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An anti-union blogger ridiculed a New Jersey Education Association group this week for supposedly failing to pay federal payroll taxes for years, but a school official said Thursday that the alleged tax debt was a clerical mistake that was resolved last month.
Kyle Olson, a contributor to a conservative website, biggovernment.com, posted documents Tuesday showing that the NJEA Passaic Valley Operations staff owed $56,730 in back taxes.
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An ERISA plan provider can't deny benefits based on a "clerical error" where coverage was already available because of the absence of a waiting period requirement, the 4th Circuit has ruled.
An insurer provided a group life insurance policy to a hospital. Just five months after starting work at the hospital, a nurse died, and her beneficiary filed a claim for $81,000 in life insurance benefits.
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The state's largest teachers union produced paperwork Wednesday showing the Christie administration changed key information and helped sink the state's application for hundreds of millions of dollars in federal education reform money.
Everything was fine, the New Jersey Education Association said, until aides to Governor Christie rewrote one paragraph in the more than 1,000-page Race to the Top application over the Memorial Day weekend, creating a mistake that cost the state precious points and up to $400 million.
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Postrelease control; nunc pro tunc; Crim.R. 36; clerical error
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Wedlake Bell has recently successfully acted for the claimant in a reported case in the High Court for the rectification of a Will (Austin v Woodward ...
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SAN FRANCISCO - A clerical error landed Kathleen Casey on the streets.
Out of work two years, her unemployment benefits exhausted, in danger of losing her apartment, Casey applied for a job in the pharmacy of a Boston drugstore. She was offered $11 an hour. All she had to do was pass a background check.
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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - Jennifer Keener lost her daughter six years ago. Now, thanks to a clerical error, she is losing her chance to sue the people she holds responsible.
Keener sued the city of Herrin in 2005, claiming police were negligent when they arrested 18-year-old Chelsea Keener for underage drinking then released her, apparently still drunk, at 4:40 a.m. Walking home in the dark, the young woman was hit by a car and killed.
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The FMCSA amends its December 3, 2011, final rule that restricted the use of hand-held mobile telephones by drivers of commercial motor vehicles. That rule was jointly issued by FMCSA and Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), but this technical amendment only affects an FMCSA regulation. The purpose of this rule is to correct a clerical error.