Sentence examples similar to bring into effect earlier from inspiring English sources

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A housing and work law aimed at controlling population levels is being brought into effect later this year.

The rules are expected to come into force next year after a consultation period and will bring into effect recommendations made in 2014 and earlier this year by the Law Commission.

Ofcom, with help from privacy regulator the Information Commissioner's Office, plans to bring in technical solutions this year to bring into effect caller authentication to weed out spoofed spam calls.

The committee's report, popularly referred to as "The Wyndham Report", was presented to Heffron in October 1957 and gave rise to the Public Education Act of 1961, being brought into effect in 1962, during Heffron's term as Premier.

The legislation was brought into effect in May of 2016 and has been very slowly been phased in, and yesterday the Supreme Court refused permission to appeal the Standardised Packaging legislation.

To solve them the £8bn boost needs to be "frontloaded" by being brought into effect from this year, he said, rather than merely made an ambition for five years' time.

Table 1 shows data from Germany where the laws were progressively enforced, having been first brought into effect in 1980.

Input from the engagement sessions will be made available online on a regular basis and the results of the review shared, and final changes to the regulations are scheduled to be completed by June or July, with final regulations brought into effect by August 2015.

Under the proposed new behavioural orders, dubbed "TEBOs" (terrorism and extremism behaviour orders) – which could be brought into effect by the spring of 2014 – the selected preachers would have their activities restricted and be banned from speaking at universities, Islamic study centres and other public spaces.

Just to make sure clever accountants and lawyers find it harder to invent new but legal tax dodges, the government is going ahead with its plan to introduce a novel feature of the UK tax system - a general anti-avoidance rule (or GAAR, in the jargon), to be brought into effect after the 2013 Budget, following consultation.

Although the act should have been brought into effect as from September 1939, it was not implemented because of the effects of World War II, but was eventually enforced from April 1947.

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