Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

9 Sentences With "fails to provide for"

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

"Despite amendments and changes, the AHCA still fails to provide for the needs of my constituents," said Ros-Lehtinen, who is retiring, in a statement.
North Koreans are being forced to pay officials bribes to survive while the government fails to "provide for life's basic necessities," according to a United Nations report released Tuesday.
"The statute fails to provide for notice that a voter is being disenfranchised and/or an opportunity for the voter to be heard," Judge Richard Ulmer wrote in his ruling.
"The dilemma that the population faces is to find ways to satisfy basic daily needs while circumventing the formal prohibition and punishment of private initiative by a State that fails to provide for those needs," Quintana wrote.
Melinda, played by Siobhan Hayes, is the fiancée of Ricky Butcher (Sid Owen). She appears between 1 and 4 April 2008. Melinda comes to Walford with Ricky for funeral of his father, Frank Butcher (Mike Reid). Throughout the day, she spends most of the time on the telephone to her father asking him for £25,000 as a property deposit, which he later fails to provide for her.
The United Students Against Sweatshops, have stated that the FLA has "... a weak code that fails to provide for women's rights, a living wage, the full public disclosure of factory locations, or university control over the monitoring process." WAAKE-UP! was also critical of the Fair Labor Association as much of its funding comes from organizations it monitors, creating a potential conflict of interest. The organization FLA Watch monitors the Fair Labor Association.
Seal of the Supreme Court of Ohio DeRolph v. State is a landmark case in Ohio constitutional law in which the Supreme Court of Ohio ruled that the state's method for funding public education was unconstitutional. On March 24, 1997, the Supreme Court of Ohio ruled in a 4-3 decision that the state funding system "fails to provide for a thorough and efficient system of common schools," as required by the Ohio Constitution, and directed the state to find a remedy. The court would look at the case several times over the next 12 years before it relinquished jurisdiction, but the underlying problems with the school funding system remain to this day.
If there is only one eternal soul, and individualized thinking only happens through a lower faculty which will perish with the body when a person dies, then the theory fails to provide for a person's immortality and afterlife. Thomas Aquinas wrote a treatise De Unitate Intellectus, Contra Averroistas ("On the Unity of the Intellect, against the Averroists"), which contained detailed arguments to reject this theory. He used the philosophical and theological oppositions mentioned above, and used his own reading of Aristotle to show that Averroes misinterpreted what Aristotle said. Catholic Church authorities condemned the theory, along with other ideas of Averroes, in 1270 and 1277 (by Bishop Étienne Tempier of Paris) and again in 1489 in Padua by local bishops.
After a year, the panel lost its jurisdiction over the matter, and the EU did not pursue the matter any further before the WTO. The law has also been condemned by humanitarian groups because these groups argue that sanctions against an entire country will affect only the innocent population. The law provides for compensation of only the largest of claims for confiscated property, primarily only the claims of large multinational companies (valued at roughly $6 billion). It fails to provide for the claims of individuals of the exiled Cuban-American community whose personal residences were confiscated. The European Union introduced a Council Regulation (No 2271/96) (law binding all member states) declaring the extraterritorial provisions of the Helms–Burton Act to be unenforceable within the EU, and permitting recovery of any damages imposed under it.

No results under this filter, show 9 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.