The phrase
"onerous conditions" means having difficult, burdensome, or unpleasant requirements or circumstances that are demanding and make a task or situation challenging.
Full definition
As mentioned above, contracting States of the Convention should not impose
more onerous conditions on the recognition or enforcement of international arbitral awards than those imposed on domestic arbitral awards.
Not only are the repayments extensive but the PFI buildings remain owned by the original company and can therefore come
with onerous conditions regarding their upkeep, including non-negotiable costs for routine maintenance jobs, such as repainting or changing bulbs.
For the last three years, the Obama administration has given waivers from the law's
most onerous conditions, including that every child in a school must be deemed proficient in reading and math by 2014.
An added headwind is the seemingly steady trend towards more
onerous conditions set by host countries for extractive industries in general, and the seemingly steady erosion of the rule of law in locales once thought to be safe for new investment.
The company is confident it will ultimately prevail in the Hogan lawsuit, but was not able today to obtain from the trial court even a brief stay
without onerous conditions to seek relief from the appeals court.
Natalie Miller, President of the ATT, said: «The Association has previously drawn attention to the
increasingly onerous conditions to be met by sports clubs to qualify for tax relief.
For years, the board has lamented the existence of charter schools and treated them as unwanted competition,
placing onerous conditions on approval and roadblocks to sustainability, like the year - to - year facilities agreements that make life hard for schools and their parents and are part of the current disagreement.
Ultimately the aim is to ensure that investors are provided with sufficient and timely information to enable them to make an informed investment decision whilst not imposing
unnecessarily onerous conditions or restrictions on issuers.
In principle, the Act also creates incentives for grantees to reach agreement because if they fail to do so and enter arbitration the Tribunal may decline to grant the interests they seek or impose
onerous conditions on any grant it makes.
With a deadline looming, boosters of Saratoga Race Course have launched an effort to counter what they say are
onerous conditions the Cuomo administration wants to impose on the re-privatization of NYRA.
With a deadline looming, boosters of Saratoga Race Course have launched an effort to counter what they say are
onerous conditions the Cuomo administration wants to impose on the re-privatization of the New York Racing Association
And AEP has had to agree to
onerous conditions to merely complete the plant it's building in Arkansas.
Despite the absence of statutory protections, the plaintiff alleges she and her class members agreed to
the onerous conditions because they could ill afford to make demands of their employer amid Canada's cutthroat legal jobs market.
[80 - 81] It disapproved of a more burdensome «strong» prima facie case standard, where an inquiry committee may consider more
onerous conditions, like a suspension.
Verizon and AT&T both charge more for plans with HD video streaming, while their cheaper unlimited plans have
onerous conditions.
Buyers should also ask their attorney to scrutinize the title deeds for
onerous conditions and investigate the diagram of the property prepared by the Surveyor General's office as these documents may contain servitudes or rights in favour of third parties over the property.