Better to simply buy a worthless rust bucket, pay the minimal non-insured fee and hope for the best. |
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Head teachers at other independent schools said above-inflation fee hikes were necessary to meet a number of rising costs. |
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Not every company charges an astronomical rate, a massive arrangement fee and suggests a loan which extends to the next generation. |
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The Auctioneers reserve the right to collect the appropriate lotting fee with the entry form. |
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The publicity secretary said people wishing to travel would only pay a nominal fee of K50,000 for a round trip including meals. |
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Such a body could charge a fee for their services, which participating hospitals would only be willing to pay. |
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Promoters claim that African-Americans are eligible for tax credits related to slavery reparations and charge a fee to prepare the claim. |
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As noted in paragraph 17 above, the occupancy fee incorporates three components, namely, mortgage interest, condominium fees, and property taxes. |
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A multiple planting permit might be given without fee to anybody scoring a Moreton Bay fig or camphor laurel. |
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Product fees are hidden under various disguises such as booking fee, reservation fee, processing fee, arrangement fee or completion fee. |
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This court, nevertheless, decided that it was arguable that the interpreter could recover a reasonable fee for work done. |
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Members pay a yearly fee on a sliding scale, depending on age, occupation, and residence. |
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However, if residents on the estate wanted to recycle cardboard a small fee might be levied. |
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Trade apprentices are charged the fee for the two 10-week periods they spend as part of their training at the colleges. |
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Entry fee includes green fee, caddy, European and Thai food, and pig on a spit. |
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Patent holders can charge a license fee for their invention and restrict who uses it. |
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Companies that work on retainers usually get the bulk of their fee before the search is complete. |
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These clubs often wait for a contract to expire before signing a player, in order to eliminate any transfer fee involved. |
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However, many of the websites that charge a fee will do this legwork for you. |
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Some or all of the claimants entered into conditional fee agreements with their solicitors after they had been refused legal aid. |
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We had to pay a fee and put in a lot of new equipment and then retune everything. |
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Movies could be rewatched as many times as desired by paying a fee by credit card. |
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Since 1997, they have grown their fee income by 30 percent, year on year, to rank comfortably as the nation's largest legal firm. |
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Meanwhile, the rest of the income you receive from the fee can be used to clear the bank loan. |
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As this is is an inclusive service, the fee also covers the procurements of gifts to the happy couple. |
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The fee may be either an all inclusive flat rate or a fee for each service received. |
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All one needs is the payment of a fee and some metric for its delivery to continue to incent the creation of content. |
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The central government has developed cold feet on the promised legislation to regulate fee and admissions in professional colleges. |
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She called for controls on cockling and said a licensing fee could be charged which could pay for regulation to improve safety. |
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While the fee represents a peppercorn rent for large consumer device manufacturers it's a toll nevertheless. |
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If, however, the journal wants to peer review every study and take only those that are original and pass review then the fee will be smaller. |
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If the claim is not accepted by the company's panel of solicitors, no fee is payable. |
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It encouraged families to enrol as subscribers, by paying an annual fee for free or subsidised treatment. |
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However, hedge funds are risky in that if they lose money, clients pay no fee at all. |
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He's not going to be syndicated, and we should be ready to announce the stud fee soon. |
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The board had agreed a fee for the 19-year-old Scouse hotshot and he and his agent John Seasman were in talks for most of Thursday. |
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Twenty per cent of the sustentation fee shall be paid into a specially held account for the purposes of campaigning. |
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Some users pay a fee for technical support, but free support is available on internet message boards. |
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At the moment, if you want a game you just turn up and post your 20 fee into an old Royal Mail box which serves as an honesty box. |
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These competitions are confined to paid-up members of the club so anyone wishing to take part should pay their membership fee without delay. |
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The padrone supervised the gang's work and provided housing and meals, charging a fee against wages. |
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If the service provider only provides a summary bill with no call detail, pay the extra fee to get the detailed billing. |
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By scanning the ring the guard could see that they had paid the entrance fee and in the same way they checked in their coats in the checkroom. |
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But universities and colleges say that fee hikes were necessary to balance their budgets, maintain services, and protect quality of education. |
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Even as the varsity officials maintain that the fee hike was inevitable, most students see the hike as monumental. |
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After two years of 30 per cent fee hikes, students at SFU are bracing for a 20 to 35 per cent tuition increase this year. |
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Many hospitals have overcharged the bureau for medicine, requesting fee compensations at above-market prices. |
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Priests received a fee to celebrate a memorial mass in the chantry and further alms were given to those who attended the service. |
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Their joining fee was twice annual subscription up until September last year when they reduced it to the same as annual subs. |
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For the last few years Kingston have helped Richmond deal with their stray dogs, charging a fee per animal dealt with. |
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More than 200 students rallied at the doors of the meeting in opposition to the fee increase. |
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In addition, the Czechs resisted the one-time compensation fee paid to federations for players. |
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Big Blue will charge a one-time setup fee and send a bill each month based on how much compute capacity is used up. |
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Some are free, some charge a one-time fee and others charge a subscription fee. |
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Should an advisor to the Pentagon be pocketing a fee for helping to raise money for a terrorist organization? |
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Five games will be played on one-on-one basis with entry fee being Rs.10 per person. |
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Most card issuers will charge a fee if you withdraw cash on your card whilst abroad. |
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Mr Lowry said at the time that Commission objections led him to extend the tender time fee and to cap the fee. |
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A nominal fee is charged for a range of odd jobs around the home, such as mending dripping taps or fitting lightbulbs or smoke alarms. |
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Congress has passed statutes making a defendant pay the fee of a plaintiff's lawyer if the plaintiff prevails in the case. |
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Punters too pay 50 notes to get into the building, but then negotiate a fee with the strumpet of their choice. |
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To their dismay, the unions may find that many non-union workers will refuse to pay the service fee or join the union. |
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The complainant must fill out a form, a copy of which must be given to the hedge owner, and pay a non-returnable fee to the local authority. |
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Express in the UK charges a once only, non-refundable processing fee per submission. |
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We would urge anyone seeking a loan to be wary of any business which requires an advance fee to be paid by money transfer to secure a loan. |
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Everyone is welcome to attend, and the entry fee is R5 for members and R10 for non-members. |
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It will also be free to all existing members with a current card with only a nominal fee charged to those joining up after the opening. |
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Manchester United have reportedly reached a verbal agreement with Barcelona on a fee for the England captain. |
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The fee struck a sour note with some supporters, particularly given the strong tradition of free festival entertainment. |
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In both cases the purchaser paid a fee to the mortgagee for the purpose of having a valuation of the property carried out. |
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When the valets park your car in a covered spot, the fee is the same as uncovered. |
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Plus, state and federal courts require that civil plaintiffs pay a fee to the court as a condition of bringing the suit. |
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As he says, sometimes the only way to get value for your licence fee is to be an aberrant decoder. |
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She did not have any cash to pay at the ticket machine so intended to go and get some money and then pay her parking fee later. |
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The downturn is also thought to affect the fee income of barristers for whom personal injuries work is often their bread and butter. |
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There is a 3 per cent upfront brokerage fee in addition to an annual 1.5 per cent management charge. |
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It cannot be long until the first offers appear to pay us a modest fee to sign up to their system. |
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All prices are subject to booking fee and tickets are available from the Theatre Royal box offices and Ticketmaster outlets nationwide. |
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Telephone companies will unlock phones that are out of contract, but whether they charge a fee to do this varies somewhat. |
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One is provided by dentists and physicians in private practice on a fee basis to those able to pay. |
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A booking fee of 50p per transaction applies to all advance ticket bookings. |
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However similar fears before the introduction of the current tuition fee proved ungrounded. |
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He waived the hourly fee after discovering a mutual common interest in the gym. |
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The two main elements in the fee are tuition and boarding and the level of fee normally increases from the junior to the senior school. |
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He said the new fee schedule was at odds with the previous policy of attracting hotels, motor inns and motels to the area. |
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The fish are mostly carp and ayu, and for an extra fee you can take the day's catch home. |
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Nor is it a boat club, where boaters pay a fee for unlimited access to a fleet of boats at one location. |
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The nurses want a significant increase in their flat fee for agreeing to be on call. |
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Either we pick up a fair fee for our trouble, or we get rid of those blasted opinion pollsters. |
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The Officer called his supervisor who told him to leave until they could determine whether Mr. Bess lived on trust or fee land. |
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Well, I have agreed a fee with the buyer and already solicitors are busying themselves passing bits of paper backwards and forwards. |
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Under the changes, a fee will also be charged for modifications to properties where covenants still apply. |
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True to the format, a psychologist got to trouser a fee for saying that it isn't very nice if your father dies when you are a child. |
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Several university presidents chaired committees and, following customary practices, earned an additional fee for this responsibility. |
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In some cases, management also charges registration fee from the transporters on a unit vehicle basis. |
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The shell company's fee income is greater than the costs of supporting the site. |
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If your Honour looks to the instrument of conveyance, the transfer, it is an unqualified transfer of the unencumbered fee simple. |
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He reckons he's in the clear as he already paid a fee for being able to copy CD's and transfer music to other media. |
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The Law Society is currently dealing with a raft of complaints about solicitors who charged miners an additional fee on top. |
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In the past, I have hired agencies for a set fee and I never really knew if I was really getting the best bang for my buck. |
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The second aspect of their strategy was the contracting out of sessional work to private orthodontists on a fee per case basis. |
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Most users of public water are metered, with the customer paying a regular fee per thousand gallons of water used. |
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The meter operating fee assigns the meter operating costs equitably to customers who have metered water service. |
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They even charge you a booking fee if you turn up in person and buy the tix at the Arena. |
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In 1714, a fee of twelve riksdollars per annum was charged for grazing land, and a tithe of one tenth of the crop for sowing land. |
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And not every meritorious claim will be sufficiently lucrative to attract a lawyer willing to work on a contingent fee basis. |
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Word problems contained in the workbook illustrate the complexities of the fee increases. |
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If the licence fee were to go, and a voluntary subscription were to be introduced, who would pay? |
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Mr Sorrell is currently in possession of the property, and is accordingly presumed to be seised of an estate in fee simple. |
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Elephants are tethered by chains so people can climb on them for a cute photo for a fee of 10 yuan. |
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But even success-only fee lawyers will find it difficult to act for a bust business. |
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However, the production company has baulked at a 15,000 fee for the use of an abandoned crofthouse. |
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Players contribute each week to the lowly fee that the men in white receive. |
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Accommodations are available for a nominal fee in on-site teacherages with internet and telephone access. |
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Then I paid for my ticket a week and a half late, and I got a letter in the mail saying that I had to pay another fee for being late. |
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However, those who cannot afford to pay this fee are exempted and treated free of cost. |
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The NSW government is waiving the fee for beekeepers with hives in bushfire-affected areas of state forests and national parks. |
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This fee is usually waived for credit card transactions within the eurozone. |
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The five-times gold medal winner also waived a five-figure fee for appearing at the race along the River Dee. |
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The funds were to be used to reimburse city departments for lost revenues for fee waivers granted to applicants. |
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Students and staff united, opposing fee increases, allowance ineligibility, and low staff pay. |
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The wantaway keeper has moved for an undisclosed five-figure fee after signing a two and a half-year deal. |
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One of the things that happens when you get a fee simple is that you can dispose of a fee simple. |
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Chautauqua's parent company, Republic Airlines, paid American a contract rights fee in the form of a warrant to buy shares of its common stock. |
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A draconian law to quell demonstrations has only galvanised public support for young Quebecois protesting tuition fee hikes. |
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Investment bankers fear that with no possibility of IPOs scene perking up in near future, the fee accrual on this account will be minimal. |
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You must pay this fee even if you pay off your balance when your credit card bill arrives. |
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He said that the ballot was balanced on a knife-edge and that it looked to be tipping against the Prime Minister and his top-up fee plans. |
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A person is not entitled to dispose of the fee simple if he needs the consent of others to dispose of it and has not got it. |
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He said he was going to walk the rest of the way home, save the money he'd spend on a bus fee for something else. |
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The East Croft was also commonable, but a small fee was charged for the accommodation of cattle. |
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In some situations, the broker's fee is added to the actual amount of money that the person wants to borrow. |
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She added a licence fee increase was an interim measure and would be reviewed in 18 months time. |
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Mail was expensive and had to be collected after a conveyance fee was paid at the post office by the addressee. |
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Some owners are now registering their properties with independent agents who charge lower commissions or a flat fee to sell the property. |
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Black cabbies pay the airport a fee to operate there, while Checker was required to bid for a contract. |
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The rationalisation of the fee structure for medical, dental and nursing courses was a welcome step. |
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It allows them trade their shares for a discounted commission fee of 0.5 per cent. |
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In fact, charging people to use the road would be seen as tantamount to having an admission fee for entry to the town. |
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It also pointed out that solicitors receive a flat fee from legal aid and stand to lose earnings if a case is adjourned. |
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We say that buses are a public service, and that bus fares are really a user fee on a public service. |
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We did not charge an admission fee but we asked those who demonstrated to make donations. |
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Try using a credit card to get your money out and usually there's a flat fee on top of whatever interest charge your credit card will pay you. |
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Once we'd agreed on a budget, she explained that she charged a flat fee for her services. |
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They let me take one for a small fee and I had a companion to keep me company during the day. |
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A consultant needs to add real value to an organisation to justify a fee of hundreds a day. |
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York Minster recently began charging visitors an admission fee after a voluntary charging scheme failed to generate enough cash. |
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Mission success fee incentivizes the contractor's realization of certain specific achievements that are critical to the success of the program. |
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They hire professional tamperers, whose fee ranges from Rs.1,000 to Rs.50,000, to manipulate the power consumption meters. |
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This fee for service payment mechanism could affect patients with long term conditions in four ways. |
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It is denied that any fee was agreed on any of the three occasions identified by the Claimants. |
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In doing so the dentist was taking his fee for professional services, which he simply refused to provide on any other terms. |
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Consumer advocacy groups are predictably outraged and are calling for fee caps. |
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Some are structured so that a cardholder pays a fee every time the card is used in an automated teller machine or at a cash register. |
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Commissions are currently disclosed and most firms will also work on a fee basis, rebating any commissions. |
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Texas will collect sales tax revenue on shipments now as well as a shipper's permit fee from wineries. |
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For a fee private subscribers could also be hooked up to receive the time signal. |
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One Kikuyu female farmer, for example, approached a large farm with a proposal to pay a small fee to tap into their irrigation system. |
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In short, the augmented tuition fee fails to meet current costs, let alone the requisite investment in infrastructure. |
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The airline originally attempted to triple the fee for the ticket change, but reckoned without Gabereau's ability to make a fuss. |
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Get rid of those London-based middle managers who splash the licence fee on ludicrous motivational courses at luxury hotels. |
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The fee charged by British Airways will be 20 euro, the same for European and intercontinental flights. |
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Such a fee is recoverable by the mortgagee if a statement is requested by the mortgagor. |
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Brokers and auctioneers profit by charging a small fee for each transaction completed using their services. |
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The entrance fee was one shilling, and we had to borrow several pails to hold the coppers and other coins that were paid in. |
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One word problem required calculating the fee for three students taking the same units at the same university. |
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One approach worthy of serious consideration would be to charge a fee for visitors to Kangaroo Island to hunt koalas. |
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To enter the okula, the society's forest sanctuary, an individual who has joined an age company pays a membership fee of 50 kobo. |
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Companies at the Grammy gifting lounge said the fee for participation was worthwhile. |
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The bidders are charged an application fee of 100,000 kronor and then winners are chosen on merit as opposed to depth of pocket. |
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The fee includes a T-shirt, and refreshments will be available along the route. |
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The first year students are demanding the refund of their fee so that they can take admission elsewhere next year. |
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Of course, as the honourable member will know, alienability is a defining characteristic of a fee simple title. |
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The addition of this fee is intended to ease the process of registration during orientation week. |
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For an all-in fee I can insure my car and get breakdown cover at the same time for both the UK an Europe. |
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Your local lumberyard can mill these for a nominal fee or might even donate to your school. |
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I deplore the situation where we are pitted against each other for low fees, but reintroducing the fee scale is not an option. |
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With lottery scams, people are told they have won the lottery, but then told they must pay a fee before the money can be released. |
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Global Trader 247 offers customers a no commission, no brokerage fee service to small institutions, retail investors, high net worth individuals and other customers. |
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Firms using a third-party reviewer would be granted a fee waiver. |
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Guests at the camp can stay in private cabins or for a smaller fee in the dormitories. |
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You will be charged a late fee if the electric company does not receive your payment on time. |
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Some services charge a fee for premium functionality, and sometimes, this functionality includes exporting the data. |
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He will run CIT much like a Wall Street firm, further tying compensation to financial results, keeping a close eye on risk, and boosting fee income. |
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This lease not only provided Sidebottom with a quarterage on the amount of coal extracted, but also brought the considerable sum of a L50 yearly rent fee and other rents. |
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A good wedding planner will save a couple the cost of the fee and more. |
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You might have heard about scam merchants offering to find grants for businesses, pocketing a fat consultancy fee and disappearing into the distance without lifting a finger. |
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The fee for jumbo passports containing 60 pages has gone up. |
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Schools in more affluent areas and fee paying schools are more likely to have students whose parents can and will pay a lot of money for grinds and revision courses. |
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Most people are astonished how cheap flat fee access could be. |
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He or she will often charge you a flat fee or an hourly rate. |
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But the hourly fee fails by a wide margin to cover attorney's office fees. |
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Premises applying for a licence will face a one-off fee followed by an annual charge which will be graded according to the size and location of the bar or pub. |
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But for the absence of an admission charge, an agreeably small annual fee being the substitute as my host happily told me, this seemed to be such a place. |
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Contacting a local ghillie was easy and for a reasonable fee we were able to arrange for her to spend a day on the river trying to catch one of these leviathans. |
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You're charged a small fee only when you add or withdraw money from your account or opt to receive a traditional plastic MasterCard debit card from the company. |
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The user fee on duck stamps goes exclusively to funding federal acquisition of wetlands as wildlife habitat. |
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And I'll keep repeating myself until people realise that fee setting affects every single student at Victoria, and every single student at every tertiary institution. |
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When the emissary phoned him to say the fee had been refused, he said he had meetings and could not talk. |
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They could, however, afford to pay a fee to a lending library. |
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The company also levies an initial connection fee of 10p on all calls. |
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I began with the simplest cost I could think of, the fee for some routine blood work I had scheduled for later that month. |
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The fat fee is raising some hackles, but the head of the nonprofit she helped tells Shushannah Walshe she was worth the money. |
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The construction fee plus the cost of equipment reached over 50,000 tael. |
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Approaching the toll bridges, electronic sensors read the tags, debit the customer's account with the toll fee and automatically lift the barriers. |
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Between 30 and 35 fee dodgers are caught in York every week. |
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The bullet fee well symbolizes the harshness of a brutal police state that cloaks itself in the trappings of religion. |
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As a result, we have agreed that the farm will pay the land taxes and all insurance and other local fees, but only pay a small administrative fee to the land trust. |
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Their backstop is a fee justification process, which is written and administered by other solicitors perusing documentation from the solicitor involved. |
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You pay an initiation fee and a monthly rate in exchange for unlimited use at facilities. |
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Now, not only do you have to pay the boot fee plus parking ticket fees, you have to type in the code in the Denver Smart Boot, and then take it to a drop off location! |
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But rising fees on bank accounts was a predictable effect of the interchange fee regulations. |
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Without any insurance, the emergency room fee was far beyond her means. |
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As producers, Warner Bros. gets an undisclosed licensing fee from CBS as well as all of the syndication and DVD revenue. |
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And you may be charged an additional fee on top of the room rates. |
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Currently, a fee is considered earned when the horse leaves the paddock. |
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This blissfully uncrowded park, where visitor numbers are deliberately restricted, is worth the small entry fee a hundred times over for its beaches alone. |
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Two things the police have going for them are the beat cop who has worked the neighborhood for years and police snitches who, for a fee or a favor, keep the police informed. |
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The judges were not given a per capita fee for each child sentenced to the detention center. |
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They also charge a valuation fee upfront for inspecting the property. |
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He accused the minister's office of butchering his education policy which he called a third way between publicly funded and fee paying higher education. |
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Soon, Supreme Group balked at paying the fee to its mentor, PWC, prompting arbitration. |
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The news will be of significant interest to City, who stand to land a sizeable chunk of any transfer fee United pull in for the highly rated youngster. |
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The fee cancellation could take effect as early as next January. |
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The package here offers students no up-front fees, loan forgiveness at 25 years, no real rate of interest, a generous grant and bursary system and a cap on the fee itself. |
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The Government should prescribe uniform guidelines to all the colleges regarding the minimum required infrastructure, along with maximum capitation fee and other fees. |
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A Canadian man has been arrested for advanced fee fraud following a sting operation instigated by a Connecticut woman fed up with receiving scam emails. |
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The fee could then be administered by a central student organization. |
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Terms of the deal were not disclosed and no stud fee has been set. |
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The fee they get is not enough to buy outboard motors for their canoes. |
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Subscribers will pay a monthly fee for uninterrupted, commercial-free digital programming based on individual channels dedicated to specific types of music. |
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This is partly for financial reasons, as the council charges a fee to cover its costs, meaning some schools choose not to run the training classes. |
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The current reserve land will be converted to fee simple holdings. |
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The program is paid for by a fee for new hookups to the water system. |
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The classes will cost E25 and this fee is payable on registration. |
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I asked if we could club together to pay the fee and was told no. |
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She produced a copy of his fee schedule for his services which showed he offered a wide range of services from haircuts to more extensive styling and permanents. |
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The decision is followed by an earlier Supreme Court judgement that said that private schools and colleges were not free to frame their own fee structure. |
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No re-test fee will apply for minor defects such as faulty light bulbs. |
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The price may be as various as the amount paid for a specific commodity, an hourly wage rate, or a professional fee for technical advice, or an insurance premium and so on. |
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Of course the licence fee should be seen for what it now is, a crude form of indirect taxation that taxes all households irrespective of their ability to pay. |
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We are in furious agreement that it is a full fee simple, but what price would it fetch on the open market and what terms must one attribute to the hypothetical sale? |
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This distinguished the fee simple from the life estate and the fee tail. |
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For this illusory victory, Fielding has helped the Federal Government strip university student unions of the right to compulsorily levy a fee for services. |
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Plan fiduciaries must understand the fee structure of the plan and demand full disclosure of compensation received directly or indirectly by service providers. |
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For example, insurance companies are able to let customers make instalment payments on insurance policies without a fee where previously there was one. |
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The scheme will be enforced by cameras which read number plates and are connected to a computer system which deducts the fee from a pre-paid account. |
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The Chine is open to the public for a small fee and continues up to Rylstone Gardens in the Old Village. |
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I wondered if it charged an eight-dollar fee like the strip club. |
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The entry fee is PS15 and every participant will receive a Deerstalker hat, pipe and magnifying glass on the day of the event. |
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Under terms of our agreement with Continental, Radiant will receive a fee for each aircraft deiced using our facility. |
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The fare is included in rail tickets to Luton Airport or a cash fee is charged for non ticket holders. |
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The airport management received hefty parking fee without providing parking space especially to the relatives of passengers. |
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Thus the partygoer is willing to pay a higher fee in the expectation of getting more in return. |
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Besomebody plans to take a small fee for creating the connection between the person and the Passionary. |
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The fee for testing and retesting is at the discretion of the proprietor of the test facility, subject to legal maximum prices. |
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There was a large fee income for the clerk, and he was usually a friend or relative of the custos. |
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As the system developed in the Philippines and elsewhere, the laborer could pay an appropriate fee and be exempted from the obligation. |
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A grant of outfangthief imports the trial of those of his fee taken for felony in another precinct. |
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A judicidal review against the raised fees failed in 2012, and so the new fee system came into use that September. |
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Whether or not they are so granted is at the option of the grantee, who pays a higher fee if they are. |
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Originally, there was a subscription fee of 1s 6d, however this was later changed in 1853 and it became a public library. |
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The 5 euro administration fee is deducted from each applicant and there is no limit to the number of applications each individual can make. |
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Meanwhile the state is phasing in a fee for visitors to the island. |
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The drafters of PPACA included the industry fee in an effort to cover part of the cost of PPACA coverage expansion provisions. |
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The remainder of licence fee revenue raised in the country is spent on networked programmes. |
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The Bistro also secured a license to pour hard liquor and has no corkage fee on Mondays. |
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Cronshaw had told him that the facts of life mattered nothing to him who by the power of fancy held in fee the twin realms of space and time. |
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Approved by Ofcom, this results in ITV plc commissioning and funding the network schedule, with STV and UTV paying a fee to broadcast it. |
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In 2014, Nick Ross, a BBC presenter, stated that the licence fee was unfair and should be abolished. |
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The television licence fee system has been variously criticised, commented upon and defended by the press. |
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One of the reasons given is the licence fee criminalises poor people, in particular women with children living on welfare. |
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Licence fee evasion makes up around one ninth of all cases prosecuted in magistrate courts. |
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The BBC admits that no detection evidence has ever been used to prosecute a licence fee evader. |
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Schools joining the cooperative were assessed an initial membership fee to purchase a high-speed tape duplicator and about 200 tapes. |
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Sir, cannot all this bangling be easily rectified? Cannot the fee be taken with the schedule? Cannot an hour be named, nnd kept, nearer noon? |
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The revenues they generate supplement the licence fee in financing the UK services. |
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Each plan has a monthly prorated fee of just AED 300, and up to 700 international minutes for free. |
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The university waives the application fee for low-income students. |
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In January 2006, the Office of National Statistics classified the licence fee as a tax. |
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This differs from our other instalment schemes, where at least half of the licence fee is collected in advance. |
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The payment methods mean that the licence fee is paid for either completely or partially in advance. |
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The level of the fee is decided following periodic negotiations between the UK Government and the BBC Trust. |
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The licence fee is formally set by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport by the use of Statutory Instruments. |
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Licence fee collection is the responsibility of the BBC's Finance and Business division. |
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Gervais that fee splitting encourages unnecessary cataract surgery and thus increases the taxpayer burden. |
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I guess this is the influence of our HMO masters who look to this kind of fee splitting to help their bottom line, which is their priority. |
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A major Pivotal Position championed by Dr Matas was his support for the American College of Surgeons and opposition to fee splitting. |
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Both accuse Stewart of illegal business referrals and fee splitting arrangements With real estate companies. |
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The TV licence fee is collected by the BBC and primarily used to fund the radio, television and online services of the BBC itself. |
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Since 1991, collection and enforcement of the licence fee has been the responsibility of the BBC in its role as TV Licensing Authority. |
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Most people fly-tip either out of laziness, negligence or to avoid paying the disposal fee known as landfill tax. |
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The ITA also has moved forward with an audit of 2004 franchise fee payments. |
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The licence fee is classified as a tax, and its evasion is a criminal offence. |
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This was to be followed by a simple 10 shillings licence fee with no royalty once the wireless manufactures protection expired. |
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Two wings of the Boiler House are used to stage the major temporary exhibitions for which an entry fee is charged. |
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To fulfill the activities of the NMC it charges a registration fee to its members. |
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The initiative, called i-plus freemail, does not require any registration or fee and will be financed by revenue from on-screen advertisers. |
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Yet to be decided is whether the front-end fee will be a direct fee paid by the customer at the point of sale. |
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The front money, the con men said, was an insurance fee and would be returned along with the prize. |
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