Points to Remember Sample Clauses

Points to Remember. If: Then: Your income isn’t always the same List the amount of money that you normally get. For example, don’t include overtime pay, if you don’t normally get it. If your income is normally higher or lower, you can report annual income instead. Your household includes members who aren’t citizens You or your children don’t have to be U.S. citizens to qualify for meal benefits. You are in the military Don’t include your Family Subsistence Supplemental Allowance (FSSA), combat pay, or the money you receive for privatized housing. If deployed, count the amount of pay that is made available to your household as income.
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Points to Remember. The Statewide Mobilization Plan only comes into effect when the local community resources and those of its normal mutual aid system are expended. • The plan organizes apparatus and personnel in task forces or strike teams. Each has its own Task Force or Strike Team Leader. • The task forces or strike teams meet at an assembly point and travel together. They report to a designated staging area for assignment. • Task forces or strike teams cannot be used for routine cover assignments. Station coverage remains a local mutual aid system responsibility. • The Incident Commander must authorize the request for the plan to be implemented. The Incident Commander assumes overall responsibility. • Notification must be made to the State Fire Marshal’s Office when the plan is activated. • Task force or strike team apparatus must meet the FEMA Typing Standards. All Fire Departments and mutual aid control centers must issue procedures that reference this plan. • Authority for this plan is pursuant to New Hampshire RSA Title 3, Chapter 53-A. • Task Forces may be customized depending on the incident conditions but should follow NIMS best practices
Points to Remember. ● If two subjects are joined by and, the verb will be plural. However if the subjects refer to the same person or thing, the verb will be singular.
Points to Remember. The proposed Governance Agreement does not tell us what our laws will look like. • The four areas of jurisdiction Canada is recognizing have great importance. These jurisdictions set the foundation for First Nation governance in all areas. This is why a First Nation constitution is important. • We determine who belongs, who our leaders are, how our First Nation Government operates, and how we live as Anishinaabe, using our language and knowledge, culture, traditions, customs, and practices. • We are removing the authority of Indian Affairs to decide on our election appeals, membership appeals, and how our Chief and Council govern. • We are taking responsibility for our own governance. The agreement removes us from being governed by Sections 8-14, 74-79, and 80 of the Indian Act. The tax exemption, Section 87, still applies. Niigaan Zhaamin-Forward Together
Points to Remember. The Statewide Mobilization Plan only comes into effect when the local community resources and those of its normal mutual aid system are expended. • The plan organizes apparatus and personnel in task forces or strike teams. Each has its own Task Force or Strike Team Leader. • The task forces or strike teams meet at an assembly point and travel together. They report to a designated staging area for assignment. • Task forces or strike teams cannot be used for routine cover assignments. Station coverage remains a local mutual aid system responsibility. • The Incident Commander must initiate the request for the plan to be implemented. The Incident Commander assumes overall responsibility. • Notification must be made to the State Fire Marshal’s Office when the plan is activated. • Task force or strike team apparatus must meet the FEMA Typing Standards. All Fire Departments and mutual aid control centers must issue procedures that reference this plan. • Authority for this plan is pursuant to New Hampshire RSA Title 3, Chapter 53-A. • Task Forces may be customized depending on the incident conditions but should follow NIMS best practices OPERATIONAL FLOW CHART When Local Incident Exceeds the Ability of the Local Mutual Aid District to Control and more resources are needed The Incident Commander requests additional resources, utilizing the Mobilization Plan, from their Dispatch Center The Dispatch Center requests a ST/TF from the Fire Mobilization Plan Point of Contact (Capital Area Mutual Aid Fire Compact) The Fire Mobilization Plan Control Center (in concert with Lakes Region and Southwest) selects the Primary Control Center for the Sending TF/ST and contacts the Sending Mutual Aid District Dispatch Center The Sending Mutual Aid District Dispatch Center contacts the TF/ST Leader, determines the Assembly Point and Dispatches the appropriate response assets TS/ST Leader assembles assets, responds in convoy to Requesting Community TF/ST Leader updatePsaSgee1n6dofin34g Mutual Aid Dispatch; Sending Mutual Aid Dispatch updates Responding Departments and Primary Control Center
Points to Remember. Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield will provide coverage for prescription drugs dispensed by a participating pharmacy when prescription drugs are deemed medically necessary based on specific criteria and dispensed pursuant to a prescription issued by a participating physician or by a non-participating physician, subject to copayment. • Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield will not be liable for any injury, claim or judgment resulting from the dispensing of any drug covered by this plan. Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield will not provide benefits for any drug prescribed or dispensed in a manner contrary to normal medical practice. • Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield reserves the right to apply quantity limits to specified drugs as listed on the formulary. If a member requires a greater supply, the member’s provider can follow the prior authorization process. Prescription Drug Eligibility Eligible prescription drug benefits are limited to injectable insulin and those drugs, biologicals, and compounded prescriptions that are required to be dispensed only according to a written prescription, and included in the United States Pharmacopoeia, National Formulary, or Accepted Dental Remedies and New Drugs, and which, by law, are required to bear the legend: “Caution—Federal Law prohibits dispensing without a prescription” or which are specifically approved by the Plan.
Points to Remember. Always begin an analysis by determining the nature of the transaction—is it a sale of goods or one for services? If it is a sale of goods, then the problem will be analyzed under Article 2 of the UCC. If it is one for services, then the common law is applicable. • Courts apply an objective test to determine whether there has been an offer and an acceptance. It does not matter what a party may have subjectively intended—the test is what a reasonable person in the other party’s position would believe was meant by the promisor’s words or conduct. • Remember the limits of the “mailbox rule” which holds that an 64 acceptance is effective upon dispatch. First, if the offeree chooses an acceptance not invited by the offer, the mailbox rule does not apply and the acceptance is not effective until receipt. Second, upon dispatch, the mailbox rule also binds the offeree to the acceptance. Third, as “master of the offer,” the offeror can always depart from the mailbox rule by providing otherwise in the offer. • It is also important to note that the mailbox rule applies only to acceptances by mail, not revocations. A revocation is not effective until received by the offeree; hence, a revocation by mail or telegram is not effective until receipt. • Under the common law, an acceptance must be the “mirror image” of the offer or it is a rejection of the offer and may be a counter-offer. However, Article 2 is far more forgiving in finding an agreement and under 2–207, a contract may be formed even if the acceptance states terms additional to or different from the offer. Then the issue becomes what to do with those terms—are they mere proposals or do they become part of the agreement? Be sure you are comfortable in performing a “battle of the forms” analysis. • While the general rule is that an offeror is free to revoke her offer at any time before acceptance, there are a number of ways in which an offer can be made irrevocable. One way is if the parties have formed an option contract where consideration is given in exchange for the promise to keep the offer open. However, there are exceptions to the consideration requirement and here is where you need to be aware of the possibilities, some of which include the following: the Restatement finds an option contract if the promise to keep the offer open is in writing, signed by the offeror, “recites a purported consideration” and “proposes an exchange on fair terms within a reasonable time”; an option contract arises when the offeree begins the invited p...
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Points to Remember. ⚫ If a weatherization job that was in process or completed was damaged in the natural disaster, the Subgrantee must determine if the homeowner has insurance or sources. Weatherization funds may only be used to address eligible weatherization activities, as currently allowed in Tennessee’s policies and procedures. ⚫ If possible, local agencies will coordinate the weatherization work efforts for the home to gain efficiencies. This does not negate the requirement to perform an en ⚫ Personnel that are paid from DOE funds are not allowed to perform disaster relief work in the community. They are permitted to perform work related to protect disaster initially occurs. ⚫ The maximum amount of funds that may be spent per unit is capped at $8,250.00. This includes both pre-disaster and post-disaster work with the exception of job Version 4.0 Tennessee Housing Development Agency Weatherization 2023 Health and Safety Plan

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