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Over the past decade an innovative approach to workforce development, known as sectoral employment, has created industry-specific training programs that prepare and connect unemployed and under-skilled workers to employers desperate to fill skilled vacancies.
CNN: Commentary: Jobs going begging in some fields
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The federal "Motor Voter" law, enacted in 1993 to expand voter registration, allows would-be voters to fill out a mail-in voter registration card and swear they are citizens under penalty of perjury, but it doesn't require them to show proof.
NPR: Must Voters Have To Prove Citizenship To Register?
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With another 100, 000 arrivals expected under a short-term visa scheme that allows employers to fill urgent job vacancies from outside Australia, the total intake is likely to be closer to 300, 000.
ECONOMIST: Where immigration is still booming
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He has advocated a simple two-rate personal income tax system, under which individual taxpayers could fill out their returns on a single sheet of paper.
FORBES: What Next?
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The AFL-CIO and U.S. Chamber of Commerce had been fighting over wages for tens of thousands of low-skilled workers who would be brought in under the new program to fill jobs in construction, hotels and resorts, nursing homes and restaurants, and other industries.
WSJ: Business, labor close on deal for immigration bill
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Technically, the EUR and EUR crosses, especially JPY, will try and fill in the -2% gap first witnessed on the open Down Under.
FORBES: EURO, Yen Losers In Face Of Cypriot Bailout Offer
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Filtered water stations dotted the set, letting people fill up, plastic bottle-free, with ease a necessity under the hot SoCal summer sun.
FORBES: How Target Is Greening Their ... Television Commercials?
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By placing its credit-card business and systems firm under the holding company, Mizuho would get handy income to help fill holes made by its banking operations.
ECONOMIST: A curious proposal by one of Japan's biggest banks
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It is hoped that this will help relieve the shortage of supply teachers to fill in for absent staff and meet growing demand because of "increasing number of under-fives in Scotland who will soon enter primary school".
BBC: Teacher addresses class
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In Slovakia they make up under 10% of the population, but fill fully 60% of places in schools for special-needs children (that may not be purely the result of discrimination: some parents shun mainstream schools because of endemic bullying).
ECONOMIST: Romanies