The phrase
"onerous restrictions" means rules or limitations that are difficult, burdensome, or unfair to comply with.
Full definition
Most practitioners would agree that it is helpful to have a set of cogent regulations for guidance when faced with difficult questions on conflict and confientiality, but few would agree that those regulations should place more
onerous restrictions on the profession than those imposed at common law.
«Kentucky faces a perfect storm of attacks: A legislature that continues to pass ever
more onerous restrictions on women seeking a abortion, a governor with a personal personal crusade to shut down every clinic in the state, and escalating protests that recently culminated in a blockade that prevented patients from entering the front door.
The Labor Department first proposed an expanded fiduciary definition under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, or ERISA, in 2010, but withdrew the proposal the following year amid broad criticism that it would
impose onerous restrictions on the industry that would cause financial professionals to abandon the retirement space, leaving low and moderate - income Americans in the lurch.
Missouri's
onerous restrictions override good medical practice by requiring that women make two separate appointments with at least a 72 - hour delay in between.
Plaintiffs include Public Citizen and the law firm of Alexander & Catalano, which argue that the rules
place onerous restrictions on commercial and noncommercial speech and, in doing so, regulate the content of the ads rather than their accuracy.
After discussions with the sponsor of the senate version, SB 53 has been amended to eliminate this ban and to modify some of the
more onerous restrictions.
With NAR's help, Ohio REALTORS ® in 2005 were instrumental in defeating a proposed constitutional amendment that would have placed
onerous restrictions on the ability of PACs such as ours to participate in the political process while exempting labor unions.
In view of
the onerous restrictions in this predominantly Islamic society, it is not surprising that their enthusiasm sometimes leads them to steal sheep from other Christian pastures instead of preaching to Muslims.
Research ground to a virtual standstill because of the lack of institutional and financial support, and
the onerous restrictions on how research could be done.
The premiums are likely to exceed potential claims, particularly given
the onerous restrictions in coverage.
Apply for cards with other issuers: Other credit card issuers don't impose
these onerous restrictions on credit cards, though I'm not a big fan of the once - per - lifetime sign - up bonus policy of American Express.
The city's
onerous restrictions on pit bulls, and dogs who look like pit bulls, are now going into effect, after the Quebec Court of Appeal lifted a lower court's injunction on Thursday.
I expect, therefore, that DTE will now join me in pushing for the repeal of Public Act 286's
onerous restrictions on customer choice in electricity providers and demand the deregulation of Michigan's electricity markets.
You can knock $ 10 off your monthly bill with autopay enrollment, so the final monthly tally for a family of four is $ 155 — exactly what you'd pay for Unlimited Choice, but without
the onerous restriction on data speeds and with the ability to roll over unused data to the next month.
For many types of financial trades,
this onerous restriction means that after the funds have been committed, uninvolved parties on the network would be able to actively trade on outcomes that would have been previously unknowable and which could prove detrimental to the parties which are engaged in this arrangement.
The case exposed the lie that anti-abortion politicians have been peddling for years: that it's somehow «safer» for women when the state imposes medically unnecessary,
onerous restrictions on health centers and clinicians that provide abortions.