous because they lack experience in the area, according to EY tax partner Travis Qiu.
|
|
The reason, according to Jobs: Facebook wanted "onerous terms that we could not agree to," related to connecting with Facebook friends on Ping.
|
|
In the 90-minute hearing, Matt Bowman, a lawyer for the conservative group, argued that the law imposed an onerous and unconstitutional burden.
|
|
Media companies, for one, are going to complain that the takedown process is onerous and that it doesn't actually keep their works offline.
|
|
"Obviously, this is a much smaller economy, and there are a lot fewer incentives to negotiate with any onerous new requirements," he said.
|
|
And in terms of production vehicles, Tesla cars are equipped with full-autonomous hardware, and they even have a (legally onerous) autopilot system.
|
|
The company likens its service to the layaway and credit plans that already exist in Colombia — but involve pretty onerous requirements to use.
|
|
In both cases, people who made choices by instinct and on their own terms acquire new, often onerous responsibilities with barely any preparation.
|
|
His GOP colleague Ajit Pai voted against the deal outright, also in protest of the conditions, which he considers to be too onerous.
|
|
But if we can devise efficient chemical separations, the thought of recycling a wide variety of rare earths starts to become less onerous.
|
|
That should not be so onerous that Iran would walk away from the economic relief it stands to gain from the nuclear deal.
|
|
Today, no Australian business would seriously advocate abandoning its system and taking on the cost madness of an onerous American health care scheme.
|
|
These smaller financial institutions have their hands tied with onerous regulations and high compliance costs, and their ability to loan money is constrained.
|
|
To our dismay, we have seen cutbacks in early voting, discriminatory identification requirements, unnecessarily onerous registration procedures and purges of the voting rolls.
|
|
Federal regulators are expected to announce changes easing some of the rule's requirements, amid complaints from banks they are too onerous and confusing.
|
|
McLaughlin said government fees and construction standards can be onerous and make building uneconomical even when land can be bought on the cheap.
|
|
Most open platforms responded by excluding those under 13, rather than take on the onerous parental permission process and challenges of serving children.
|
|
This will repeal most of ObamaCare but leave the law's onerous insurance regulations in place and potentially worsen our already dysfunctional healthcare system.
|
|
It's not onerous and never took more than a few seconds, but it is something that users will have to be educated on.
|
|
The emergence of matching apps, for those seeking love or theatre tickets or a lift, has certainly made once-onerous tasks more convenient.
|
|
The expectation this winter is that the restrictions will be more widespread, even if slightly less onerous, resulting in a loss of output.
|
|
It fails to fully repeal ObamaCare, leaving intact most of the onerous insurance regulations and mandates responsible for driving up premiums and deductibles.
|
|
Angela Merkel is speculated about wistfully, but most think that she would rather stay as Germany's chancellor, however onerous the job has become.
|
|
A courtroom battle that involves publicly picking apart standard, onerous provisions of a fighter contract would have ramifications that trickle down the roster.
|
|
Worst SPX stock Freeport-McMoRan slides 21 pct on Q1 profit miss , and onerous environmental demands from Indonesia's govt ** Industrials down 3.1 pct.
|
|
Downer Group, a Sydney-headquartered engineering firm, told Reuters it decided against bidding for the Queensland order because of the "onerous" contract terms.
|
|
He argued that these terminals often come with onerous contracts for the business owner, and they're not a great experience for consumers, either.
|
|
Carriers have typically been the biggest hurdle to overcome with their onerous and costly tests, but hardware makers haven't been without fault either.
|
|
Owing to onerous know-your-customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) restrictions associated with retail channels, dLocal only provides commercial payment services.
|
|
The Paris agreement on climate change burdened our manufacturers and workers, while letting China and India build and expand without such onerous restrictions.
|
|
Well, not really; but the White House's tax cuts and rollback of onerous regulations have encouraged millions of Americans to do just that.
|
|
The funds also sidestep new onerous Securities and Exchange Commission rules aimed at improving the liquidity of mutual funds popular in retirement accounts.
|
|
Too many people are dying when we have in our collective grasp all the pieces to slow -- and even reverse -- this onerous trend.
|
|
They argue that the net neutrality rules are onerous regulations that stifle broadband investment, which hurts their ability to give consumers better products.
|
|
Debt payments proved particularly onerous as the retail environment changed and retailers needed to make investments in their businesses they could not afford.
|
|
That means removing the onerous mandates and price controls of the ACA thus encouraging the pooling of risk by letting markets price it.
|
|
Potential bidders for Air India last year suggested they found some of the stake sale terms too onerous, making it a non-starter.
|
|
These are vastly different projects that serve a similar purpose: an outlet outside of the onerous narrative demands of the traditional album cycle.
|
|
Companies never took advantage of the law anyway, industry experts say, in part because they found the law's requirements too byzantine and onerous.
|
|
Paxum and Payoneer are known to be friendly to sex workers, though their onerous onboarding process can make it unappealing for many clients.
|
|
A growing number of states are passing increasingly onerous restrictions on women's health care, including birth control and abortion, without much media attention.
|
|
Numerous surveys have highlighted the devastating impact this onerous policy has played in stunting job creation and thwarting investments in research and development.
|
|
If automated vehicles are individually owned, they will likely generate massive new vehicle use, since travel will no longer be seen as onerous.
|
|
There were more than 40 clinics providing abortion care in Texas in 2013 when lawmakers approved onerous and burdensome new restrictions for clinics.
|
|
Joseph Borelli, a Republican councilman from Staten Island who voted against the bill, said that speed restrictions in his district were too onerous.
|
|
Lael Brainard, the last remaining Fed governor chosen by President Barack Obama, has pushed back on those attempts to make regulation less onerous.
|
|
Sheriff Temple Jennings would rather look into this crime than perform his more onerous duties, like foreclosing on Jess and Hazel Fuller's farm.
|
|
One friend pointed out that the 2008 exercises were particularly onerous because they started two weeks earlier than they had in previous years.
|
|
"The challenge for all development partners is to ensure investments ... don't impose onerous debt burdens on regional governments," Bishop told Australian Broadcasting Corp.
|
|
These laws often require abortion providers to be able to admit patients at nearby hospitals or demand that clinics meet onerous licensing standards.
|
|
The Trump administration has since reimposed onerous sanctions on Iran even as other countries, including Britain, have pledged to honor the nuclear accord.
|
|
The company must now strike new licensing agreements with its customers that are free from "onerous" fees for the use of its patents.
|
|
I used to report from China each year but now find the limits on a journalist visa so onerous that it's not worthwhile.
|
|
"The House blueprint calls for a shift from an onerous business income tax to a simpler US-based cash flow system," he said.
|
|
They are exempt from onerous disclosure rules that apply to banks and issuers of mortgage-backed securities with private credit guarantees, for example.
|
|
TPG's exit from Chobani closes a deal that was profitable for the private equity firm, but onerous, if necessary, for the yogurt maker.
|
|
Michael Bennet of Colorado, standing before a bank of cameras and journalists tightly packed together due to the onerous Senate press restrictions. Sen.
|
|
And one conservative organization estimates his efforts to eliminate onerous and expensive regulations could save American businesses and consumers $60 billion or more.
|
|
It will ease the onerous restrictions on localities seeking federal funding, instead encouraging municipalities to allow more housing to be built, increasing affordability.
|
|
Many departments already had policies and training requirements governing appropriate, constitutionally-sound uses of such equipment, so this requirement was not particularly onerous.
|
|
Cox said members of Congress might think more about returning home to run for governor as life in the Capitol becomes more onerous.
|
|
DeVos defended some of the for-profit institutions on Thursday, arguing that onerous regulations by the previous administration forced them to shut down.
|
|
Others have criticized Voatz's bounty program as onerous and hostile to researchers, which might explain why the MIT researchers did not take part.
|
|
But it also undermined Roe's protections by allowing states to regulate the procedure, which lead to an avalanche of onerous state-level restrictions.
|
|
I could quickly appreciate how onerous a task formula feeding could be, what with all the measuring, mixing, warming, cleaning, and so forth.
|
|
I wasn't surprised: Hiding common medications is a workaround, an example of circumventing onerous rules to make sure patients get even basic care.
|
|
The empirical evidence is clear, the reduction in onerous price and routing controls was a big win for the industry, shippers and consumers.
|
|
Unfortunately, this historical record and the evidence was largely ignored the STB just a few years ago when several onerous regulations were proposed.
|
|
For years, low inflation across most of the advanced world was part of a vicious cycle featuring onerous debt burdens and low growth.
|
|
There are, however, some very good ideas available that depend on restraining government spending to provide relief from onerous regulations and burdensome taxes.
|
|
For America's legions of smaller online trinket-sellers, app-makers or other firms present on the internet the Californian law will be onerous.
|
|
He must decide whether to reinstate onerous restrictions on American companies that do business with Huawei, a Chinese telecommunications giant, by August 19th.
|
|
"If it's not working out in practice and it's too onerous, there's probably some room for tinkering, but it's awful soon," Lynch said.
|
|
In many European countries, abortion is widely available in the early months of pregnancy, without the onerous restrictions of some conservative states here.
|
|
The co-op board application can be an onerous one, full of reference letters and exhaustive information about your financial holdings and history.
|
|
Each state has different and sometimes onerous requirements for getting on the ballot as an independent candidate, and their deadlines are rapidly approaching.
|
|
Illinois is commonly described as a "donut hole" in the Midwest, where abortion care can be delivered without the smog of onerous restrictions.
|
|
The laws across the United States that determine how a transgender person can update their IDs are confusing and often contain onerous requirements.
|
|
The proposals will focus on simplifying and easing requirements around the plans, as banks have complained the lengthy documents can be onerous to produce.
|
|
Forget the onerous process of pulling your Pixel or iPhone from your pocket, unlocking it, opening apps, and tapping your desires onto a screen.
|
|
DT's debt maturity profile is well spread with single-year refinancing exposure at below EUR7bn, which is not onerous in view of DT's size.
|
|
The GOP says that Obamacare is a failed program that has led to increasing premiums and onerous out-of-pocket charges to many Americans.
|
|
The report documented particularly onerous restrictions on Muslims -- who have been prevented or discouraged from fasting for Ramadan or wearing veils -- and Tibetan Buddhists.
|
|
Getting rid of the entire law would be far too onerous for a $16 trillion industry that already has implemented many of the measures.
|
|
Still, companies wouldn't be giving up much, especially compared to more onerous restrictions like banning flavors or pulling some products off the market altogether.
|
|
Whoever Trump picks to fill the position will likely echo the new president's philosophy on surveillance, which many privacy advocates see as particularly onerous.
|
|
That designation carries more onerous reporting requirements, including monthly counseling and registration as a sex offender with police for the rest of his life.
|
|
So why is the FDA singling out the abortion pill for onerous restrictions that it does not require for equally or less safe drugs?
|
|
And under a new tax scheme, any cuentapropista who wants to hire more than 20 workers must pay onerous wages for each additional employee.
|
|
Meanwhile, too much of the burden falls on individuals if their firm goes bankrupt, as banks—the main source of financing—demand onerous guarantees.
|
|
Its supporters counter that it is both voluntary and relatively cheap: the Democrats' Family Act would be more onerous for all workers and employers.
|
|
It's a task that may sound like an onerous and extra part of the process, but it actually opens up more options for gameplay.
|
|
A huge majority of scientific literature is only published in English because it would be onerous to translate this highly technical text for others.
|
|
The program would be criticized for offering subprime loans with onerous terms and for repossessing vehicles when drivers didn't make their payments on time.
|
|
Both prefer their own self-administered background checks, which they say draw on more up-to-date information and are less onerous for drivers.
|
|
For many architects, the hardest part of their job starts after they finish designing a building, when the onerous process of code compliance begins.
|
|
Ambiguous rules, an onerous return filing system and glitches with its IT back-end have made doing business far more complicated for many companies.
|
|
That leaves just 15 percent of onshore land that is either subject to executive branch prohibitions or onerous stipulations that make drilling there uneconomic.
|
|
The individual tax rate brackets would be folded down from seven to three or four, and the onerous alternative minimum tax would be abolished.
|
|
Despite the onerous Dodd-Frank regulations, Wall Street jobs continued to grow, adding 18,000 in the past month and 26.3,2306 over the past year.
|
|
When they get home, Vector will recognize their face and deliver your message, presumably with a twee animation to make the chore less onerous.
|
|
Hellerstedt that struck down onerous laws passed by some states to shut down abortion clinics, over the objection of four other Republican-appointed Justices.
|
|
They say the data they use can not identify the user and is therefore low risk, making asking for consent every time too onerous.
|
|
His administration did issue rules the oil and gas industry said were onerous, but they weren't nearly as restrictive as many Democrats had wanted.
|
|
"This bill would impose a very onerous - and entirely unilateral - set of restrictions on outbound transactions of U.S. companies," Padilla said in written testimony.
|
|
"These weren't terribly onerous restrictions, yet at the same time, they changed prescribing in a way that has really significant cost implications," Larkin said.
|
|
He spoke privately with Trump last month at Mar-a-Lago about some regulations he considers onerous, including the Department of Labor's overtime rules.
|
|
The U.S. government ensured American firms were not subject to onerous business conditions, like compulsory technology transfer, or rampant theft of their intellectual property.
|
|
Third, the proximity of a cluster's stars to one another means interstellar travel is not nearly as onerous as it would be for humanity.
|
|
Many aggrieved Americans have been able to bear these types of onerous charges in part by banding together in lawsuits known as class actions.
|
|
They feared that a more onerous system of patent challenges would help drug makers stave off competition from cheaper generic versions of their products.
|
|
Having had a major illness, it's really ... And having great insurance ... It's fascinating, I can't even imagine if you didn't have ... It's already onerous.
|
|
The European Commission is considering various onerous regulations, including a European content quota, and a requirement to contribute to subsidy pots for national production.
|
|
One factor which may drive demand is the possibility of using insurance to cover the risk of the onerous fines under the new law.
|
|
I suspect these are part-sincerity and part-unwillingness to risk their own jobs and confront the onerous task of building a new infrastructure.
|
|
In fact, of all my years of seeing weird corn accessories (see: Butter Boy), never have I found buttering corn to be particularly onerous.
|
|
Both are cities that have been abandoned by Uber after their governments passed laws seen as onerous by the famously prickly ride-hailing service.
|
|
Coupled with the predicted 28503 million hours of paperwork, this is one of the most expensive and onerous regulations of the entire Obama administration.
|
|
But an onerous and complex web of security checks and vetting procedures, shared among several government agencies, has made the target difficult to reach.
|
|
A third UPA government would surely have shied away from reforming India's onerous labour laws or privatising poorly run public enterprises, like Air India.
|
|
Trump officials, including Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) head Andrew Wheeler, argued the old rule was too onerous for the car industry and not effective.
|
|
Pai and other Republicans have long argued that the net neutrality rules are an example of onerous government regulation that stifles the broadband industry.
|
|
Though Ms. Sharmila gives interviews, the process of securing them can be onerous, or they are squeezed in during her brief respites from custody.
|
|
If a person has insurance, but ends up getting services from an out-of-network provider, the cost can be steep, or even onerous.
|
|
"The Trump administration is on wobbly legal ground in trying to limit Medicaid enrollment by imposing onerous work requirements," Perkins said in a statement.
|
|
More onerous is the demand for a fiscal surplus, before interest payments, of 3.5 percent – something almost no European countries have managed for long.
|
|
Allegations by Ontario regulators of misleading investors sparked a run by depositors and forced the firm to hastily arrange borrowing capacity on onerous terms.
|
|
Between onerous and unnecessary regulation of clinics, harassment, and vandalism, and even the risk of death, being an abortion provider means living under threat.
|
|
"Discussions with various antitrust authorities have resulted in indications that merger clearance ... will be subject to requirements more onerous than previously assumed," Linde said.
|
|
If it's too onerous, he could pare back his goals and include a more expansive lobbying definition that would only apply to the administration.
|
|
Fleet, a startup focused on making international logistics less onerous for small companies, announced that it has raised a Series A of $10 million.
|
|
Now, the prisoner issue is heating up as President Trump threatens to derail the nuclear agreement with Iran and possibly revive onerous American sanctions.
|
|
Now that Mr. Marshall's art has reached tropospheric prices, insurance and maintenance costs can become onerous to institutions that don't specialize in holding art.
|
|
Consider the case of Ohio-based American Electric Power, one of the nation's largest utilities, which opposed the Clean Power Plan, calling it onerous.
|
|
At a TLC hearing prior to today's vote, a number of drivers described the onerous terms these leasing companies loan these cars out under.
|
|
Any new law must foster this commercial interest in the value of privacy without making it onerous for new businesses to emerge and compete.
|
|
Pakistan already relies on China to develop critical infrastructure projects worth some $62 billion, with onerous loan terms and profit-sharing agreements benefiting Beijing.
|
|
Moreover, across major emerging markets, many companies and banks had borrowed money in dollars, so a stronger dollar made their debt burdens more onerous.
|
|
But Mr. Scutari, who represents Union County, said he was working with officials on a way to simplify the process and eliminate onerous fees.
|
|
Both went through a Chapter 11 bankruptcy, autoworkers unions agreed to restructured contracts, and the companies were allowed to end onerous contracts with dealers.
|
|
Between the lines: 401(k)s and other defined contribution plans are cheaper for the firms than pensions and more onerous for the employees.
|
|
As more Americans shop online, the company's cavernous suburban stores became outdated and the $2348 billion debt from its private equity owners too onerous.
|
|
Arkansas officials wrote that their state's law was not as onerous as the one from Texas, which required abortion providers to have admitting privileges.
|
|
It is highly unlikely that the negotiators are even talking about these factors because they are more onerous than other forms of IP theft.
|
|
The fate of Dylann Roof will likely wind through thickets of legal appeals and an equally onerous state trial before it is ultimately resolved.
|
|
Oil lobbyists pressed their case that the methane rule was onerous and duplicative, since many oil-producing states already have state-level methane regulations.
|
|
These include a 72-hour waiting period, onerous building requirements like extra wide hallways, and, until just last year, extra medically unnecessary pelvic exams.
|
|
"Our approach is to do successive up rounds with straightforward terms rather than chase a big slug with onerous terms," Dhillon told TechCrunch once.
|
|
Administration critics contend slow permitting, which administrations from both parties have called problematic, stems from threadbare federal funding and staffing rather than onerous rules.
|
|
Some of the developing countries may protest that such requirements are too onerous without the incentive of being able to export to American consumers.
|
|
It just struck a new licensing deal with Universal Music which would lower Spotify's onerous revenue share if it can attract enough new customers.
|
|
And yet in its current form, the bill contains two highly onerous provisions that would result in undue burdens for the larger disability community.
|
|
On the one hand, the Trump-appointed commission headed by Governor Chris Christie (R) recommends removing onerous barriers to medication-assisted treatments for addiction.
|
|
If the idea of overhauling your hair-care regimen sounds onerous, Ms. von Mueffling has this simple tip: Be gentler when drying your hair.
|
|
The Libertarian Party has navigated the multitude of onerous requirements for ballot access in all 50 states, a task unaccomplished by any other third party.
|
|
Law enforcement experts say the review is a less onerous process for the police than if the DOJ's civil rights division had launched an investigation.
|
|
The onerous terms of the deal suggest Wag does not have significant leverage in fundraising negotiations, perhaps a sign of troubled finances at the company.
|
|
We need to work harder to eliminate onerous voting laws and make voting easier, not focus on long-shot recounts that provide only false hope.
|
|
Hansen lauded the company for its no-hassle design, allowing customer to bypass onerous tasks like hiring an agent, fixing up the home, and others.
|
|
American air travel is miserable in almost every possible way, from increasingly onerous security procedures to the threat of literally having your teeth knocked out.
|
|
As the stadium aged - and new, state-of-the-art NFL stadiums were erected in New Jersey, Texas, and California – the bar became more onerous.
|
|
It makes no sense whatsoever, and applying the deduction to a higher wage ceiling would not be an onerous burden on the higher wage earner.
|
|
In "Enemy of the State," a congressman holds firm against the passage of a surveillance bill that would be an onerous privacy overreach toward Americans.
|
|
So would making life easier for startups, loosening onerous labor regulations, and improving the utilization of the female workforce – which together comprise Arrow No. 3.
|
|
Arguably requiring citizens above a certain age to participate in a country's democracy is not an onerous burden and gives the result far greater legitimacy.
|
|
Sales of both have been severely constrained by onerous roadblocks to patient access put up by insurers looking to limit spending on the expensive drugs.
|
|
Though Goldman is contesting the case, it is spooking shareholders, who worry about both onerous fines and what it implies about oversight at the bank.
|
|
Hellerstedt, the plaintiffs argue that Texas's onerous abortion regulations would destroy the basic infrastructure that women rely on to exercise their constitutional right to abortion.
|
|
That bill funded the government through September 30, and mixed all 12 spending bills that run the federal government into an onerous legislative fur ball.
|
|
The system would be less onerous than tracking cattle throughout their entire lives, during which they can be kept at up to four different locations.
|
|
Under the onerous and ultimately illegal provisions of HB249, abortion providers were required to reach the same medical standards as hospital-like ambulatory surgical centers.
|
|
Simply put, overturning the Quill decision would create onerous burdens that would force many small businesses to close their doors and shut down their websites.
|
|
More subtly, onerous planning rules in almost all countries block the construction of new homes in the cities where young people most want to live.
|
|
Legislators pitch the requirements as a boon to maternal health; detractors decry them as onerous, unwarranted changes that often leave women with nowhere to turn.
|
|
Insurers and pharmacy benefit managers have put up onerous roadblocks to patient access for the drug, with some 75 percent of prescriptions written being denied.
|
|
Thai regulator, the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission, scrapped a previous tender in June after three Thai mobile operators skipped the auctions citing onerous terms.
|
|
Onerous borrowing costs combined with government spending cuts and a drought that crippled Argentina's agricultural sector this year have slammed Latin America's third-largest economy.
|
|
And sadly, as long as it's as onerous and embarrassing to change estimates as it is now we're going to keep seeing these balls dropped.
|
|
May's foreign minister, Jeremy Hunt, said on Thursday an emergency summit could offer a long extension but under "very onerous conditions" unlikely to satisfy parliament.
|
|
Uber is getting its complaints in-line in Texas, however, now saying the Houston system is too onerous and threatening to pull out there, too.
|
|
In fact, the Trump administration has already taken significant steps toward this by rolling back onerous EPA regulations that did nothing to improve air quality.
|
|
These changes were made to respond to objections from low-wage employers, mostly in Southern states, who said the new rules would be too onerous.
|
|
Ask any online shopper the one thing they'd love to change about the experience, and chances are they'll tell you the onerous check-out process.
|
|
At the same time, they could achieve similar ends by refusing to strike down onerous restrictions on abortion providers and clinics passed by state legislatures.
|
|
"Convenience retailers will welcome any flexibility the FDA may be able to provide in order to comply with this onerous rule," says spokesman Jon Taets.
|
|
Onerous regulations or outright bans on internal combustion engines and the performance advantages of electric powertrains may pose an existential threat to companies like Ferrari.
|
|
The Senate's bill maintains the alternative minimum tax, a measure that has been widely criticized as complex and onerous by both sides of the aisle.
|
|
As a result, the new government could negotiate less onerous conditions if it finds that targets set for the end of 2016 were not met.
|
|
We believe that all people thrive when they are allowed to keep more of what they earn and when they are unencumbered by onerous regulations.
|
|
The more obvious difference between the two countries is that in Bangladesh, the absence of caste, impurity, and contamination norms made behavioral change less onerous.
|
|
Roughly 70 percent of the company's leases run out within a decade, while many of its rivals are locked into more onerous 25-year contracts.
|
|
The "path forward," as Pompeo described it, is for Iran to submit to onerous new U.S. sanctions and concede to a long list of demands.
|
|
Bankers strongly support policies that promote a vibrant retail sector, but onerous price caps and regulations hurt consumers more than they help grow the economy.
|
|
Without substantial help, Iran may feel it has nothing to gain by continuing to endure both onerous sanctions and a freeze of its nuclear program.
|
|
On Monday the Memphis-based outfit founded and run by Frederick Smith revealed that it was suing the U.S. Commerce Department over onerous export rules.
|
|
First, she identifies the constant harping on the requirements as (in Pai's words) needless, onerous, ill-defined, burdensome and so on as misleading and unsupported.
|
|
He said the Obama administration made the program "more onerous" with regulations so the industry is encouraged that the Trump administration is looking at streamlining.
|
|
But its onerous terms, under which the Chinese would essentially own the dams themselves, kept Pakistan from including the dam project in the broader deal.
|
|
Given those numbers, it is clear we can end the cash bail trap without resorting to onerous conditions of release or to justice by algorithm.
|
|
And that means ending wealth-based detention, but also rejecting electronic surveillance and the panoply of other unnecessary and onerous probation-like conditions of release.
|
|
In the countryside, children left with extended family — usually uneducated or even illiterate grandparents with onerous jobs — are at risk of not getting adequate care.
|
|
He also said that the burden placed upon the president to produce documents was far less onerous than other cases cited by the president's lawyers.
|
|
Because the upkeep of the oldest house in the neighborhood, with its leaded-glass windows, and its pear orchards, and its historic-ness, is onerous.
|
|
He also suggested that if an onerous tax plan is signed by President Trump, the response from his party and their supporters should be immediate.
|
|
Without the burden of onerous regulations, the New World of France, like most New World wine regions, has been prone to following fads and trends.
|
|
If he sees credit card arbitration agreements as onerous for consumers, presumably he sees forced arbitration more generally as something the government should work against.
|
|
"[T]he CFIUS review recommended measures and conditions that both Sequoia and Smartmatic found too onerous to accept," Murphy wrote in an email to POLITICO.
|
|
Democrats have accused the Republicans of targeting Mr. Rosenstein because he oversees the special counsel investigation and forcing him to accede to onerous congressional demands.
|
|
The mind wanders: Perhaps even onerous courtroom procedures can use an injection of smart technology to bring down waiting times for trial lawyers and defendants.
|
|
But her novels are different: They entertain the possibility that motherhood might be an experience conducive to creativity, even when it is tiring or onerous.
|
|
The U.S. State Department had described the bill as putting "onerous" requirements on NGOs in Guatemala, saying such groups play key roles in functioning democracies.
|
|
After some initial tweaking, the system produced control forces that closely mimicked those of the earlier 737 models, allowing the Max to avoid onerous recertification.
|
|
In any case, Paul ended up on far-less onerous duty with a farmworker corps near Vienna, where he was able to study musical scores.
|
|
Voter fraud is a big issue for Republicans, but Democrats believe it is a non-issue drummed up as a justification for onerous registration rules.
|
|
It will also require reporters to pass through an additional security check, which will make reporting from the events onerous, Roll Call reported on Tuesday.
|
|
It could do so by, at the very least, repealing the onerous Jones Act and by making Medicaid transfers to the island more readily available.
|
|
"There's a coalition to be had opposing onerous taxes or burdensome regulations that don't work for a majority of the members of Congress," Geduldig added.
|
|
The state said it was free not only to impose onerous procedures, but also to enact a law making exonerated defendants forfeit the money entirely.
|
|
After all, to Brexit supporters, the whole point of leaving the EU was to leave it: to get away from all of its onerous regulations.
|
|
The Federal Communications Commission's Restoring Internet Freedom Order, which did away with the Obama administration's onerous net neutrality rules, has officially hit the Federal Register.
|
|
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce sent a letter to lawmakers arguing that Mr. Puzder's executive experience would make him less likely to impose onerous regulations.
|
|
The process is lifesaving, but also onerous, often requiring that patients be tethered to a machine for hours at a time, three times a week.
|
|
After the Supreme Court struck down Washington, DC's handgun ban in 2628, the city quickly imposed the onerous licensing and registration fees in the country.
|
|
Some American military officials had also chafed at what they viewed as long and onerous White House procedures for approving strikes under the Obama administration.
|
|
After taking office, he had eased some of the more onerous restrictions on Cuban citizens, giving them the right to own computers and cell phones.
|
|
He said the state was not only free to impose onerous procedures, but could also enact a law making exonerated defendants forfeit the money entirely.
|
|
Pai's move has strong backing among Republicans and broadband companies like AT&T and Comcast, who see the Obama-era rules and onerous and stifling.
|
|
Among other things, it imposes massively onerous reporting requirements that have inhibited, and could defeat, the widespread adoption of this breakthrough technology for retail commerce.
|
|
Once a public comment period is all done, Lighthizer will issue a final list of goods and services subject to onerous tariffs, fees or restrictions.
|
|
In China, the onerous lockdowns and requirements force us to think not only of ourselves but of the welfare of our family, colleagues, and neighbors.
|
|
Containing the fast-spreading disease marks an onerous challenge for the global mining industry, given the difficulty of employing "social distancing" measures in confined spaces.
|
|
The inability of LSAT takers to follow the test's extremely onerous rules is slightly disconcerting, considering these are the future arbiters of our legal system.
|
|
Social media firms want to regulate themselves, and Google has threatened to withdraw all political ads in Canada if it finds transparency rules too onerous.
|
|
Mr. Thomas said the amount of the fee, $27.20, was chosen to evoke the number of people sold, while not being too onerous for students.
|
|
Others may think the administrative aspect of documentation or forms are too onerous — even though they are simpler than infectious disease or domestic violence reporting.
|
|
Pai and his allies in the telecom industry (Pai is a former lawyer for Verizon) argue that the Title II designation is onerous and outdated.
|
|
But these onerous travel restrictions on journalists, academics and students go to the heart of what kind of country the United States wants to be.
|
|
Sri Lanka and the Chinese government also discussed loan terms, which critics said were too onerous on the host country, Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake told Reuters.
|
|
According to the reader, Wilson said she felt that they'd already put Drake through the wringer, and that another page-one revision would be too onerous.
|
|
" Says the statement: "It is vital that any new arrangements are not onerous or complex and that the industry is not held back by skills shortages.
|
|
In an ideal world, sitting in a salon chair for the duration of three podcasts would be the most onerous part of getting your hair colored.
|
|
For young people with bad or no credit history, these loans can prove less onerous to obtain than the lines of plastic credit their parents popularized.
|
|
Hellerstedt challenges a Texas law that effectively shut down dozens of clinics with new regulations that opponents say are onerous and unnecessary to protect women's health.
|
|
In particular, it alleges that handset brands have little choice but to sign up to onerous licensing conditions in order to get the chips they need.
|
|
As spending time in a car becomes less onerous, the tradeoff of moving a few hours away to save money on rent will look increasingly favorable.
|
|
It contains terms that lawyers and repair advocates described as "onerous" and "crazy"; terms that could give Apple significant control over businesses that choose to participate.
|
|
He turned down an offer of $200 million at a $2 billion valuation from a single investor because he considered the terms onerous, according to Gurle.
|
|
In addition, there is Europe's pending new General Data Protection Regulation, one replete with exhaustive data protection requirements and onerous penalties if they are not met.
|
|
The stripping of natural resources, onerous taxes and levies, and an aging power grid have long defined the legacy of the United States in Puerto Rico.
|
|
Russian currency broker Alpari, which left the United States in 2011 due to onerous regulations, is keen to see what happens with the new Trump administration.
|
|
Backers say the laws are necessary to prevent voter fraud and are no more onerous than the requirements imposed by states for driving a motor vehicle.
|
|
Guarantees also generate significant regulatory capital requirements, which have become more onerous as a result of low interest rates and the introduction of Solvency II (S2).
|
|
Sales of products with investment guarantees have declined in recent years as insurers have pulled back due to increasingly onerous capital requirements for interest-sensitive business.
|
|
The CFTC currently grants exemptions to smaller foreign clearing houses from onerous U.S. rules on the basis they are being properly supervised by their home regulator.
|
|
For men with prostate cancer who undergo radiation or surgery to remove the prostate gland, the side effects can be onerous and include incontinence and infection.
|
|
So any store selling wares over the web would face the onerous task of calculating various items' precise tax rates for countless addresses across the country.
|
|
But the Court's remaining eight justices may still deal a blow to abortion rights by permitting onerous regulations to take effect in a number of states.
|
|
"For a JAMA, for a Science, to implement some of these things, I'm sure would be a little more work, but not too onerous," he says.
|
|
Meanwhile, Upgrade's interest rates range from 5.66 percent for a person with excellent credit, to an onerous 35.97 percent for a borrower with a riskier profile.
|
|
Let that be the cry of any mixed martial artist seeking true freedom (free as springtime) in these days of onerous regulations and meddling doping agencies.
|
|
Regardless of what one thinks of the overall gun control agenda, it is unconscionable to stigmatize and impose this onerous burden on innocent Americans with disabilities.
|
|
In order to get back to $50 per barrel, oil prices could face a long, onerous process of erasing oversupply, commodities specialist Helima Croft said Thursday.
|
|
I'm still encountering bugs in its SteamVR software, and the hardware is going to be just as onerous to set up as it was at launch.
|
|
When that idea was dropped, the Senate proposed onerous new reporting requirements for individual school budgets, which the mayor and his allies in the Assembly resisted.
|
|
The Education Department under DeVos adopted a new provision earlier this year that allowed officials to dismiss hundreds of civil rights complaints considered onerous or unnecessary.
|
|
Moreover, any fixes that would be onerous enough to satisfy the Trump administration's increasingly hawkish foreign policy team would likely be a difficult sell in Iran.
|
|
The new rules, the sources said, would put privacy of users at risk and raise costs by requiring onerous round-the-clock monitoring of online content.
|
|
It partly explains why home-owners in Britain move home half as frequently as they do in America, where the equivalent tax is usually less onerous.
|
|
The explosion of corporate inversions has shed a light on the burdens U.S. businesses face as a direct result of a complex and onerous tax code.
|
|
Yet many of those people lack access to hearing aids because onerous and outdated state regulations limit who can sell them and how they are sold.
|
|
Fraudulent retail transactions are on the rise, especially as more shoppers turn to the internet to ring up purchases, making tracking consumers more onerous and costly.
|
|
These laws require duplicative visits to the doctor and forced ultrasounds or create onerous requirements with the effect of forcing abortion providers to close their doors.
|
|
Voter ID laws in particular often disenfranchise thousands of otherwise eligible voters because they can't meet onerous or time-consuming criteria to exercise a basic right.
|
|
Fifty years ago, those lawmakers might have opted to harmonize their voter ages to avoid the onerous costs of running two voting systems instead of one.
|
|
Her appeal was dragging on, and managing it had become so onerous that it was the only thing she had time to do other than work.
|
|
"The burden of onerous debt service and heightened leverage would imperil the debtors' ability to maintain the flexibility needed to withstand such downside scenarios," Cowan said.
|
|
Uber contends that these restrictions are far too onerous, and so the company will leave after its initial license in Quebec runs out in mid-October.
|
|
After all these onerous years, he is still a straight-up joy—as in actual, for-real joy—to behold, all lumbering trickery and circumspect bloodlust.
|
|