State Responsibility Sample Clauses

The State Responsibility clause defines the obligations and liabilities of a government or state entity in relation to the agreement or actions covered by the contract. Typically, this clause outlines the circumstances under which the state may be held accountable for breaches, wrongful acts, or failures to fulfill its duties, and may specify remedies or procedures for addressing such issues. By clearly delineating the state's responsibilities, this clause helps allocate risk and provides a framework for resolving disputes involving state actions or omissions.
State Responsibility. The State shall as- sume primary responsibility for the analysis, review, and approval or disapproval of the permit application component of the PAP for surface coal mining and reclamation oper- ations on lands subject to the Federal lands program.
State Responsibility. 1. STATE shall administer the funds apportioned to South Dakota by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) under the Section 5303 program. 2. STATE shall provide staff assistance to CITY as necessary to implement the UPWP. STATE may charge an amount up to Eight Thousand Dollars ($8,000) against this AGREEMENT in carrying out Rapid City Transit activities. STATE shall provide the twenty percent (20%) matching share of the $8,000. 3. STATE shall submit transit documents from CITY to FTA if required. STATE will review these submissions to assure that any concerns of STATE have been properly addressed in either the STATE transmittal letter or in the transit documents. STATE's review shall be in the spirit of joint cooperation with CITY. 4. STATE shall transmit to CITY, pertinent STATE Metropolitan Planning documents for CITY's review prior to submittal to FTA in order to assure that the local concerns are properly recognized.
State Responsibility. As the rules on state responsibility in international law make clear, several states may be responsible for an international wrong at the same time.224 This is particularly obvious where some states may engage directly in wrong- doing while others fail in their positive human rights obligations of protection. Extraordinary renditions and the web of states that have, in various forms, made possible or contributed to the ERP, raise numerous issues concerning the nature of multiple states’ responsibility.
State Responsibility. According to Article VI OST, a State is internationally responsible for the activities of its nationals in outer space, which should be authorised and continuously supervised. The responsibility of States extends to the activi- ties that are carried out by governmental as well as non-governmental enti- ties. Article VI forms the basis for the adoption of national space laws that lay down the conditions under which a State authorises the activities of its nationals. Furthermore, it calls upon States to maintain an overview of the progress of their national activities, from the launch to the end of the mission, as well as potential changes, including the position and trajectory of the launched object. These elements are relevant for the adoption of STM guidelines, which, if not legally binding at international law, might be implemented at national level.
State Responsibility. 1) The State shall administer the funds apportioned to South Dakota in accordance with FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION Policies and procedures for Section 134 Title 23, U.S.C and FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION Policies and procedures for Section 5303 of Title 49 of the U.S.C. 2) The State shall provide staff assistance to the MPO and other assistance as necessary to implement the Unified Planning Work Program. STATE may charge an amount up to Eight Thousand Dollars ($8,000) against this AGREEMENT Federal Transit Planning Funds in carrying out Rapid City Transit activities. STATE will provide the twenty percent (20%) matching share of the $8,000. 3) The State shall submit all documents from the MPO to FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION and FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION. The STATE will review these submissions to assure that the concerns of the STATE, FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION, and the FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION expressed during the development of the documents have been properly addressed in either the transmittal letter or the documents. The STATE's review shall be in the spirit of cooperation with the MPO to facilitate the earliest possible FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION and FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION approval of these documents. 4) The State shall transmit any documents developed by the State that affect the local governmental entities comprising the MPO to the MPO for review prior to submittal to the FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION and FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION to assure that the local concerns are properly addressed.
State Responsibility a) The State agrees to comply with the federal grant award terms and conditions set forth in the FMAG, FEMA Policy #▇▇▇-▇▇▇-▇, the applicable provisions of Sections 404 and 420 of the ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ Act, the applicable regulations at 44 C.F.R. Part 80 and §§ 206.430-206.440, this Agreement and all provisions of the State Administrative Plan in place for each grant award. b) The State is required to develop a plan for the administration of HMGP Post Fire. FEMA will not obligate funds for HMGP Post Fire until a State Administrative Plan that incorporates the process for addressing HMGP Post Fire is approved by FEMA, in accordance with 44 C.F.R. § 206.437. c) The State is required to maintain a FEMA-approved State Mitigation Plan (SMP) in accordance with 44 C.F.R. Part 201 as a condition of receiving non-emergency ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ Act assistance, which includes HMGP Post Fire assistance. FEMA will not obligate funds for HMGP Post Fire projects unless or until an SMP is approved by FEMA. FEMA will cease obligating funds during any lapse period between expiration of the current SMP and approval of an updated SMP. d) The State agrees to lead, manage and drive the overall post-wildfire recovery process and coordinate recovery activities and technical support by setting appropriate State policies. The State will coordinate with local governments, Tribal governments, and other federal agencies as appropriate, to lead and coordinate post-wildfire recovery planning and assistance to impacted communities.
State Responsibility 

Related to State Responsibility

  • Your Responsibility You are solely responsible for the quality, completeness, accuracy, validity and integrity of the image. You are solely responsible if you, intentionally or unintentionally, submit fraudulent, incorrect or illegible images to us or if Mobile Deposit is used, by authorized or unauthorized persons, to submit fraudulent, unauthorized, inaccurate, incorrect or otherwise improper or unusable images to us.

  • Contractor Responsibility (a) The Contractor shall be responsible for the entire Performance under the Contract regardless of whether the Contractor itself performs. The Contractor shall be the sole point of contact concerning the management of the Contract, including Performance and payment issues. The Contractor is solely and completely responsible for adherence by the Contractor Parties to all applicable provisions of the Contract. (b) The Contractor shall exercise all reasonable care to avoid damage to the State's property or to property being made ready for the State's use, and to all property adjacent to any work site. The Contractor shall promptly report any damage, regardless of cause, to the State.

  • Primary Responsibility The Company acknowledges that to the extent Indemnitee is serving as a director on the Company’s board of directors at the request or direction of a venture capital fund or other entity and/or certain of its affiliates (collectively, the “Secondary Indemnitors”), Indemnitee may have certain rights to indemnification and advancement of expenses provided by such Secondary Indemnitors. The Company agrees that, as between the Company and the Secondary Indemnitors, the Company is primarily responsible for amounts required to be indemnified or advanced under the Company’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws or this Agreement and any obligation of the Secondary Indemnitors to provide indemnification or advancement for the same amounts is secondary to those Company obligations. To the extent not in contravention of any insurance policy or policies providing liability or other insurance for the Company or any director, trustee, general partner, managing member, officer, employee, agent or fiduciary of the Company or any other Enterprise, the Company waives any right of contribution or subrogation against the Secondary Indemnitors with respect to the liabilities for which the Company is primarily responsible under this Section 15. In the event of any payment by the Secondary Indemnitors of amounts otherwise required to be indemnified or advanced by the Company under the Company’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws or this Agreement, the Secondary Indemnitors shall be subrogated to the extent of such payment to all of the rights of recovery of Indemnitee for indemnification or advancement of expenses under the Company’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws or this Agreement or, to the extent such subrogation is unavailable and contribution is found to be the applicable remedy, shall have a right of contribution with respect to the amounts paid. The Secondary Indemnitors are express third-party beneficiaries of the terms of this Section 15.

  • Tenant’s Responsibility (a) Except to the extent contributed to by a Landlord Party and except for those matters listed in Section 9.5(a) for which the Landlord shall be responsible, the Tenant shall be solely responsible and liable for any work required by any governmental authority having jurisdiction with respect to any Contaminants on, in or under the Premises during the Term of the Lease. Except (i) as caused by or contributed to by a Landlord Party, and (ii) for those matters listed in Section 9.5(a), the Tenant shall indemnify, defend (utilizing counsel satisfactory to the Landlord) and hold harmless the Landlord and the Landlord’s respective officers, directors, beneficiaries, shareholders, partners, agents and employees from all Claims arising out of or in any way connected with any Release of any Contaminants that occurs during the Term of this Lease, at, in, on, from, under, or about the Premises or the Building, or which arises at any time from the Tenant’s use or occupancy of the Premises, or from the Tenant’s failure to provide all information, make all submissions, and take steps required by all authorities under Environmental Law. (b) Upon the occurrence of any material Release of a Contaminant at the Premises and upon the Tenant becoming aware of such Release, the Tenant shall immediately give written notice to the Landlord. In any event, the Tenant shall immediately take all steps required by Environmental Law to remedy or otherwise address the situation giving rise to any Release. (c) If any work is required in accordance with this section 9.2 the Tenant shall prepare all necessary studies, plans and proposals and submit them to the Landlord for approval, which approved shall not be unreasonably withheld, provide all bonds and other security required by any lawful governmental authorities and carry out the work required. In carrying out such work, the Tenant shall keep the Landlord fully informed of the progress of the work. If the Landlord has reasonable grounds for believing that the Tenant will not promptly or properly carry out such work, the Landlord may, in its sole discretion, elect to carry out all such work, or any part of it, and if the Landlord does so, the Tenant shall pay for all costs in connection therewith, within thirty (30) days after the Landlord has incurred the costs and made written demand to the Tenant. (d) The Tenant covenants, acknowledges and agrees that its obligations and liabilities under this Section shall survive the expiration or earlier termination of this Lease.

  • Joint Responsibility If the Seller determines that the Interface Problem is attributable partially to the design of a Warranted Part and partially to the design of any Supplier Part, the Seller will, if so requested by the Buyer, seek a solution to the Interface Problem through cooperative efforts of the Seller and any Supplier involved. The Seller will promptly advise the Buyer of such corrective action as may be proposed by the Seller and any such Supplier. Such proposal will be consistent with any then existing obligations of the Seller hereunder and of any such Supplier towards the Buyer. Such corrective action, unless reasonably rejected by the Buyer, will constitute full satisfaction of any claim the Buyer may have against either the Seller or any such Supplier with respect to such Interface Problem.