Word: hire
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...staff member six times a year, and review the care plans of each of her residents once a month. She must pay out certain benefits, like tax credit or maternity pay, to employees on behalf of the government. As much as Gallagher would like to free up time, to hire someone to take on the paperwork would cost her about €22,300 annually - more than she can afford. And she's hardly alone. There are about 24,000 care homes for the elderly in England and Scotland. Over each of the past five years, says the National Care Homes...
...program will hire Harvard undergraduates to be paid teaching assistants during the summer and continue to work with the high school students as mentors during the school year...
...tides were already turning. Michael S. Dukakis, then governor of Massachusetts, created the Music Under Boston program to fund live performances in the subway and, in some cases, hire musicians from the Boston Symphony Orchestra to perform...
Because of extended hours, so goes the argument, small establishments that need to hire more staff will potentially lose money if Sunday profits don’t exceed their added operating costs. However, as State Representative Peter J. Larkin indicated, liquor stores will not be forced to open their doors on Sundays; and, to further deflate concerns for small businesses, only those establishments with seven or more full-time workers will be made to pay the requisite time-and-a-half wage to Sunday workers...
...fewer than nine major league teams-including rivals the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox-are reportedly in the running for the services of the 1.75-m shortstop. The question brewing on hot stoves on two continents is not just where this bat-and-glove for hire will wind up but also whether he's willing to change positions or play in the shadow of another Japanese star...