Principles of Operation Sample Clauses

Principles of Operation. The Council shall operate its programs, services, and business activities in keeping with the purposes, philosophy, and standards described in the LULAC Constitution and its By-Laws and this Agreement.
Principles of Operation. The CIF Principles of Operation reflect the principles from the Working With Communities Policy and set out how this funding will be applied for, approved and administered. The CIF Principles are separately provided to Members.
Principles of Operation. 3.1 In adopting this document the parties agree to: • Continue to promote the spirit of co-operation that exists between the relevant agencies; • Recognise the benefits to be derived from developing close working relationships; • Seek to enhance the understanding of the advantages and opportunities which joint activity can bring to effective enforcement and community safety; • Promote the legitimate exchange of information and operational co-operation in support of shared objectives. 3.2 Each party to this protocol undertakes: • To regularly consult with each other upon matters of policy and strategy; • To ensure that the information it holds is accurate and up to date; • That information disclosed by any party will be kept secure by the partner to whom it has been provided. 3.3 All parties to this protocol agree when handling the media: • To be fair to other organisations and maintain their integrity; • When providing information to do so honestly and fairly; • Statements must reflect the multi-agency decision process or, clearly identify the statement as the independent position of an individual organisation; • Consent of the data owner will be sought prior to releases of information to all third parties.
Principles of Operation. 2.2.1 Pursuing the Primary Objective In pursuing the Primary Objective, the Company shall:
Principles of Operation. 7.1 Any Individual Cardio-Thoracic Surgery Centre or surgeon wishing to participate must fill in the ACD registration form and they will become a Participator when their registration is accepted by the Committee. 7.2 The Participators are responsible for: 7.2.1 Providing accurate, complete and truthful information; 7.2.2 Ensuring that participation in the ACD complies with any applicable local laws and internal procedures; 7.2.3 Advising the Committee of any change in circumstances affecting its participation or the reliability and completeness of the data that it is supplying. 7.3 EACTS reserves the right to refuse registration of the Participator and may terminate participation at any time or make continued participation conditional upon such terms as it may impose. 8.1 The reliability of the submitted data is a vital element of the operation of the ACD. 8.2 Data may be inserted into the ACD by the registered Participators only. 8.3 Data is submitted using the fields supplied by the Committee. 8.4 Participators undertake to ensure that the inserted data is accurate, complete and robust. They undertake to 8.4.1 Crosscheck data against other local sources of data, such as operative logs or administrative data to ensure that case ascertainment is complete; 8.4.2 Utilise local independent sources of mortality to ensure that mortality returns are accurate; 8.4.3 Monitor data accuracy to ensure that risk factors are reliably recorded. 8.5 EACTS is not obliged to verify whether the input data fulfils these requirements. However, 8.5.1 the Committee reserve the right to remove data from the ACD or take such other steps as may seem appropriate if it suspects that data is not robust or for any other reason. 8.5.2 The Committee shall have an unfettered right to such steps as it considers necessary to audit the data inserted by any Participator. 8.6 Participators are responsible for ensuring that only properly authorized persons submit data to the ACD. 8.7 EACTS shall not be responsible for any inaccuracies and shall be indemnified by Participators in respect of any harm caused to any person in any way as a result of inaccurate data being supplied or information being supplied without the required consent. 8.8 The Committee shall have an unfettered right to remove any data from the ACD without being required to give any reason.
Principles of Operation. 2.2.1 Pursuing the Primary Objective In pursuing the Primary Objective, the Company shall: (a) exercise its Functions in a manner best calculated to achieve an appropriate balance between the need: (i) to protect the interests of users of railway services; (ii) to promote efficiency and economy on the part of persons providing railway services; (iii) to enable persons providing railway services to plan the future of their businesses with a reasonable degree of assurance; (iv) to demonstrate leadership and efficiency in the development and management of its support Functions; (v) to take account of relevant strategies that are promoted or endorsed by the Rail Delivery Group; (vi) to be accountable to its members for identified elements of industry process; (vii) to lead for the whole industry in areas where a) by virtue of the Functions it holds industry leading competence, or b) requested by the industry through its Board; (viii) to maintain the independence of the company, and, where appropriate, to challenge or act as a conscience for the industry with respect to the functions it fulfils; (ix) to provide an industry audit trail for the industry decisions it facilitates; and (x) to promote solutions that recognise the railway as a system and the respective interests of different Railway Industry Parties; (b) where it is necessary to impose restrictions on Railway Industry Parties, to do so to the extent proportionate to the achievement of the Primary Objective and having regard to the criteria set out in clauses 2.2.1(a)(i)-(x). 2.2.2 Carrying out the Company’s Functions The Company shall carry out its Functions in a transparent and non-discriminatory way, and where appropriate shall encourage and ▇▇▇▇▇▇ co-operation between Railway Industry Parties to achieve the Primary Objective.
Principles of Operation. The period between 1 September of one year and 31 August of the following year inclusive shall be deemed to constitute the water year. The various kinds of flow shall normally be computed on a weekly basis. A quantity of water equivalent to the yield diverted over a one-week period shall normally be delivered during the following week at a steady rate of flow with a permissible deviation of plus or minus 10 per cent. Total surpluses or shortfalls in weekly return deliveries, excluding surplus quantities over and above the permissible deviation of 10 per cent, must be compensated every four weeks, such water to be restored during the fifth week at a steady rate of flow and in accordance with the accumulated readings taken between the beginning and end of the said four-week period. The quantity of water which may still be required to attain delivery of the guaranteed minimum annual flow of 20 million cubic metres shall be computed on 15 July of each year; any shortfall of water shall be delivered at a steady rate of flow during the second half of July and the month of August, the adjustments necessary to take account of the natural flow being made every fortnight. The Supervisory Commission provided for in article 2 of the Agreement relating Lake Lanoux shall meet in mid-July each year in order to establish specific procedures to ensure the minimum annual guaranteed return flow, taking into account the probable summer yield. EXCHANGE OF LETTERS CONSTITUTING AN AGREEMENT 4 BETWEEN FRANCE AND SPAIN AMENDING THE ARRANGEMENT OF 12 JULY 1958 2 RELATING TO LAKE LANOUX Sir, At its meeting of 28 September 1965, the Joint Franco-Spanish Supervisory Commission for the development of Lake Lanoux proposed that the text of the Arrangement referred to in article 1 of the Franco-Spanish Agreement of 12 July 1958 5 relating, to Lake Lanoux, and annexed to that Agreement, should be amended. The Commission proposes the following new text for the Arrangement: Water diverted from the Lanoux natural catchment basin to the Hospitalet falls is drawn off from the flow of the ▇▇▇▇▇. The flow thus diverted shall be returned to the ▇▇▇▇▇ through a gallery approximately five kilometres in length, the "Ariege-▇▇▇▇▇ gallery"; water from the Ariege shall be directed through an intake situated at elevation 1575 metres into the said gallery, which shall be of sufficient capacity to ensure a flow of five cubic metres per second. Such water shall be returned to the ▇▇▇▇▇ before the border, do...
Principles of Operation. An Aggregate Authority that agrees to follow the Principles of Operation in this section will face limitations on the degree to which it can control aggregate components and collect information about them. These limitations will vary by aggregate. For example, aggregates that make heavy use of resources from opt-in users may have little or no control of resources being shared by the opt-in user, except to disconnect or allow user's access to GENI. This agreement cannot define principles for every conceivable aggregate, but it is expected that participating AAs will document and share important limitations on their ability to follow the principles in this section.
Principles of Operation. 3.1.1. The services to be provided by the HOST are described as follows: 3.1.1.1 Regulated Roaming Services HOST shall provide ACCESS SEEKER with end-to-end delivery of Regulated Roaming Calls, SMS and Data services, provided by visited network operators with which HOST has a wholesale roaming access agreement. This comprises in detail the delivery of: mobile originated roaming calls (outgoing roaming calls) made by the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer, originating on a visited network within the EU/EEA and terminating on a public communications network within the EU/EEA; excluding premium numbers mobile originated roaming SMS messages (outgoing roaming SMS messages) sent by the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer, originating on a visited network within the EU/EEA and terminating on a public communications network within the EU/EEA; excluding premium numbers mobile terminated roaming SMS messages (incoming roaming SMS messages) received by the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer on a visited network within EU/EEA mobile roaming packet switched data communication generated by the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer on a visited network within the EU/EEA HOST shall provide access to relevant interfaces, protocols or operational support systems of HOST in order to enable ACCESS SEEKER to carry out for itself the necessary retail functions towards its end-customers. The applicable charges for regulated roaming services are the charges according to Art.7, 9 and 12 of the Roaming Regulation. 3.1.1.2 Non-regulated Roaming Services HOST shall provide ACCESS SEEKER with end-to-end delivery of non-regulated roaming calls, SMS and data services, provided by visited network operators with which HOST has a wholesale roaming access agreement. This comprises in detail the delivery of: mobile terminated calls from a national or international network to the roaming network where the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer is located mobile originated roaming calls generated by the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer to and/or from a state outside EU/EEA mobile originated roaming SMS generated by the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer to and/ or from a state outside EU/EEA mobile roaming data traffic generated by the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer from a state outside EU/EEA mobile originated roaming calls/SMS to premium numbers generated by the ACCESS SEEKER’s Roaming Customer. 3.1.1.3 Other provided wholesale services Other wholesale service, which are not commonly included in wholesale ro...
Principles of Operation. (1) The First Minister and Deputy First Minister, acting jointly, shall make arrangements to ensure that the OHA operates independently, free from political interference, in accordance with the Stormont House Agreement. (2) The OHA shall have regard to the founding principles in the exercise of its functions.