Exclusionary definition

Exclusionary zone or “hot” zone means the area immediately around the incident where serious threat of harm exists, which includes the collapse zone for a structure fire. Entry into such zone would require the use of breathing apparatus, protective clothing, and specialized training required under Section 633.508(2), F.S., and this rule chapter.
Exclusionary means the formal (e.g., out-of-school suspension, in-school suspension, alternative placement, Shortened School Days, and expulsion) or informal (e.g., parent pickup or other involuntary removal) exclusion of a student from school.

Examples of Exclusionary in a sentence

  • Exclusionary searches for prospective employees and contractors shall be performed prior to employment or contracting.

  • Exclusionary Criteria: Only convictions within the last five (5) years will be considered.

  • Exclusionary language pertaining to materials supplied by the insured shall be reviewed by the certificate holder for approval.

  • Exclusionary fencing shall be installed around the mitigation area to prevent disturbance until success criteria have been met.

  • Bodily Injury, Property Damage, Contractual Liability $ 1 M $ 2 M Additional Insured Endorsement- Including on-going and products/completed operations Coverage Limits shall be endorsed to be dedicated on a per contract or per project basis Delete Railroad Exclusionary Language Business Automobile Liability (BAL) Individual Accident Covering claims arising from ownership, operation, loading, unloading owned, hired, leased, non-owned, and /or borrowed private passenger and commercial vehicles.

  • Effective April 1, 2006, Article V, Exclusions, paragraph K is revised to read as follows: “Pollution loss or liability excluded by the provisions of the applicable ISO Pollution Exclusionary language drafted by the Company in use at the time the policy involved is written or renewed and where available per filed rule and not precluded by regulatory constraint.

  • The District will review individual disciplinary records from each school at least quarterly to identify any instances of discriminatory treatment of individuals based on disability in the imposition of Exclusionary Discipline, law enforcement referrals, and restraint and seclusion.

  • Exclusionary Discipline does not include consequences such as after-school detention or a brief “timeout” (i.e., a documented behavioral intervention of a limited and specified time of no more than approximately 10 minutes, in which a student is separated from the class within the classroom or in a non-locked setting, without physical restraints, for the purpose of self- regulating and controlling his or her own behavior).

  • Exclusionary Discipline refers to any disciplinary consequence that removes a student from classroom academic instruction, including, but not limited to: In-School Suspension, Out-of-School Suspension, placement in an Alternative Program, and Expulsion.

  • The District must make reasonable modifications to its policies and procedures to provide students with disabilities subject to Exclusionary Discipline equal opportunities to take such tests.