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296 Sentences With "charged more"

How to use charged more in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "charged more" and check conjugation/comparative form for "charged more". Mastering all the usages of "charged more" from sentence examples published by news publications.

If they haven't stayed insured, they could be charged more.
I just charged more and now I make more money.
He charged more than $500 for some of the products.
Federal prosecutors charged more than 50 people in their probe.
In some cases, their credit card was charged more than once.
Most of those companies won't get charged more for the changes.
Novartis executives defended their position by implying they could have charged more.
The company was charged more than $1 million in fines and citations.
Under such plans, people with pre-existing conditions can be charged more.
The United States has charged more than 40 defendants in its case.
It has charged more reporters with defamation than did her military-backed predecessor.
Prosecutors have also charged more than a dozen men with fraud-related offences.
If you had a lot of health problems, you could be charged more.
Women are often charged more for plus-sized clothing, while men are not.
Mr. Mueller has already charged more than one person with making false statements.
And people could not be charged more as long as they maintained coverage.
Community rating bars people from being charged more based off their past medical history.
Beyond products, women are also routinely charged more than men for the same services.
Foreigners, who can be charged more, help pad out budgets and subsidise local students.
Not only are women charged more than men, but they're not making as much.
If they remain on insurance, they cannot be charged more than a healthy person.
" The report pointed out that the family was charged more than $15,000 for "trauma activation.
U.S. prosecutors have charged more than 100 individuals since 2013 with Islamic State-related crimes.
The drawback to capacitors is "energy density," meaning they need to be charged more often.
U.S. authorities have charged more than 80 individuals with Islamic State-related crimes since 2014.
The commission charged more than 85033,300 companies and more than 2,700 individuals, including top business leaders.
But, that still means some Americans could be charged more for insurance because they were assaulted.
But if people have a gap in their coverage, they could be charged more for insurance.
And it charged more than others upfront for the phones, which it had to specially modify.
No policyholders are being charged more than the maximum rates specified in their policies, he said.
Novartis points out that some groups think the company could actually have charged more for Kymriah.
But the state was charged more than $17.50 per unit, which the Columbus Dispatch has reported.
A sweeping American probe of bribery at the company has so far charged more than 20 people.
The fact that they're charged more for an essential sanitary product because of the GST is unacceptable.
Consumers with pre-existing conditions wouldn't be charged more if they don't have a gap in coverage.
VICE: So Sergeant Adonis is getting internally charged more than a year after Eric Garner passed away.
And it charged more than others up front for the phones, which it had to specially modify.
I pre-pay, but might be charged more later as I'm guessing what the total might be.
Yale researchers found that customers of one big insurer were charged more when EmCare entered a hospital.
After years of trying, they had charged more people with violating migratory bird laws than voting statutes.
Barack Obama's administration charged more whistleblowers with violating the Espionage Act than any other administration in history.
If you have a chronic or pre-existing condition, you might be charged more or denied coverage altogether.
Some online lenders have charged more than 60 percent in annual interest on their loans, including origination fees.
So when Scalise says "nobody can be charged more than anybody else," what he means is "get bent."
After being turned away or charged more, the plaintiffs work with a lawyer and decide whether to sue.
It guarantees that people with preëxisting health conditions cannot be rejected by insurers or charged more than others.
The pharmacist remembered Alec leaving without meds after being charged more than he had in his bank account.
Maggie Mulvaney — a Republican fundraiser — charged more than $2,500 for a stint as a contractor in October 2018.
The company charged more than double the going rate for workers and higher-than-normal rates for meals.
And he could be charged more for everything—sheets and blankets, food, contraband—all because of who he is.
The possibility of platforms or organizations being charged more for content delivery through "fast lanes" or "prioritization" undermines this.
Federal investigators have charged more than 20 people in the case, including a former chief executive of the bank.
After that window, you could face that underwriting process and possibly be charged more for coverage or rejected altogether.
Patients also could not be charged more for care from out-of-network doctors at an in-network hospital.
In his case, his rides were traced to Europe, and he was reportedly charged more than $2,949 (S$4,000).
Advertisers are generally charged more for video ads than static ads because of the engaging nature of the content.
But since the plans will be exempt from ObamaCare protections, people with pre-existing conditions could be charged more.
Companies may also be charged more for loans if they are perceived as more exposed to climate-related risks.
For example, people with pre-existing conditions have been able to obtain coverage without being charged more than others.
Mr. Levashov charged more to target American computers, an indication that these were a higher priority, court documents said.
They would allow people with pre-existing conditions to be charged more, for example, something not allowed under ObamaCare.
Fox had also charged more for this year's women's tournament ad slots compared to the 2015 Women's World Cup.
But they can be charged more, starting in 231 (or 2250 for those gaining coverage during a special enrollment period).
Non-Mormons can attend, but they are charged more for tuition and must obey the school's strict code of conduct.
Sometimes the ER doctor bills are separate from the hospital, so you will be charged more than a basic copay.
The US Attorney's Office declined to say why Hopkins was charged more than a year after his residence was searched.
You shouldn't be charged more for a loan to go to school than for a loan to buy a home.
She believes not only are they charged more because they are women, but also because of their race or size.
Keri is worried that if the ACA is repealed, she could lose her health coverage, or could be charged more.
Executives from Aetna and UnitedHealthcare charged more for their insurance products than competitors that excluded high-end specialists and hospitals.
They noticed that the childcare centers with an online presence often charged more, because they probably saw more inbound demand.
The report, published Wednesday by Consumer Reports, said it was not entirely clear why insurers charged more in minority areas.
You won&apost get charged more for an Uber Assist — it&aposs the same price as a standard UberX ride.
They're also concerned that women could be charged more for their health insurance if it doesn't automatically include maternity care.
Number three, women can't be charged more than men for health insurance, which is the way it used to be.
Deliveries on orders of more than $35 come with a $5.99 delivery fee; deliveries under that amount are presumably charged more.
In July, the Department of Justice charged more than 600 people in a massive sweep of doctors doling out fraudulent prescriptions.
Later that afternoon, I checked my bank account and noticed I was charged more than $90 for the Kylie Lip Kits.
Would you have invested in AirBnB if you knew African-Americans would be denied or charged more for their online rentals?
Schumer pointed to a practice used by some airlines in which passengers are charged more money for seats with extra legroom.
"In other words, people can once again be denied insurance because of pre-existing conditions or be charged more," Jost said.
The regulations say that you cannot be charged more for using your phone abroad than you would be your home country.
The short-term plans split from ObamaCare in multiple ways, including that people with pre-existing conditions can be charged more.
And the 133 million people with pre-existing conditions could no longer be turned away or charged more by insurance companies.
The Department of Justice has charged more than 7,000 state and local officials with public corruption over the past two decades.
HCA Healthcare, another for-profit hospital chain, owns two facilities that each charged more than $200,000 for joint replacements in 2016.
"You can be charged more for a specific condition," says Chris Sloan, a senior manager at the health research firm Avalere.
This is the first time the group has routinely charged more than $30, and as much as $46, for main courses.
These officials charged more than $25,240 in Palm Springs meals to the company in January 20223 alone, according to court documents.
"In fact, the testimony is so close that I could be charged more with self-plagiarism than self-contradiction," he wrote.
Women could again be charged more than men of the same age for similar insurance policies, unless states banned such practices.
I think all of the channels—look, I know that ESPN charged more per subscriber than a lot of the other channels.
In June 22017, the Justice Department said it had charged more than 22017 defendants with hate crime offenses in the previous decade.
A better idea, says Ms Adler, is congestion pricing for runways—where airlines are charged more to use slots at busy times.
If they're charged more than once, it's considered a felony, according to a California criminal defense lawyer who asked to remain anonymous.
If you're in this situation and have underlying health issues, you could be charged more for a policy or denied coverage altogether.
Women can no longer be charged more than men for our basic health care -- and access to family planning must be covered.
Being female or pregnant is no longer considered a pre-existing condition that can result in being denied coverage or charged more.
"Whoever it was charged more than $20,000," said Wang, who spoke last year at a Federal Trade Commission conference about her ordeal.
That could lead to poor people being charged more, making it harder for them to get the care they need, she said.
Carolyn L. Engelhard, director of the health policy program at the university's School of Medicine, acknowledged that teaching hospitals often charged more.
In fiscal 2019 alone, the Education Department reported that it charged more than $100 billion in interest on all federal student loans.
Influencers who focus on sports, beauty, fashion, DIY, video games, and food all charged more than $2742,2722, on average, for a post.
During the course of our investigation, we charged more than 30 defendants with committing federal crimes, including 12 officers of the Russian military.
In the past, water privatization has led to consumers being charged more for worse service and even to dangerously unsafe public drinking water.
Asked about allowing states to repeal rules preventing people with pre-existing conditions from being charged more, Cassidy cited statements from President Trump.
So far, the special counsel investigation into Russia interference in the 2016 election has charged more than 30 people with 191 criminal counts.
During the course of our investigation, we charged more than 30 defendants with committing federal crimes, including 12 officers of the Russian military.
Senate Republicans are also leaning toward keeping a requirement that individuals with pre-existing conditions can't be charged more, which conservatives want waived.
For example, the proposal would have allowed people with pre-existing conditions to be charged more, something that is not allowed under ObamaCare.
In states that get a waiver, people who don't stay insured could be charged more for insurance policies based on their health status.
In those states, if someone with a pre-existing condition has kept themselves insured, they wouldn't be charged more because of their health condition.
The promise is that you will never be charged more than competitors, but — crucially — if everyone takes better care, you will pay much less.
Before the second world war, most passengers in America and Europe were weighed before take-off and charged more for extra heft (see picture).
"So far, the office has charged more than 30 individuals and has secured a number of guilty pleas, which is not insignificant," he said.
And the company sending high-definition films, which use a lot of bits, can't be charged more or discriminated against by the service providers.
Defense personnel have charged more than $300,000 to department credit cards at various properties owned by the president since he took office in 85033.
We've got stuff that we're working on now that is less politically charged, more about current events that are not actually related to politics.
Before getting their food, they noticed that they were being charged more for one of the items than the price listed on the menu.
Since its creation a decade ago, it has charged more than 3,500 people for what prosecutors said were over $12.5 billion in false billings.
Verizon and AT&T have long charged more for service than Sprint and T-Mobile based on claims of superior network speed and coverage.
Technically the Senate bill means people with preexisting conditions couldn't be charged more for their health insurance plan's premiums, the monthly cost of having insurance.
Apart from tourists, whom Stanley admitted on sufferance and charged more, most guests were struggling artists or writers, and two-thirds were long-term residents.
The Journal reported further that North had told the board's executive committee that LaPierre had charged more than $200,000 in wardrobe purchases to a vendor.
The repeal of net neutrality could pave the way for tiered internet speed access, meaning consumers and companies would be charged more for faster internet.
Today, because of the Affordable Care Act, those with a pre-existing health condition cannot be discriminated against, denied health care coverage or charged more.
British charity Mind has warned that some people with a history of mental illness are already being charged more for insurance or refused cover altogether.
Officials have also charged more Internet users with "spreading rumors," including in cases where writers had been discussing the recent economic downturn and stock market turmoil.
Robuchon, whose restaurants charged more than $400 per person for the tasting menu, said he was "a regular person" when it came to cooking for himself.
And 75% say it's a "bad idea" to allow states to decide whether individuals with pre-existing conditions can be charged more -- including 59% of Republicans.
The agreement centers on giving states the ability to have waivers to repeal a ObamaCare regulation preventing people with pre-existing conditions from being charged more.
Number three, women can't be charged more than men for our health insurance, which is the way it used to be before the Affordable Care Act.
Federal prosecutors investigating the alleged meddling have charged more than 30 people as part of their probe, including more than two dozen Russian individuals and entities.
Prior to the Affordable Care Act, Americans trying to buy insurance on their own could be turned away or charged more based on their medical histories.
That evening they would find out that he charged more than two thousand dollars, buying gift cards and a can of soda in a nearby drugstore.
But how is this any different from how iTunes has historically charged more to download an HD version of a movie compared to a standard version?
Before Obamacare, women were routinely charged more than men for insurance premiums, and coverage of basic women's health needs like birth control and maternity care was inconsistent.
A new version of the popular game is taking on gender discrimination and the ridiculous "pink tax" that sees women charged more for certain products and services.
Prosecutors initially charged more than 30 parents with conspiracy fraud in March, including actress Felicity Huffman who began serving her 14-day sentence October 15 in California.
As market data has become a more important source of revenue, and as the exchanges have charged more, there has been some push-back from Wall Street.
But the measure would not allow states to waive rules preventing people with pre-existing conditions from being charged more, a departure from the House-passed bill.
Earlier this week, an Atlanta woman said that when she ordered three boxes of toilet paper from Amazon, she was charged more than $7,000 in shipping fees.
Those regulations include "essential health benefits," which mandate services a plan must cover, and community rating, which prevents people with pre-existing conditions from being charged more.
California's three big utilities are shifting to time-of-use rates for residential customers — meaning ratepayers will be charged more for electricity when it is more valuable.
And they point out that some inequities, like black people being charged more than white people when they buy cars, go away when the transaction happens online.
"(This) shows these suppliers have consistently charged more than the indicative level of the default tariff cap, which reflects the estimated costs of an efficient supplier," it said.
In addition to the fake accounts scandal, last year it was reported that Wells Fargo charged more than 800,000 customers for auto insurance that they did not need.
Women can't be charged more for their insurance, young adults can stay on their parents' plan until they turn 26, contraceptive care and preventive care are now free.
The Postal Service enters into deals with major customers, and while we don't know the details of Amazon's rates, some analysts have suggested companies could be charged more.
"If women are making less and then at the same time also being charged more for the same kind of products, that's really a travesty," Menin told CNBC.
Of those charged, more than 100 have pleaded guilty to a felony charge; eight cases were dismissed, and 15 remained open, according to the Manhattan district attorney's office.
Cars crossing into Staten Island are charged $16, or $11.08 with an E-ZPass; trucks that cross the bridge, many en route to New Jersey, are charged more.
For the E.R. visit, Cynthia will be charged more than $1,000 plus about $600 in professional fees for the few minutes of critical thinking I expended on her.
The special counsel, who is examining Russian interference and ties between the Trump campaign and Russia, has charged more than two dozen Russians for interfering in the 2016 election.
She was making the point that women pay a kind of "pink tax" whenever they are charged more for "feminine" items, or even general services, such as dry cleaning.
The ObamaCare regulations in question include preventing people from being charged more based on their health and requiring that insurance plans cover a certain range of health services. Sen.
The code calls for districts to bear all recruitment and legal costs, and for foreign educators not to be charged more than a nominal application processing fee, under $150.
Consumers didn't necessarily see that price — you could have been charged more or less by a registrar — but that was the price domain registrars ended up paying per registration.
A few years ago, money was flowing out of anything with a higher fee (certainly anything that charged more than 2240 basis points) and into lower cost index funds.
Between September and November of 216 alone, more than 241 children ran away, according to prosecutors who have charged more than a dozen officials in connection with the fire.
Thanks to this law, the days when women could be charged more than men and Americans with pre-existing conditions could be denied coverage altogether are relics of the past.
Last year, he wrote on Twitter that the United States Postal Service's deals with Amazon made "the Post Office dumber and poorer," and that the company should be charged more.
Most data plans charged more if users were to go over their monthly limits, and the 2G and 3G networks were significantly slower than the LTE networks we experience today.
Any tenants found to have income that's more than 120 percent of the area median income for two consecutive years would have to be charged more rent or move out.
This legislation protects Americans with pre-existing conditions so that they cannot be denied coverage or charged more based on health status – two of the central protections contested in Texas vs.
" In an address to the parliamentary communications committee, she said, "They've had the temerity to split the passengers up, and when the family want to travel together they are charged more.
Mar-A-Lago reportedly doubled its initiation fees to $200,000 shortly after Trump became president, and has charged more for tickets to events — including the most recent New Year's Eve bash.
In February, 20 Republican state attorneys general backed a lawsuit to overturn Obamacare — including a popular provision that protects people with pre-existing conditions from being charged more or denied coverage.
People with pre-existing conditions could only be charged more based on health status if they had a lapse in health coverage, so these would be the people helped by Upton's amendment.
In a departure from the controversial MacArthur Amendment in the House bill, the Senate measure would not allow states to waive protections preventing people with pre-existing conditions from being charged more.
She said the bill would finally provide a legal remedy for when women are kicked out of places for breastfeeding or if they are charged more than men for services or products.
And because the government negotiates lower rates for Medicaid and Medicare, patients on those plans are less desirable than privately insured patients, who can be charged more to boost hospitals' bottom line.
The revised bill would allow states to waive ObamaCare protections preventing people from being charged more based on their health, which could lead to exorbitant premiums that put coverage out of reach.
So someone who needs certain drugs or treatments could not be denied or charged more for insurance, but their health plan may not cover those services if the state waived the rule.
All 50 states had laws requiring newborns to be covered under a parent's insurance policy and not to be charged more if they were sick, if they were enrolled within 30 days.
Washington (CNN)Defense Department personnel have charged more than $300,000 at Trump-branded properties since the start of Donald Trump's presidency through last November, according to internal agency documents obtained by CNN.
What it means: True, a person with cancer couldn't be denied insurance or charged more for a plan, but it's possible that their state would only offer plans that don't cover cancer treatment.
The 2015 regulation lays out that customers can't be charged more while traveling elsewhere in the EU, and requires mobile operators to notify customers when they're reaching the limits to their data allowances.
One of the areas where states may be able to opt out would be community rating provisions, which currently protect people from being charged more on the basis of medical history or gender.
The special counsel has charged more than two-dozen Russians in separate plots to use social media to sow discord among the American public and hack into Democratic organizations and U.S. electoral systems.
The amended bill would allow states to waive ObamaCare protections preventing people with from being charged more based on their health, if certain conditions are met to provide coverage in high-risk pools.
But those conservative demands could alienate other Republicans, particularly a call to allow states to opt out of ObamaCare's protections against people with pre-existing conditions being charged more due to their illness.
A guy cops say claimed to be Genie Bouchard's brother charged more than $40,000 to the tennis star's personal account at a fancy Miami Beach hotel ... only problem is, HE'S NOT HER BRO!
The revised bill would allow states to waive ObamaCare protections preventing people with from being charged more based on their health, which could lead to exorbitant premiums that put coverage out of reach.
GM said the new batteries, which it has branded EME 1.0 and first described last fall, will be smaller than current EV batteries, can be charged more quickly and will provide more energy.
The three complaints share similar concerns about McDonald's franchising terms and conditions, including prices set for products sold at franchises, saying consumers are charged more than at McDonald's own stores as a result.
They would still enjoy many of the ACA's protections: under FEHBP plans, "no one can be refused, or charged more, for a preëxisting condition" and "dependents under twenty-six are covered," Frank writes.
"If tobacco users are charged more for health insurance, they should be provided with access to resources to quit," said lead author Michael Pesko, a health economist at Georgia State University in Atlanta.
As a result of that discretion, minorities were charged more for home loans than white borrowers with the same credit profile, paying tens of millions of dollars in additional mortgage costs, the complaint said.
The assumption that the cost of prenatal care should only be paid for by women suggests that it's acceptable for women to be charged more for their health care, simply because of their gender.
Similarly, in May authorities charged more than 50 people, most of them civil servants, in relation to the theft of nearly $100 million of public funds from the National Youth Service, a government agency.
"If the Texas lawsuit prevailed, it would be particularly bad for women because they would start to get charged more again," Katherine Hempstead, a senior adviser at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, told me.
Publicly commit that when a drug is approved in other countries, U.S. taxpayers will not be charged more than citizens of other wealthy nations given America's unique investment into the science driving drug discoveries.
States are required to set up a high-risk pool where people with higher medical costs can buy health insurance, and people cannot be charged more if they don't have a gap in coverage.
Separately, the fraud office has charged more than a dozen people as part of a long-running investigation into the manipulation of the London interbank offered rate, another benchmark interest rate, known as Libor.
Experts said Trump's plan could leave behind only the sickest people in the Obamacare markets, raising premiums and effectively eroding the law's protection that people with pre-existing medical conditions cannot be charged more.
Meanwhile, Mr. Mueller has charged more than a dozen Russian individuals and companies for their roles in a coordinated and deceptive social-media campaign aimed at hurting Hillary Clinton's candidacy and helping Mr. Trump's.
But Craig Conrath of the Justice Department pushed back, noting that AT&T's advertising revenue has increased in recent years, while the company at the same time has charged more for pay-TV subscriptions.
Issa told a Stage 3 breast cancer survivor concerned about being targeted for her pre-existing condition that she wouldn't be charged more under the bill as long as she keeps her continuous coverage.
A recent Upshot column showed how much of the rise is a result of more being done for patients during hospital stays and doctor visits, or that they are charged more for those services.
Federal prosecutors have charged more than 80 members of the violent Mexican Mafia gang with taking part in a conspiracy to run drugs and carry out violent assaults ordered from inside Los Angeles County jails.
"You can be charged more for a specific condition," says Chris Sloan, a senior manager at the health research firm Avalere, of the Cassidy-Graham plan that has begun to gain traction on Capitol Hill.
While the New Jersey university charged more than $47,000 in tuition and fees for the 2017-2018 year, the school provided need-based financial aid to 60 percent of freshman in the 2016-2017 year.
Older Americans could not be charged more than three times as much as younger people, even though the cost of insuring the old is far more than three times the cost of insuring young adults.
Mueller's more than yearlong probe has charged more than two-dozen Russians in separate plots to use social media to sow discord among the American public and hack into Democratic organizations and U.S. electoral systems.
"Innocent drivers who don't cause accidents should not be charged more because someone else hit them," J. Robert Hunter, the consumer group's director of insurance, said in a telephone conference call this week with reporters.
Separately, the fraud office has previously charged more than a dozen people as part of a long-running investigation into the manipulation of the London interbank offered rate, a similar benchmark interest rate, known as Libor.
Facebook is pushing back on a claim that was quoted by Hillary Clinton on Twitter that her presidential campaign was systematically charged more than twice that of the Trump's presidential campaign for advertising rates on Facebook.
N charged more than $55,000 for 30-second ad spots as part of packages ranging from $800,000 to $1 million that included future debates and election night, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
They said that between last August and mid-October, a period when Ms. Herzer said she was occupied by taking care of Mr. Redstone's health care, she charged more than $265,000 to his American Express card.
On Friday, 10 GOP senators introduced a bill to preserve ObamaCare's protections against people with pre-existing conditions being denied coverage or charged more, as a backstop in case a GOP-led lawsuit against ObamaCare succeeds.
On Friday, 2202 GOP senators introduced a bill to preserve ObamaCare's protections against people with pre-existing conditions being denied coverage or charged more, as a backstop in case a GOP-led lawsuit against ObamaCare succeeds.
At least one of the former teachers is dead, and Massachusetts law states that for most crimes, a person cannot be charged more than 27 years after the encounter, or until after the victim turns 16.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), under President Obama, overhauled the program to impose civil monetary penalties for companies that charged more than the highest allowed price through the program for a specific drug.
Under the new plan, states were required to set up high-risk pools so that people with high medical costs could still get insurance and people couldn't be charged more unless they had a gap in coverage.
S. campaign ahead of the 2016 election, but in a message on Twitter sent after Special Counsel Robert Mueller charged more than a dozen Russians with meddling in the election, Trump said his campaign did nothing wrong.
The government said that some customers are being charged more than 300 pounds ($419) than they should be, and the cap will apply to expensive plans that customers are moved to when their cheaper fixed deals end.
Russian tech companies face increased skepticismLast year, the former special counsel Robert Mueller's office charged more than a dozen Russian citizens with crimes related to a vast social-media campaign meant to influence the 2016 presidential election.
Alexander downplayed the notion that he wants to undo ObamaCare's basic protections, including the requirements that nobody can be charged more if they have a pre-existing condition, and that everyone is guaranteed to be sold insurance.
Since the federal crackdown began in 22, authorities have charged more than 22014,603 defendants, recovering $260 billion in fraudulent payments last year alone, according to a joint report by the U.S. Justice and Health and Human Services departments.
Under the Trump administration, the Justice Department has charged more than 70 people with crimes motivated by hate, including the men allegedly behind attacks at synagogues in Pittsburgh and Poway, California, in 2018 and 2019, according to Dreiband.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has separately civilly charged more than 40 people and entities for their roles in the scheme, which it said resulted in more than $100 million of illegal profit from 2010 to 2015.
His campaign notes that people could only be charged more under the bill if they had a lapse in coverage for 63 days or more, which the campaign said was an incentive for people to maintain coverage. Rep.
"I would adamantly oppose any proposal that does not protect Alabamians from rising health care costs, higher premiums and out-of-pocket expenses while ensuring those with preexisting conditions cannot be denied coverage or charged more," he wrote.
The DOJ argues that ObamaCare's protections against people with pre-existing conditions being denied coverage or charged more should be invalidated, maintaining that the individual mandate that people have insurance or face a tax penalty is now unconstitutional.
The top Democrats on the House Financial Services Committee asked the panel's chairman on Tuesday to hold another hearing on Wells Fargo's sale practices amid reports the bank charged more than 800,85033 customers for unwanted auto insurance. Reps.
It would expand rights for women in public accommodations where they may be charged more than men for services or harassed for breastfeeding and offer recourse for people of color who are discriminated against in retail spaces. 8.
Burger King is trying to make a point Thursday about how women are charged more for some products that are almost entirely identical to the ones for men, whether it's deodorant, jeans or having a shirt dry cleaned.
Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal tweeted that the state government had received complaints about Uber and Ola, and would impound cars which charged more than the government-prescribed taxi rates, with the drivers facing permanent cancellation of their licenses.
SYDNEY/BEIJING (Reuters) - Australia's Crown Resorts Ltd said Chinese authorities charged more than a dozen of its employees with promoting gambling, ending an eight-month limbo since the staff were arrested and inching closer to resolving its biggest crisis.
Beyond exploiting women for sex, prosecutors said, Mr. Raniere charged more than $100,000 to the credit card of a senior Nxivm member after her death and wrote checks totaling more than $300,000 on her bank account, Ms. Penza said.
According to the Journal, North told the board that he was forming a crisis committee to look at the organization's finances and had told the board's executive committee that LaPierre charged more than $200,000 in wardrobe purchases to a vendor.
According to an analysis from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University, federal prosecutors charged more than 52,000 people with illegal entry under Section 1325 in the first eight months of the 2019 fiscal year, which began in October.
Barbara Underwood, the attorney general, said defendants typically charged more than $1,000 for their services, which often came with usurious interest rates, after luring borrowers with false claims such as being affiliated with the government, or that their help was needed.
Still, many Senate Republicans are open to allowing states to repeal at least some of the ObamaCare regulations, which are located in Title I of the law, including the provision that people with pre-existing conditions cannot be charged more.
Asked about his vote for that bill, Cramer's campaign noted that people could only be charged more if they had a lapse in coverage for 63 days or more, which the campaign said was an incentive for people to maintain coverage.
Trump's first year in office was also focused on repealing ObamaCare, and his administration has supported a lawsuit that would overturn the health-care law's protections for people with pre-existing conditions, preventing them from being denied coverage or charged more.
And while Mueller has charged more than two dozen Russians in plots linked to the Kremlin's interference campaign, none of the charges leveled against Trump associates have alleged a conspiracy between Americans and the Russians to meddle in the vote.
In 85033, the Justice Department charged more than 200 protesters at an anti-Trump rally with felony charges for allegedly conspiring to riot because someone broke windows and lit a limousine on fire while they were in the general vicinity.
New York (CNN)For months, the Trump administration hid a report showing that banks charged high fees to college students who opened accounts and held debit cards -- and that Wells Fargo charged more on average than any other financial institution.
The analysis found that in 20 of 38 tests (53 percent), a moderate-income driver with a clean record was charged more for basic auto liability insurance than a high-income driver who caused an accident in which someone was injured.
In March 264, the Affordable Care Act passed, and today 29 million more Americans are insured, no child or adult can be denied coverage because of a pre-existing condition, and women are not charged more just because of their gender.
After that time, you can be rejected or charged more, unless you live in one of four states (Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine and New York) that provide some level of guarantee to enroll at a later time with pre-existing condition protection.
The Justice Department also released updated statistics on hate crimes, saying in a release that over the past 10 years it has charged more than 300 defendants with hate-crimes offenses, including 50 defendants in fiscal years 2017 and 2018.
Certain categories of people were being given "scores" by computer programs, which led to their being charged more for car insurance, paying higher interest rates on credit cards, getting disqualified from jobs, or receiving longer prison terms—all because of arithmetic.
In a sign of GOP concerns about the issue, 10 Republicans senators in August introduced a bill to enshrine into law ObamaCare's ban on people with pre-existing conditions being denied coverage or being charged more, in case their party's lawsuit succeeds.
"If this bill is signed into law, the suffering will be widespread, needless, and cruel: hospitals will close... families will go bankrupt paying healthcare costs, and women will be charged more than men for coverage that doesn't even guarantee maternity care," she said.
The United States has charged more than 40 individuals and businesses with a range of corruption-related crimes, and it has also brought to light details of sports rights deals that had traditionally been secured behind the scenes with little outside scrutiny.
Some lawmakers have called for the banks to end what they call "free banking" for those in credit because they say it simply means other services, such as overdrafts, are charged more heavily and that often hurts the less well off more.
While it's unclear whether these gestures contribute to real progress in the fight for equal pay, they certainly contribute to social media uproar — in some cases, men have claimed that being charged more than women amounts to a violation of their human rights.
Doctor's choice on what to charge On average, anesthesiologists, radiologists, ER doctors, pathologists and neurosurgeons charged more than four times the amount Medicare pays for the given medical services provided, according to a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
"We sent letters to the CEOs of every manufacturer and retailer of the 800 products that we sampled to urge them to change this practice and to really have price parity, because there's no reason why female consumers should be charged more," Menin told CNBC.
As a result, he said women could be charged more than men for health-care coverage, those with contraceptive coverage could lose it and 22019- to 26 year-olds may no longer be covered under their parent's plan if the judge's decision is upheld.
Short-term plans promoted by these actions, for example, do not guarantee coverage for preexisting conditions, while association plans, also given a boost by yesterday's order, lack basic protections like the one that forbids women from being charged more than men for the same services.
Denham co-sponsored an amendment unveiled the night before last Thursday's vote that would provide $8 billion over five years to help individuals with pre-existing conditions afford premiums in states that received waivers from ObamaCare protections preventing sick people from being charged more.
In addition to exploiting women for sex, Mr. Raniere charged more than $100,000 to an American Express card belonging to a senior Nxivm member, Pam Cafritz, after her death and wrote checks totaling more than $300,000 from one of her bank accounts, Ms. Penza said.
Mr. Jones has not been charged by the Justice Department but has come under scrutiny as federal prosecutors have found union officials from a regional office he previously headed charged more than a million dollars in luxury travel and personal spending to the union.
In mid-2015, Macquarie had to refund millions of dollars to about 2,300 clients who were charged more fees than promised, but the Sydney-based bank has been largely unscathed by the Royal Commission - a powerful independent inquiry that has revealed widespread misconduct in Australia's financial sector.
Oculus seems to be wanting it both ways though, because they could have released a headset that pushed the limits and charged more for it, but they opted to launch a product that moved laterally and made sacrifices — but they still are charging more for it.
Those elements: an individual mandate to spread risks by placing everyone in the same insurance pool; a minimum benefit package to ensure all customers were adequately covered; "community rating" to prevent high-cost patients from being charged more; subsidies to help low-income Americans purchase coverage.
They are also concerned about the possibility that the bill would only allow states to repeal ObamaCare rules on what an insurance plan must cover, known as essential health benefits, and not protections against people being charged more based on their health, known as community rating.
That year, 2014, was the first for new Affordable Care Act rules mandating designs of insurance plans, which included a set of minimum health benefits that plans had to include, as well as a guarantee that sicker customers could not be charged more than healthier people.
The specifics of the funding proposal are not yet clear, but it appears designed to address one potential hole in the AHCA waivers: In states with waivers, people cannot be charged more for their insurance because of their health, as long as they maintained health coverage.
"My hunch is that we are going to see more indictments of Russians," said Glenn Kirschner, a former federal prosecutor with the U.S. attorney's office in Washington, D.C. The special counsel has charged more than two dozen Russians and six Trump associates in connection with the investigation.
About half of the documented expenses involve the U.S. Secret Service, which has been charged more than $600,000 by various Trump properties between September 2016 and August 22017, though it's unclear if the Secret Service has released all records of Trump-related expenses during that time.
And under federal law today, insurers can't rate based on domestic violence — but if a state were to allow insurers to charge higher premiums based on health status, women who weren't continuously covered with health insurance might be charged more because of a history of domestic violence.
The poll also found that in battleground states, such as Florida and Nevada, the pre-existing conditions mandate — which ensures that people with conditions such as diabetes or cancer don't get charged more in monthly premiums — was a key issue in deciding who to vote for.
In the run-up to Christmas 2015, UPS worked to manage package flows, but to control its costs it also made clear to retail customers that if they missed key deadlines ahead of the holiday for ground deliveries, they would be charged more for moving those packages by air.
Republicans have pushed back on those attacks by arguing the provision was narrower than it's being portrayed, and that people could be charged more for a pre-existing condition only if their state chose to get a waiver and if they were uninsured for more than 63 days.
The Funeral Consumers Alliance and the Consumer Federation of America examined pricing at dozens of funeral homes in nine major markets, and found that homes owned by Service Corporation International usually charged more for similar services, whether a simple cremation, a simple burial or a traditional, full-service funeral.
They'd also be able to get a waiver from the rule that people can't be charged more for pre-existing conditions — but only if the state has another way to take care of sick people, such as a high-risk pool or a "reinsurance" program to help compensate their insurer.
It also keeps intact other Obamacare requirements that made that health care law such a game-changer for women's health: covering women's preventive health services with no cost-sharing, covering maternity care as an essential health benefit, and making sure women can't get charged more for insurance just because they're women.
The deeply personal story ended with an inevitable political slant— the Republican healthcare bill currently being considered in the House would allow states to decide if people with preexisting conditions (like Billy Kimmel) could be charged more or shunted off into "high-risk pools" that can be expensive for patients.
Meeting in unfriendly territory Under MacArthur's amendment, people with pre-existing conditions couldn't be denied coverage, but they could be charged more if they let their coverage lapse and if they live in states that opt out of the protection for people with pre-existing conditions known as community rating.
In some cases I reviewed, hospitals charged more than six times what the identical drug would cost in the UK. Insurance plans will often negotiate down those charges, but even those lower prices are still multiples higher than what patients pay in our peer countries, such as Canada or England.
The GAO provided examples from a patient advocacy group, including two patients who were charged more than $500 for a single record request, one who was charged $148 for a "PDF version of her medical record," and two others who were "directed to pay an annual subscription fee" for access.
But they may have charged more "if they see that you've been screened for S.T.D.s, had treatment for an S.T.D., taken H.I.V.-preventive medication, had more than annual pelvic exams or had other follow-up encounters with the medical system," said Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown's Health Policy Institute.
In claiming to protect people with pre-existing conditions, the House proposed to provide states with $15 billion over ten years for maternity, mental health and substance use disorder care and $85003 billion over five years to reduce premiums or out-of-pocket costs for people charged more due to pre-existing conditions.
People were sold junk insurance plans at high costs, some individuals with pre-existing conditions were essentially locked out of the marketplace all together, women could be charged more just because of their gender, and plans could drop you the moment you got sick—the time when you need coverage the most.
This can't be ruled out, but the nature of data selling and data mining is so embedded in the current models of most IT companies that it is very hard to see how such businesses could thrive unless they charged more to consumers than consumers have so far been willing to pay.
Trump also raised eyebrows during last month's G7 meeting by suggesting the 2020 event should be hosted at his golf resort in Miami, and internal Defense Department documents obtained by CNN show that department personnel have charged more than $300,000 at Trump-branded properties since the start of Trump's presidency through last November.
But the Freedom Caucus wanted to go beyond that, into the rest of Obamacare's insurance regulations — which include popular things like covering anyone with pre-existing conditions, making sure sick people can't be charged more, coverage of young adults, coverage of preventive care, and standards for how much of a person's medical expenses are covered.
"Senate Republicans are pushing to take away people's healthcare and go back to a time when women could be charged more than men for healthcare, you could get kicked off your plan when you got sick, and people hit lifetime caps on coverage," said Sadie Weiner, a spokeswoman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.
Allow insurers to charge older people more The bill does NOT remove the provision that people can't be charged more for having pre-existing conditions, but it would allow insurers to charge older customers more than they're paying now (up to five times as much as younger people versus the 3x limit currently imposed).
Tom MacArthur and Mark Meadows to get the GOP health care bill moving again, per a source familiar with the discussions: States would be able to get waivers from two Affordable Care Act insurance regulations: the "essential health benefits" and the rule that older adults can't be charged more than three times as much as younger ones.
New York Attorney General Letitia James opened an inquiry into the organization the same week the group itself devolved into a power struggle between supporters of CEO Wayne LaPierre (who the Wall Street Journal reported charged more than $200,000 in wardrobe purchases to a vendor) and supporters of President Oliver North (whose very name is synonymous with political scandal).
The New York Times said that those aged in their 0003s and 60s could see premiums rise by $2,000 to $3,000 a year, equivalent to 20 percent to 25 percent, or higher, by changing current rules stating adults in those age brackets cannot be charged more than three times what they charge young adults for coverage.
"The reality is, people don't like being told they're being charged more money for the same thing with no extra benefit, so there's a good chance that some content creators may get the email from Patreon saying they're being charged an extra 2.9% + $0.35, decide 'well, that's enough from me' and pull their pledge entirely," Scullion told me.
Here's what he said at a leadership press conference after a meeting with House Republican members: The case: Scalise said the layers include the bill's "continuous coverage" rule, which prevents people from being charged more for health conditions if they keep themselves insured, and high-risk pools to cover sick people in states that waive that rule.
Blackwater, which Prince sold to investors in 2010 (who renamed it multiple times), received more than $1 billion in contracts from the American government between 2001 and 2007; at one point Congressional investigators found that the firm charged more than $1,200 a day for its mercenaries in Iraq — more than six times what a U.S. soldier is paid.
Meanwhile, millions earning low wages, particularly single mothers who want to work, struggle to find affordable childcare — not surprising considering that in 10 states and the District of Columbia the annual cost of such care exceeded $10,000 last year; and that, in 2000 states, childcare centers charged more than the cost of tuition and fees at four-year public colleges.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) has charged more than 400 people, including 56 doctors, with healthcare fraud that cost taxpayers approximately $1.3 billion, Attorney General Jeff SessionsJefferson (Jeff) Beauregard SessionsDOJ should take action against China's Twitter propaganda Lewandowski says he's 'happy' to testify before House panel The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy MORE announced on Thursday.
It's also about the more than 150 million Americans with insurance through their workplaces, who under the ACA cannot be denied coverage for pre-existing conditions, who are now protected from lifetime limits on care, whose children can now stay on their policies until age 26, and who cannot be charged more because of their gender -- because being a woman is no-longer a pre-existing condition.
One way it does so is through the MacArthur Amendment, which allows states to obtain three waivers: It allows older Americans to be charged more than 5 times what younger Americans pay, it brings back higher premiums for people with pre-existing conditions if their coverage lapses, and it lets insurers opt-out of essential health benefits, which include things like emergency services and maternity care.
New court documents filed Thursday by lawyers for Mr. Redstone assert that Ms. Herzer exploited her relationship with him for financial gain, saying that between last August and mid-October she charged more than $265,000 to his American Express card, and at one point called in a request for $40,000 in cash to be delivered to Mr. Redstone's house and had him sign for it.
Staffers at the Department of Defense charged more than $138,000 on department-issued cards at President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE's properties during the first eight months of the Trump administration, CNN reported Wednesday.

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