Projected Outcomes Clause Samples

The "Projected Outcomes" clause defines the anticipated results or deliverables expected from a particular agreement or project. It typically outlines specific goals, milestones, or performance metrics that the parties aim to achieve, such as sales targets, completion dates, or quality standards. By clearly stating these expectations, the clause helps ensure that all parties have a mutual understanding of success criteria and provides a basis for evaluating performance, thereby reducing ambiguity and potential disputes.
Projected Outcomes. The University outperforms the adjusted sector average on its projected first degree completion rates, with a rate of 91.5% (2009/10). If account is taken of those projected to transfer to another institution, such as Durham’s cohort of Phase 1 medical students to Newcastle University, Durham’s projected completion rate is 97%.
Projected Outcomes. The goal for this program is to reduce acts of violence throughout the City of Columbus with specific focus on low-income communities and communities of color while increasing expressions of pro-social and positive behavioral changes in these same targeted areas.
Projected Outcomes. 12.1. Targets for increasing participation and retention of students from underrepresented communities are given below against the published HEFCE Performance Indicators. This is slightly problematic because of eighteen months delay in publication of official figures for any academic year. However, we regard them as the most reliable indicators at present, affording benchmarking against our own performance and that of the sector at large. As internal data production becomes more comprehensive, we may seek to substitute our indicators for those of HEFCE. 1 Bursary payments do not include Compact or postcode awards. Income bursaries only - represent c30% of additional income in 08/09, 31.2%% in 09/10, and c 32,4% in 10/11 2 These costs as well as fees and income bursaries will rise with inflation, but are all represented here without inflation. 12.2. Our proposed targets for participation reflect our current success, and are deliberately more modest than those for retention, since all Universities will to some degree be competing more for those students from disadvantaged groups in the first instance. Although participation may increase across the sector as a whole, growth is unlikely to be distributed evenly across institutions. Since UoD has a strong track record for Widening Participation, and those institutions who have less of a record are being challenged most to improve, it may be that in the early stages UoD makes little net gain. This may well be exacerbated by concern amongst the targets groups about potential debt until new arrangements are fully understood, which will be when the first cohorts of students have completed their studies under the new arrangements. As a consequence, our general strategy will continue to be to maintain a strong profile for Widening Participation and to improve retention rates to meet or exceed benchmark.
Projected Outcomes. The goal for this program is to reduce poverty by 50% throughout the City of Columbus by developing a 10-year actionable poverty reduction strategic plan, with stakeholder. The initiative will comprehensively survey State-level policies and regulations to identify those that create barriers for individuals and families working to achieve financial self- sufficiency and oversee advocacy work to know down those walls. Also, the program will lead a development campaign to raise awareness, fund pilot projects, and ensure this work can go forward until the goal is reached.
Projected Outcomes. 12.1. Targets for increasing participation and retention of students from underrepresented communities are given below against the published HEFCE Performance Indicators. This is slightly problematic because of eighteen months delay in publication of official figures for any academic year. However, we regard them as the most reliable indicators at present, affording benchmarking against our own performance and that of the sector at large. As internal data production becomes more comprehensive, we may seek to substitute our indicators for those of HEFCE. 12.2. Our proposed targets for participation reflect our current success, and are deliberately more modest than those for retention, since all Universities will to some degree be competing more for those students from disadvantaged groups in the first instance. Although participation may increase across the sector as a whole, growth is unlikely to be distributed evenly across institutions. Since UoD has a strong track record for Widening Participation, and those institutions who have less of a record are being challenged most to improve, it may be that in the early stages UoD makes little net gain. This may well be exacerbated by concern amongst the targets groups about potential debt until new arrangements are fully understood, which will be when the first cohorts of students have completed their studies under the new arrangements. As a consequence, our general strategy will continue to be to maintain a strong profile for Widening Participation and to improve retention rates to meet or exceed benchmark. 12.3. We anticipate reviewing these figures (which are the original 2005 submitted targets) during 2007/08 Last pub. % Adjusted benchmark 04/05 05/06 06/07 07/08 08/09 09/10

Related to Projected Outcomes

  • Outcomes Secondary: Career pathway students will: have career goals designated on SEOP, earn concurrent college credit while in high school, achieve a state competency certificate and while completing high school graduation requirements.

  • Planned Outages Seller shall schedule Planned Outages for the Project in accordance with Good Industry Practices and with the prior written consent of Buyer, which consent may not be unreasonably withheld or conditioned. The Parties acknowledge that in all circumstances, Good Industry Practices shall dictate when Planned Outages should occur. Seller shall notify Buyer of its proposed Planned Outage schedule for the Project for the following calendar year by submitting a written Planned Outage schedule no later than October 1st of each year during the Delivery Term. The Planned Outage schedule is subject to Buyer’s approval, which approval may not be unreasonably withheld or conditioned. Buyer shall promptly respond with its approval or with reasonable modifications to the Planned Outage schedule and Seller shall use its best efforts in accordance with Good Industry Practices to accommodate ▇▇▇▇▇’s requested modifications. Notwithstanding the submission of the Planned Outage schedule described above, Seller shall also submit a completed Outage Notification Form to Buyer no later than fourteen (14) days prior to each Planned Outage and all appropriate outage information or requests to the CAISO in accordance with the CAISO Tariff. Seller shall contact Buyer with any requested changes to the Planned Outage schedule if Seller believes the Project must be shut down to conduct maintenance that cannot be delayed until the next scheduled Planned Outage consistent with Good Industry Practices. Seller shall not change its Planned Outage schedule without Buyer’s approval, not to be unreasonably withheld or conditioned. Seller shall use its best efforts in accordance with Good Industry Practices not to schedule Planned Outages during the months of July, August, September and October. At Buyer’s request, Seller shall use commercially reasonable efforts to reschedule Planned Outage so that it may deliver Product during CAISO declared or threatened emergency periods. Seller shall not substitute Energy from any other source for the output of the Project during a Planned Outage.

  • PRODUCTIVITY The Union shall place no limitations upon the amount of work which an Employee shall perform during the working day and there shall be no restrictions imposed against the use of any type of machinery, tools or labour saving devices.

  • Project/Milestones Taxpayer provides refrigerated warehousing and logistic distribution services to clients throughout the United States. In consideration for the Credit, Taxpayer agrees to invest in a new refrigeration and distribution facility in the ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ Park area of Sacramento, California, and hire full-time employees (collectively, the “Project”). Further, Taxpayer agrees to satisfy the milestones as described in Exhibit A (“Milestones”) and must maintain Milestones for a minimum of three (3) taxable years thereafter. In the event Taxpayer employs more than the number of full-time employees, determined on an annual full-time equivalent basis, than required in Exhibit A, for purposes of satisfying the “Minimum Annual Salary of California Full-time Employees Hired” and the “Cumulative Average Annual Salary of California Full-time Employees Hired,” Taxpayer may use the salaries of any of the full-time employees hired within the required time period. For purposes of calculating the “Minimum Annual Salary of California Full-time Employees Hired” and the “Cumulative Average Annual Salary of California Full-time Employees Hired,” the salary of any full-time employee that is not employed by Taxpayer for the entire taxable year shall be annualized. In addition, the salary of any full-time employee hired to fill a vacated position in which a full-time employee was employed during Taxpayer’s Base Year shall be disregarded.

  • Baseline For purposes of measuring a reduction in net tax revenue, the interim final rule measures actual changes in tax revenue relative to a revenue baseline (baseline). The baseline will be calculated as fiscal year 2019 (FY 2019) tax revenue indexed for inflation in each year of the covered period, with inflation calculated using the Bureau of Economic Analysis’s Implicit Price Deflator.163 FY 2019 was chosen as the starting year for the baseline because it is the last full fiscal year prior to the COVID– 162 See, e.g., Tax Policy Center, How do state earned income tax credits work?, https:// ▇▇▇.▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇/▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇-▇▇▇▇/▇▇▇-▇▇- state-earned-income-tax-credits-work/ (last visited May 9, 2021).