Sentences with phrase «lost on your potential employer»

Not exact matches

If I transfer assets out of the Plan and into an IRA I understand that: (i) those assets will no longer be subject to the protections of ERISA, (ii) I alone will be making investment decisions about those assets and will not be able to rely on the plan sponsor or any other person with ERISA fiduciary responsibilities, (iii) depending on the investments and services selected for the IRA, I may pay more in transaction costs than when the assets are in the Plan, and (iv) if I am between the age of 55 and 59.5, I would lose the ability to potentially take penalty - free withdrawals from the plan, (v) if I continue working past age 70.5 and transferred my plan assets to my new employer's plan, I would not be subject to required minimum distribution, and (iv) if I hold appreciated company stock, I understand any potential tax benefits that may have been available to me (e.g. net unrealized appreciation).
You might think that with all of the problems social networking sites like Facebook can create in the workplace — ranging from lost productivity to potential legal liability for discrimination or harassment — employers should simply prevent employees from using these sites on the job.
After interviewing for a job, the employee lost out on obtaining employment with another company because of a negative reference from his former employer to his potential employer.
If the potential employee has let their status expire or lost classification for some other reason there is no status to modify, so the worker must refile for H - 1B status with the new employer as the sponsor on a new visa issue.
The significance of being assigned as your detachment's Classified Material Systems (CMS) custodian will probably be lost on a potential civilian employer.
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