WINTER SHUTDOWN Sample Clauses

WINTER SHUTDOWN. 38.01 The Employer may in its sole discretion decide to conduct a shut down for the period between Boxing Day and New Year’s Day inclusive (“Winter Shutdown”). If a decision is made to conduct a Winter Shutdown, any regular work days that are not observed as general holidays during the shutdown may be granted as days off without loss of pay. If a decision is made to conduct a Winter Shutdown, the Executive Director (or designate) will notify the staff of the closure by November 1 prior to the shutdown. 38.02 If the Employer decides in its sole discretion to conduct a Winter Shutdown for days outside or in addition to the period stipulated in Article 38.01, the Executive Director (or designate) will notify the staff of this closure by November 1 prior to the period. 38.03 If the Employer implements a Winter Shutdown, Part-Time employees will receive payment for each regular work day during the shutdown that is not observed as a general holiday calculated as five percent (5%) of their total gross earnings (excluding overtime) in the four (4) calendar weeks immediately prior to the Winter Shutdown. 38.04 Notwithstanding that they would not normally be performing work during the winter school break, Full-Time or Part-Time Employees occupying a School Year Position will be eligible to receive payment for regular work days during the shutdown that are not observed as General Holidays that are covered by the Winter Shutdown period established by the Employer. Part-Time employees will receive payment pursuant to Article 38.03.
WINTER SHUTDOWN. (a) College may schedule a winter shutdown between December 24 and January 1, inclusive. (b) Those employees not scheduled to work may elect to use their vacation, floating holiday, allotted winter shutdown days as provided in Section 9.02(d), or allotted personal days as provided in Section 9.02 (c) for those days not covered by this period by section 6.
WINTER SHUTDOWN. At the time Contractor submits the permits, it shall include a time schedule designating construction start and completion dates within the Project site location. If permission is granted to begin construction, this schedule shall be strictly adhered to. Contractor shall take whatever winter protection measures necessary to complete this Work prior to adverse weather conditions. If the Work is not performed according to this schedule, due to Contractor’s fault and/or negligence, construction time could be extended into the critical season where adverse weather conditions may prohibit continuation of the construction according to the Contract Documents. If this should occur and cause any street or portion of the street and the surrounding Work area to be in an impassable and/or hazardous condition, thereby creating undue inconvenience and anger to the area residents, the Contractor shall be assessed a daily monetary deduction, as specified under the contract item, “Traffic Control & Protection,” for failure to correct deficiencies for the number of calendar days that unsatisfactory conditions prevailed. However, regardless of the circumstances of the starting of the street construction and for whatever reason any street or portion of the street is found to be in the aforementioned unfavorable condition, it shall not be allowed to remain as such throughout the winter shutdown. Contractor shall, at its own expense, put the roadway and the contiguous construction area in a condition, approved by the City of Chicago that can safely and adequately serve the needs of the abutting property owners. Contractor shall maintain it in this condition until the time that the new construction is permitted to resume and the proposed improvement completed according to the Contract Documents.
WINTER SHUTDOWN. No Winter Shutdown is anticipated for this project. It is the Contractor’s responsibility to address cold weather effects on work without additional cost to the RITBA.

Related to WINTER SHUTDOWN

  • 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.

  • Commissioning Commissioning tests of the Interconnection Customer’s installed equipment shall be performed pursuant to applicable codes and standards. The ISO and Connecting Transmission Owner must be given at least five Business Days written notice, or as otherwise mutually agreed to by the Parties, of the tests and may be present to witness the commissioning tests.

  • CLEC OUTAGE For a problem limited to one CLEC (or a building with multiple CLECs), BellSouth has several options available for restoring service quickly. For those CLECs that have agreements with other CLECs, BellSouth can immediately start directing traffic to a provisional CLEC for completion. This alternative is dependent upon BellSouth having concurrence from the affected CLECs. Whether or not the affected CLECs have requested a traffic transfer to another CLEC will not impact BellSouth's resolve to re-establish traffic to the original destination as quickly as possible.

  • Plant The expression ‘Plant’ as used in the tender papers shall mean every temporary accessory necessary or considered necessary by the Engineer to execute, construct, complete and maintain the work and all altered, modified, substituted and additional works ordered in the time and the manner herein provided and all temporary materials and special and other articles and appliance of every sort kind and description whatsoever intended or used therefore.

  • Provisioning Line Splitting and Splitter Space 3.8.1 The Data LEC, Voice CLEC or BellSouth may provide the splitter. When EZ Phone or its authorized agent owns the splitter, Line Splitting requires the following: a non-designed analog Loop from the serving wire center to the NID at the End User’s location; a collocation cross connection connecting the Loop to the collocation space; a second collocation cross connection from the collocation space connected to a voice port; the high frequency spectrum line activation, and a splitter. The Loop and port cannot be a Loop and port combination (i.e. UNE-P), but must be individual stand-alone Network Elements. When BellSouth owns the splitter, Line Splitting requires the following: a non designed analog Loop from the serving wire center to the NID at the End User’s location with CFA and splitter port assignments, and a collocation cross connection from the collocation space connected to a voice port. 3.8.2 An unloaded 2-wire copper Loop must serve the End User. The meet point for the Voice CLEC and the Data LEC is the point of termination on the MDF for the Data LEC's cable and pairs. 3.8.3 The foregoing procedures are applicable to migration to Line Splitting Service from a UNE-P arrangement, BellSouth Retail Voice Service, BellSouth High Frequency Spectrum (CO Based) Line Sharing. 3.8.4 For other migration scenarios to line splitting, BellSouth will work cooperatively with CLECs to develop methods and procedures to develop a process whereby a Voice CLEC and a Data LEC may provide services over the same Loop.