Examples of Critical Change in a sentence
His daughter Debbie became a successful athlete who had won the Middlesex Junior Championship.
Notifies AFROC before submittal of an AF response to the JROC regarding Critical Change Reports (CCR), 10% Tripwire briefs and Nunn-McCurdy Breach presentations.
In addition, for the MAIS programs for which acquisition oversight has been delegated to the Component, CAPE is responsible for establishing policies for preparation and review of Component cost estimates at milestone reviews, and for revised program cost estimates in support of certification of a MAIS program that has experienced a Critical Change.
Notwithstanding a Deadlock regarding the use of contingency in the ON Line Budget, the Managing Party may utilize contingency in the ON Line Budget to fund any Critical Change Order.
Registration of Device Type made prior to Change continues to be in effect unless (a) CI Plus TA withdraws such Registration according to the following sentence or (b) such change is a Security Critical Change, in which case Registration is automatically revoked on the Date of Effect for all previously Registered Devices that do not comply with the Security Critical Change.
Millhiser & Szmerekovsky usefully summarize different resources available for teaching Critical Change Project Management (2012: 68).
Table 1 shows how the AOC 10.2 program costs have changed between the 2013 and 2016 CCRs.Asa resultof the Critical Change, the program office delayed theinitial production and full deployment decisions by3 years.
Air Operations Center Weapon System–Increment 10.2 Experienced a Critical ChangeAOC 10.2 program officials declared a schedule delay and cost increase Critical Change in March 2016, during the program’s development.
Addressing a ban on firearms in national parks, the Fourth Circuit explained that it is “prudent to await direction from the Court itself.” Id. Other courts have voiced similar reservations in resolving Heller’s unresolved questions.
MCs launched over 1,000 attacks From 1962–1972, and yet the Court continued to develop jurisprudence based on liberal second-order preFerences (e.g., 1963’s Abington v.