Sufficient Progress Clause Samples
The Sufficient Progress clause defines the requirement for a party, typically a contractor or service provider, to demonstrate ongoing, adequate advancement toward completing their contractual obligations. In practice, this clause allows the other party to monitor milestones or deliverables and assess whether work is proceeding according to the agreed schedule or standards. Its core function is to provide a mechanism for early detection of delays or underperformance, enabling intervention or remedies before a project falls significantly behind.
Sufficient Progress. EPA will measure sufficient progress by examining the performance required under the workplan in conjunction with the milestone schedule, the time remaining for performance within the project period and/or the availability of funds necessary to complete the project. EPA may terminate the assistance agreement for failure to ensure reasonable completion of the project within the project period.
Sufficient Progress. The President and Treasurer of the Company shall have certified to the Board that the Company has met the milestones specified in Exhibit 5.2(c) hereof, with respect to the Interim Closing, and the Board, by a resolution adopted by action of a majority of the directors, including all of the Investors' Designee(s) shall have concurred with such determination and shall have deemed it advisable for the Interim Closing to occur.
Sufficient Progress. Park City agrees that the UDEQ may terminate any Funding Assistance if Park City fails to make sufficient progress to reasonably ensure completion of the requirements specified in this Agreement prior to three years from the effective date of this Agreement. The UDEQ shall determine whether Park City is achieving sufficient progress by examining quarterly reports, the status of each requirement, the milestone schedule and the time remaining in the project period.
Sufficient Progress. EPA may terminate the assistance agreement for failure of the recipient to make sufficient progress so as to reasonably ensure completion of the project within the project period, including any extensions. EPA will measure sufficient progress by examining the performance required under the workplan in conjunction with the milestone schedule, the time remaining for performance within the project period, and/or the availability of funds necessary to complete the project. In determining sufficient progress, EPA may also consider the rate of expenditure of funds (unliquidated obligations), as well as the findings from the most recent § 319 performance and progress determination. (See EPA's Guidance and Checklist for Determining Progress of State NPS Management Programs and Performance of CWA Section 319 Grants.)
Sufficient Progress. The EPA Project Officer may assess whether the Recipient is making sufficient progress in implementing the EPA-approved Solar for All workplan under this Assistance Agreement within 90 calendar days of June 30, 2025 as well as within 90 calendar days of June 30 of each year thereafter during the Period of Performance. “Sufficient progress” shall be assessed based on a comparison of the Recipient’s planned versus actual expenditures as well as planned versus actual outputs/outcomes. This term and condition “flows down” to Subrecipients, with the Recipient required to assess whether each Subrecipient is making sufficient progress in implementing the workplan under its Subaward Agreement; the Recipient may increase the frequency and scope of the review of sufficient progress of Subrecipients, in accordance with 2 CFR 200.332 Requirements for Pass-Through Entities. If the EPA Project Officer determines that the Recipient has not made sufficient progress in implementing its EPA-approved Solar for All workplan, the Recipient, if directed to do so, must implement a corrective action plan concurred on by the EPA Project Officer and approved by the Award Official or Grants Management Officer pursuant to 2 CFR 200.208. EPA will not find that the Recipient has failed to make sufficient progress in implementing its EPA- approved Solar For All workplan based on shifts between types of Financial Assistance over the Period of Performance (or other shifts in portfolio allocation, to the extent applicable, such as by region or market segment, over the Period of Performance). If EPA finds the Recipient has failed to achieve sufficient progress on deployment of Financial Assistance in general, or is achieving progress at a slower rate than projected under the EPA-approved Solar for All workplan, the Recipient will have an opportunity to implement a corrective action plan pursuant to 2 CFR 200.208.
Sufficient Progress. TCEQ may terminate this assistance agreement for Your failure to make sufficient progress so as to reasonably ensure completion of the project within the project period, including any extensions. TCEQ will measure sufficient progress by examining the performance required under the work plan in conjunction with the milestone schedule, the time remaining for performance within the project period, and/or the availability of funds necessary to complete the project. Electronic and Information Technology Accessibility. You are subject to the program accessibility provisions of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, codified in 40 CFR Part 7, which includes an obligation to provide individuals with disabilities reasonable accommodations and an equal and effective opportunity to benefit from or participate in a program, including those offered through electronic and information technology ("EIT"). In compliance with Section 504, EIT systems or products funded by this award must be designed to meet the diverse needs of users (e.g., U.S. public, Your personnel) without barriers or diminished function or quality. Systems shall include usability features or functions that accommodate the needs of persons with disabilities, including those who use assistive technology. At this time, the EPA will consider Your websites, interactive tools, and other EIT as being in compliance with Section 504 if such technologies meet standards established under Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, codified at 36 CFR Part 1194. While Section 508 may not apply directly to You, You are encouraged to follow either the 508 guidelines or other comparable guidelines that concern accessibility to EIT for individuals with disabilities. You may wish to consult the latest Section 508 guidelines issued by the US Access Board or W3C's Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 (see ▇▇▇▇://▇▇▇.▇▇▇▇▇▇-▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇/sec508/guide/index.htm). TCEQ will provide additional information and assist in determining whether this requirement is applicable to you. Quarterly Progress Report. You must submit Quarterly progress reports to the TCEQ Project Manager electronically. Quarterly Report Periods are groups of three months as follows: January through March, April through June, July through September, and October through December. These progress reports must be submitted for each quarterly period no later than 15 days after the end of the quarterly period. The first reporting period begins on the date of the...
Sufficient Progress. DOH may terminate the assistance agreement for failure of the sub-recipient to make sufficient progress so as to reasonably ensure completion of the project within the project period, including any extensions. DOH will measure sufficient progress by examining the performance required under the workplan in conjunction with the milestone schedule, the time remaining for performance within the project period, and/or the availability of funds necessary to complete the project.
Sufficient Progress. 1. This condition supplements the requirements of the Sufficient Progress Condition (No. 22) in the General Terms and Conditions. If after 18 months from the date of award, EPA determines that the CAR has not made sufficient progress in implementing its cooperative agreement, the CAR must implement a corrective action plan concurred on by the EPA Project Officer and approved by the Award Official or Grants Management Officer. Alternatively, EPA may terminate this agreement under 2 CFR § 200.339 for material non- compliance with its terms, or with the consent of the CAR as provided at 2 CFR § 200.339, depending on the circumstances. Sufficient progress is indicated when an appropriate remediation plan is in place, institutional control development (if necessary) has commenced, initial community involvement activities have taken place, relevant state or tribal pre-cleanup requirements are being addressed, and a solicitation for remediation services has been issued.
Sufficient Progress. 1. This condition supplements the requirements of the Sufficient Progress Condition (No. 22) in the General Terms and Conditions. If after 18 months from the date of award, EPA determines that the CAR has not made sufficient progress in implementing its cooperative agreement, the CAR must implement a corrective action plan concurred on by the EPA Project Officer and approved by the Award Official or Grants Management Officer. Alternatively, EPA may terminate this agreement under 2 CFR § 200.339 for material non- compliance with its terms, or with the consent of the CAR as provided at 2 CFR § 200.339, depending on the circumstances. Sufficient progress is indicated when 35% of funds have been drawn down and disbursed for eligible activities. For assessment coalition cooperative agreements, sufficient progress is demonstrated when a solicitation for services has been released, sites are prioritized or an inventory has been initiated (if necessary), community involvement activities have been initiated and a Memorandum of Agreement is in place, or other documented activities that demonstrate to EPA’s satisfaction that the CAR will successfully perform the cooperative agreement.
Sufficient Progress. The State will measure sufficient progress by examining the performance required under the workplan in conjunction with the milestone schedule, the time remaining for performance within the project period and/or the availability of funds necessary to complete the project. The State may terminate the assistance agreement for failure to ensure reasonable completion of the project within the project period.