She said the system was extremely cumbersome and that this had given some people cutting corners and operating illegally. |
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If you try to save money up-front by cutting corners, it can end up costing you much more in the end. |
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Is the employee rewarded for finding ways to save money by cutting corners? |
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His staff complains that he is cutting corners to save money by putting ordinary cream cheese in the tiramisu. |
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This is the hazard of cutting corners and disregarding procedures prescribed by law. |
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It is not a process that can be accomplished quickly or by cutting corners. |
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There was some evidence of controllers cutting corners to handle current traffic levels with current controller availability. |
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Time spent waiting around fruitlessly for repair men plus money spent should equal problem fixed, but Benedict was a past master at cutting corners. |
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I'm dedicating this newsletter to taking the easy way out, cutting corners, and phoning it in. |
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They are only interested in cutting corners and making money. |
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Don't feel guilty about cutting corners like housework when you're feeling swamped. |
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He enjoys checking the details of others work and does not like cutting corners to meet deadlines. |
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Worse still, the loose gravel dragged onto the road by previous competitors cutting corners turned the stages into a slippery skating rink. |
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Cost-cutting and cutting corners caused the biggest environmental disaster in history. |
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The truth is that cutting corners early on in the procedure ends up costing a lot more in administration, court time, lawyers and the cost of food and shelter. |
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Maritime transport companies are developing in a globalised climate and are subject to strong international competition, which often results in their cutting corners when it comes to staff wages and welfare. |
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While many valve manufacturers are focused on cutting corners to save costs, we hold steadfast to our core design principals and relentlessly pursue product and process improvements. |
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We save your organization money not by cutting corners, nor by slashing prices, but by scaling to your needs and reducing the time and effort it takes to stay on top of your market. |
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While this need is widely recognized, some controllers are cutting corners on occasions, trying too hard to get the job done or to provide a level of service for which they are not capable. |
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But that disappeared when he didn't fight as regularly as he should have done, when he was cutting corners on his training. |
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Even now, inevitably, officials are cutting corners. |
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Nor were all the conventioneers cutting corners. |
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Countrywide, also fighting for market share, was cutting corners, too. |
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Genetic manipulation is certainly cutting corners on traditional breeding. |
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Above all it is important to avoid cutting corners, which easily happens with the ongoing and multiple evaluations that are nowadays often required. |
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The 1923 fiasco is a clear example of how cutting corners programmatically, rather than taking a straightforward Leninist position on the state, will lead to disaster. |
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These summits do not lend themselves to cutting corners when it comes to ensuring the safety and security of world leaders and their delegations as the motion before us today suggests they should. |
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This report sets out clearly the significant challenges we face and sends a clear signal that there is no place for cost cutting or cutting corners when it comes to safety. |
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That kind of circumstance, I think, is ripe for the kinds of concerns to arise over cutting corners when it comes to dealing with questions of safety. |
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Younger drivers were more prepared to violate traffic regulations, particularly with regard to speeding, traffic light infringement, cutting corners and overtaking slow drivers on the inside. |
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It sets the stage for cutting corners in our principles just so we can brandish a perceived badge of stature. |
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Nevertheless, these same pressures can lead to some operators taking safety risks and cutting corners, to the detriment of the environment and road and bridge infrastructure. |
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It just doesn't pass the smell test. It just creates too many opportunities for cutting corners, doing unethical things and basically not telling the truth. |
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Merchant shippers used the surplus of sailors' labor to drive wages down, cutting corners to maximize their profits, and creating unsavory conditions aboard their vessels. |
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No more cutting corners Of fast-moving technology, E-mails, iPods and teen speak, Fashion changes ending Where she had begun Her own teenage years. |
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Construction was of the shoddiest sort, partly because rewards were given for cutting corners and doing the work quickly, one of the pay-offs of the Stakhanovite incentives. |
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