Overview of the Project Sample Clauses

Overview of the Project. Project reference number: [MERGE] The Project is operating in the following Council area: [MERGE] The total number of Service Users being supported by the Project is: [MERGE] Brief summary of the Project: The awarded devices and internet connectivity will be provided to Service Users from the Grantee. Support will be provided to Service Users from Digital Champions who have received training from SCVO.
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Overview of the Project. 1 In March 2012 the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) 2 awarded a Partnership Grant for the proposal titled: “Neighbourhood Inequality, Diversity 3 and Change: Trends, Processes, Consequences and Policy Options for Canada’s Large 4 Metropolitan Areas” (hereafter referred to as the Neighbourhood Change Research 5 Partnership or NCRP). 6 SSHRC Partnership Grants require projects to include substantive involvement of, and cash 7 and in-­‐kind contributions from, community and university partners. SSHRC has 8 contributed $2.5 million over a maximum 7-­‐year term. Continued SSHRC funding of this 9 grant is contingent on two criteria:
Overview of the Project. A. The Project and its Purpose To maintain adequate depths for naval ships, NS Mayport must dredge 600,000 cubic yards of sediment every 18-24 months from the entrance channel of the St. Xxxxx River and the facility’s turning basin1. NS Mayport plans on using this dredged material as the foundation for the production of construction blocks and artificial reef material. Initially, the dredged material for construction of the building blocks and the artificial reef material will be derived from two existing upland holding sites. In the future, the dredged material will come (either directly or indirectly through temporary storage at the upland holding sites) from the facility’s maintenance dredging projects thereby eliminating the need for ocean disposal of this material. Additionally, NS Mayport is considering the use of flyash produced by Jacksonville’s electrical generating plant as a solidification material for the construction blocks. No flyash will be used to make materials for artificial reefs. Through Project XL, NS Mayport is asking EPA to participate in a partnership with XXX, Florida DEP, Jacksonville and interested Stakeholders to streamline the dredging and ocean disposal permitting process by synchronizing the permit cycles. Savings from the streamlining process and the reduction in paperwork from longer permits would be invested in the beneficial reuse Project. Potential environmental benefits of this Project include: ! decreasing and eventually eliminating the need for ocean disposal of NS Mayport’s maintenance dredged material; ! beneficial reuse through the production of construction blocks and artificial reefs of material now contained in NS Mayport’s two upland disposal sites; ! creation of new reef habitat by use of the artificial reef material; ! reducing the potential for adverse impact to the population of the Northern Right Whales (NRWs) by reducing and eventually eliminating the transits of the dredged material disposal vessels across NRW critical habitat and restricting artificial reef placement to outside the NRW calving season; ! reducing the potential for adverse impacts to water quality and benthic communities due to ocean disposal; ! creating the potential for reduction in the waste streams associated with disposal of flyash and the mining of the brick-making clay; and, ! reducing the amount of raw materials, such as cement and aggregate, necessary for making concrete.
Overview of the Project. The Client has requested the setup/configuration and support of integration components and services to allow bidirectional data transfer between SEIS and the Client’s SIS. SJCOE/ CODESTACK will setup and provide integration services developed using XXX.Xxx 4.0 to integrate SEIS with Client’s SIS. Custom procedures, server jobs, and custom reports will be developed in both systems to facilitate full interoperability and data integrity.
Overview of the Project. The Project consists of the construction of a housing complex with 48 affordable housing apartment units, and associated parking upon the Property, the conceptual plans of which are attached hereto as Exhibit B. The Project will be subject to income and rent restrictions as set forth in the extended use agreement entered into by Developer and the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (“WHEDA”) in connection with the allocation of the Tax Credits (as defined herein) to the Project. Construction shall commence by September 1, 2023 and shall be Substantially Completed within sixteen months thereafter (subject to extension for Force Majeure), at an estimated Hard Cost of $11,000,000 (Eleven Million Dollars.)
Overview of the Project. It is proposed to clad the entire parking building outer facade facing the road from Town Hall to Golden Temple with outdoor LED Screen under Public Private Partnership (Build, Operate, Transfer mechanism) THE CONCEPT
Overview of the Project. A. The Project and Its Purpose As one of the fastest growing counties in Ohio, Clermont is experiencing significant changes in population density and rural demographics. In response to development, the land use patterns, transportation infrastructure, wastewater treatment, and drinking water needs will be affected as well. Changes in the infrastructure can result in increased impervious areas, more runoff volume or intensity, higher pollutant loadings, increased stream temperatures, and reduction of riparian areas. The impacts of growth could result in degradation of the water resources of the County by affecting the stream’s ability to support an exceptional warm water fishery. A major reservoir in Clermont, Xxxxxx Xxxx, serves as an essential water supply. Inputs of nutrients and pesticides from land uses upstream of the reservoir could adversely impact the use of the reservoir for recreational, aquatic life and water supply. The County intends to address environmental management of its resources with an aggressive and innovative approach so that it can maintain a balance between economic growth and the preservation of its rural character and environment, and where possible strive to improve the environment and protection of the area’s natural resources. Types of tools needed to manage and protect the water resources include land use planning, stormwater ordinances, erosion and sediment control measures, riparian and buffer zone management, and implementation of urban and agricultural best management practices (BMPs). Some of the current impediments are lack of authority in land use planning, and limited ordinances for stormwater and sediment and erosion control. The County also needs flexibility in determining measures of environmental conditions which are sensitive to the site specific impacts within the watershed. The Clermont XLC Project (Project) addresses these constraints by Xxxxxxxx accepting additional responsibility for protection of the environmental quality of its waters. The specific waters within the County considered under this agreement include the East Fork of the Little Miami River (EFLMR) mainstem and tributaries, and Xxxxxx Xxxx which is located centrally within the EFLMR basin. The EFLMR is a major waterbody within Clermont and is considered a high quality warm water fishery. Clermont has established a framework for Stakeholder involvement in the development of the EFLMR watershed management plan. The County has engaged the stakehold...
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Overview of the Project. This project is not primarily intended as a comparative study of Xxxx and the Muslim mystic and philosopher Muhyī ad-Dīn Ibn al-‘Arabī (d.1240). It neither attempts to merely point out similarities between the structures of their philosophical systems nor claim that they simply coincide despite the difference in time, cultural background and philosophical jargon of each. It is also not a philological/historical examination of the two thinkers. It is rather a philosophical project; by examining under-explored dimensions in the theory of judgment and consciousness in the thought of Xxxx and Ibn al-‘Arabī (d.1240), this study endeavors to offer an original insight into the relation between philosophy of religion and the theory of human nature. The study demonstrates that both thinkers argue that imagination is the faculty that allows the human being to connect the realm of transcendent ideas, which cannot be empirically verified, with the realm of spatial-temporal experience. In addition, each sees that a sense of the self and form of subjectivity corresponds to each realm— in other words, that every human being can think of her/himself either as a rational essence that is completely transcendent to experience or as an empirical self in the spatial-temporal domain. For both Xxxx and Ibn al-‘Arabī, the faculty of imagination harmonizes these two domains and hence these two senses of the self into one single consciousness of the human being as a whole. Imagination accomplishes this task through a hermeneutical role whereby it represents the super-sensible in the sensible and purposively interprets the sensible in light of the orientation furnished by the super-sensible ideas. Through this role, hermeneutical imagination constitutes human- being as essentially historical and everyday consciousness. The study then shows that imagination can constitute this being through the orientation given to it by the idea of God as a supreme being; in this respect, it shows that of all the transcendent ideas of reason, the idea of God inasmuch as it represents the sum of all possibilities of being conscious of any ‘thing’ as such is the main idea that guides imagination in fulfilling this task. While this overall scheme applies to both Xxxx and Ibn al-‘Arabī, there are certainly key differences and more importantly dimensions that are lacking in one system and present in the other. In light of this, the first part of this study is entirely devoted to Xxxx who articulates the ...
Overview of the Project. The purpose of this project is to quantitatively assess the public health risks posed by the levels of peanut, hazelnut, milk and wheat cross-contamination detected in UK retail products sampled and tested as part of the FSA funded survey of allergen advisory labelling. This will be done using probabilistic risk assessment. The inputs for the probabilistic risk assessment will be based on UK food consumption data, the combined food allergic threshold datasets developed by TNO and FARRP. Furthermore, the allergen contamination data will be based on the FSA’s survey of allergen advisory labelling and allergen content of UK retail pre-packed foods. TNO and FARRP will also compare the level of peanut, hazelnut, milk and wheat cross-contamination in UK retail foods sampled as part of the FSA survey to the reference does proposed by VITAL 2.0 and ILSI-Europe. This will be done by setting a product-specific action level (ppm) for samples that tested positive. This action level will be based on the reference doses as identified by VITAL 2.0 and ILSI-Europe and the level of product specific food consumption in the UK. The results of this project will be used to help inform the FSA’s work to develop risk based, proportionate allergen management thresholds. Specifically, the results will help the FSA to:-  quantitatively assess the public health risks posed by the levels of allergen cross- contamination found to be present in foods sold on the UK retail market to which UK food allergic consumers are currently being exposed  give an indication as to whether the proposed reference doses developed by the VITAL 2.0 programme and ILSI-Europe are practical in relation to the actual levels of cross- contamination detected in the FSA survey samples Objectives and Tasks
Overview of the Project. The Project consists of the construction of a housing complex with 28 workforce apartment units, and associated parking upon the Property. Construction shall commence within ninety days after approval of the TID amendment by the Joint Review Board and Common Council and shall be completed within fifteen months thereafter, at an estimated cost of $9,680,000.
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