"To reject an applicant" means to decline or refuse someone's application or request for something, indicating that they will not be accepted or chosen for a particular opportunity or position.
Full definition
As it stands, universities have no way
of rejecting applicants who do not know arithmetic adequately for college - level mathematics.
Recruiters
reject applicants who fail to show that the match is right, no matter how strong their academic credentials, standardized test scores, and letters of recommendation.
In some states, medical underwriting is illegal and insurers can
not reject applicants due to their health condition or charge higher premiums.
With this knowledge, you can
reject this applicant because you have a reasonable concern that he or she could steal from other tenants in the building.
Even with the smallest mistake can send email cover letter to the trash bin or to the pile of letters
from rejected applicants.
While some
companies reject applicants with bad credit right away, you may come across some that are more tolerant of your financial issues.
And if you're open to relocation, don't include your street address, as the software may have been programmed to
reject applicants outside commuting distance.
In many cases, liability policy restrictions are triggered when a background check reveals a criminal history, making it necessary to
reject the applicant even if he or she is otherwise qualified.
Some landlords in states that require acceptance of Section 8 applicants and can find no other way to
reject the applicants focus on their rental units not passing the inspection.
A refusal to submit to a drug test or tests resulting in a positive confirmed test result will be used as a basis to
reject any applicant for employment with our animal hospitals.
If you tell me that you
automatically reject applicants based upon the factors you listed, then you are of no value to me, and I will find someone willing to work for the fee I pay them rather than taking short - cuts.
Historically college rankings emphasize selectivity, using SAT scores of incoming freshman and the percentage of accepted vs.
rejected applicants as a measure of an institution's desirability among candidates.
The Tribunal
also rejected the applicant's claim that the Board should have accommodated her by letting her remain off work instead of terminating her employment.
The
landlord rejected the applicant, citing the company's policy that required applicants to have an income equal to three times the rental amount as well as a policy that prohibited the use of a cosigner.
Despite growing fears that Harvard Business School has turned its back on financiers and consultants, it's more likely that
recently rejected applicants to the elite MBA program fell victim to common application fumbles.
In fact, Uber has decided to no
longer reject applicants with records of certain non-violent or non-sexual offenses, such as petty theft and check fraud, the company told the Wall Street Journal.
There's already a law in New York City making it illegal to
reject an applicant just because they're on public assistance and / or receive government rent vouchers.
While the policy has only sporadically been captured as a written statement, «too many recent accounts» is a frequent reason given to
rejected applicants during reconsideration calls and in letters.
In a Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario decision on July 25, vice chairman David
Muir rejected the applicant's claim the organization acted in a discriminatory manner when it declined to assist with a civil suit for wages allegedly owing for the Queen's reign.
The Federal Court of
Appeal rejected the applicant's submissions on appeal, stating they attempted to modify the Carter test by substituting the first principle with litigation affecting the «architecture of the Constitution,»
If the resume is unstructured or lacks headings and bullet points, for example, employers assume the candidates» paperwork is also shoddy and
reject the applicant without looking more carefully at his or her qualifications.
Many landlords are afraid to screen to their own standards but the fact is a landlord can
legally reject any applicant they choose even when their own personal reason for rejecting is not necessarily to the letter of the law.
Chase is infamous for thorough implementation of its 5/24 rule, which
automatically rejects applicants who have received five or more new lines of credit within a 24 - month period.
One thing to keep in mind when signing up for a Chase credit card is the infamous 5/24 Rule, which will automatically
reject applicants who have opened five or more new credit accounts in the last 24 months.
While there are jobs where a hard and fast rule for exclusions exists, such as
rejecting applicants for law enforcement jobs if they have a criminal conviction, it is a good rule of thumb to avoid them.
The whole point is that virtually any «bright - line» screening process will generate a pool
of rejected applicants that may be disproportionately members of a protected class.
Mosley J.
also rejected the applicant's arguments relying on Khadr v. Canada (Prime Minister), because in that case the Prime Minister's statements were judicially reviewable as they affected the right of a Canadian to enjoy the protection of their own country.
It covers all of the normal sticky landlord legal issues
like rejecting applicants, handling security deposits, and evicting tenants, but it also addresses other issues like potential liability for your property manager's acts and how to handle subletting requests.
Now that the city of Minneapolis has passed the ordinance prohibiting landlords
from rejecting applicants on Section 8, do you think this will have much, if any, impact?
The survey of more than 2,600 hiring managers revealed that 45 percent of employers used social networking sites to research candidates and 35 percent of
employers rejected applicants based on what was uncovered on social networking sites.