The company plans to turn itself around, according to its lawyers, by improving its manufacturing and "eliminating noncompetitive legacy liabilities and burdensome restrictions under current labor agreements."
The decision was "an open invitation to states across the country to pass burdensome restrictions," she said.
He opened his first abortion clinic in 1969 in Montreal, challenging what he saw as an unjust law placing burdensome restrictions on women seeking abortions.
The government has also begun lifting some of the less burdensome restrictions imposed on other West Bank towns by Israel's previous government.
Second, the burdensome restrictions are not narrowly tailored to serve any compelling state interest.
What burdensome restrictions are in the corporate cross-hairs?
Reciprocity of advantage means that people may have burdensome restrictions on their private property, but they will benefit greatly from the restrictions that are placed on others.
For years, bankers have warned that unless burdensome restrictions on their activities are lifted, their less-regulated foreign counterparts would provide strong competition in all banking markets, including the United States.
"We simply cannot afford to continue to be encumbered by high legacy issues and burdensome restrictions under current labor agreements that impair our ability to compete," he added.
In order to prevent exportation, the whole inland commerce of wool is laid under very burdensome and oppressive restrictions.