Sufficient Steps Clause Samples
The 'Sufficient Steps' clause defines the level of effort or action a party is required to take to fulfill a contractual obligation. Typically, it obligates a party to take all reasonable or necessary actions to achieve a specified result, such as obtaining regulatory approval or delivering a product. For example, a supplier may be required to take sufficient steps to remedy a defect within a certain timeframe. This clause ensures that parties are not held to an absolute standard of performance, but rather to a standard of reasonable diligence, thereby clarifying expectations and reducing disputes over what constitutes adequate effort.
Sufficient Steps. Steps I and III may be sufficient in a small unit. Step II may be duplicated as an additional step in a large unit where more than one intermediate supervisor may be affected.
Sufficient Steps. Nothing in this Agreement shall prevent a grievance from skipping any particular step if it is apparent to the parties that the grievance must be addressed at a higher step in the process as long as the responsible person at the skipped step is copied on the petition to the higher step.
