Principles of Maintaining Security Sample Clauses

Principles of Maintaining Security. Within Employer’s Estate The key principles in terms of ensuring that each Site within the Employer’s Estate remains secure and is not compromised by the Contractor’s activities are as follows: The Employer shall always have overriding control over who has access to the Site. Contractor’s personnel delivering Works on a day-to-day basis shall be required to have the specified level of security clearance for access to the Site that they are working on before being granted admission to the Site without an escort. Generally, personnel working at Site shall only be granted access to areas on the basis of need in order to carry out their duties successfully under the Package Order. Contractor’s personnel shall be issued with a pass to gain access to the relevant Site where an electronic access system is installed. Where Contractor’s personnel do not have the necessary security clearance to enter a building or area within a building but need access in order to carry out their duties, the Contractor shall be required to request and organise escorts by prior arrangement with the Employer’s Representative. The Employer reserves the right to deny access to any person deemed to be unsuitable without disclosing the reasons for refusing entry. The Employer reserves the right to exclude any person from working on the Package Order without disclosing the reasons for rejecting the employee.
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Related to Principles of Maintaining Security

  • PRINCIPLES OF COLLABORATION The parties agree to adopt the following principles when carrying out the Project (Principles):

  • Principles of cooperation The Parties shall apply the following principles to cooperation activities covered by this Agreement:

  • Particular Methods of Procurement of Goods and Works International Competitive Bidding. Goods and works shall be procured under contracts awarded on the basis of International Competitive Bidding.

  • Principle of territoriality 1. The conditions for acquiring originating status set out in Articles 3.1 through 3.14 must be fulfilled without interruption in the territory of one or both of the Parties. 2. Notwithstanding paragraph 1, an originating good exported from a Party to a non-Party shall when returned be considered to be non-originating unless it can be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the customs authorities in accordance with laws and regulations of the importing Party concerned that the returning good: (a) is the same as that exported; and (b) has not undergone any operation beyond that necessary to preserve it in good condition while being exported. 3. Notwithstanding paragraphs 1 and 2, goods listed in Annex 3B shall be considered to be originating in accordance with Annex 3B, even if such goods have undergone operations and processes outside the territories of the Parties.

  • PRINCIPLES OF GOOD EMPLOYMENT PRACTICE The Supplier shall, and shall procure that each Sub-Contractor shall, comply with any requirement notified to it by the Customer relating to pensions in respect of any Transferring Former Supplier Employee as set down in: the Cabinet Office Statement of Practice on Staff Transfers in the Public Sector of January 2000, revised 2007; HM Treasury's guidance “Staff Transfers from Central Government: A Fair Deal for Staff Pensions of 1999; HM Treasury's guidance: “Fair deal for staff pensions: procurement of Bulk Transfer Agreements and Related Issues” of June 2004; and/or the New Fair Deal. Any changes embodied in any statement of practice, paper or other guidance that replaces any of the documentation referred to in Paragraph 5.1 shall be agreed in accordance with the Variation Procedure.

  • Particular Methods of Procurement of Goods Works and Services (other than Consultants’ Services)

  • Basic Principles The Electrical Contractor and the Union have a common and sympathetic interest in the Electrical Industry. Therefore, a working system and harmonious relations are necessary to improve the relationship between the Employer, the Union and the Public. Progress in industry demands a mutuality of confidence between the Employer and the Union. All will benefit by continuous peace and by adjusting any differences by rational common-sense methods.

  • Cost Principles The Subrecipient shall administer its program in conformance with 2 CFR Part 200, et al; (and if Subrecipient is a governmental or quasi-governmental agency, the applicable sections of 24 CFR 85, “Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Cooperative Agreements to State and Local Governments,”) as applicable. These principles shall be applied for all costs incurred whether charged on a direct or indirect basis.

  • Principles of Construction All references to sections and schedules are to sections and schedules in or to this Agreement unless otherwise specified. All uses of the word “including” shall mean “including, without limitation” unless the context shall indicate otherwise. Unless otherwise specified, the words “hereof,” “herein” and “hereunder” and words of similar import when used in this Agreement shall refer to this Agreement as a whole and not to any particular provision of this Agreement. Unless otherwise specified, all meanings attributed to defined terms herein shall be equally applicable to both the singular and plural forms of the terms so defined.

  • Requirements of the State of Kansas 1. The contractor shall observe the provisions of the Kansas Act against Discrimination (Kansas Statutes Annotated 44-1001, et seq.) and shall not discriminate against any person in the performance of work under the present contract because of race, religion, color, sex, disability, and age except where age is a bona fide occupational qualification, national origin or ancestry;

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