This rider states that if you should die in an accident the company will
pay you family twice the face amount of the policy.
Not exact matches
That's nearly
twice the average amount spent by
families in the West — $ 19,181 — while
families in the Midwest and the South
pay $ 21,577 and $ 20,953, respectively, Business Insider's Tanza Loudenback previously reported.
«I witnessed an increase in the minimum wage
twice,
paid family leave, and Universal Pre-K for NYC — all possible because of the IDC's influence.
Jurors had informed the court
twice that they were deadlocked in the case against Percoco and three businessmen accused of
paying his
family more than $ 300,000 in bribes, but U.S. District Judge Valerie Caproni ordered them to keep deliberating and on Tuesday said she would accept a partial verdict.
Alcantara defended her alliance with the IDC in a statement released last week: «I witnessed an increase in the minimum wage
twice,
paid family leave, and Universal Pre-K for NYC — all possible because of the IDC's influence.
While
families with greater means can move to neighborhoods with public schools they like, or
pay twice for education by opting for a private school, lower - income
families often don't have those options.
In exchange for using marital funds
twice to repay past debts, I asked him to commit to
paying back the
family savings for the remainder of 2016.
Whether you are considering co-signing for a child, a
family member, or someone else, think
twice before agreeing to
pay someone else's debt.
Finally, prayers go out to
Paid Twice and his
family, as he lost his father this month.
The High Deductible Health Plan is defined as «a health plan which has an annual deductible which is not less than $ 1,000 for self - only coverage, and
twice the dollar amount ($ 2,000) for
family coverage, and the sum of the annual deductible and the other annual out - of - pocket expenses required to be
paid under the plan (other than for premiums) for covered benefits does not exceed $ 5,000 for self - only coverage, and
twice the dollar amount ($ 10,000) for
family coverage.»
An recent article titled «Contributions to College Costs by Married, Divorced, and Remarried Parents» by researchers Ruth N. LÃ ³ pez Turley, associate professor of sociology at Rice University, and Matthew Desmond, a junior fellow at Harvard University, proposes that students coming from
families of divorced or remarried parents will have to
pay twice as much of their share of college education as students whose parents stay married.