Visa Sponsorship Sample Clauses

Visa Sponsorship. Assist you in obtaining a J-1 U.S. visa by provision of the DS2019 and give you information relating to your work in the camp and your stay in the U.S.
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Visa Sponsorship. At its sole discretion, the University may establish a pilot program for non-academic employee visa sponsorship. Should the Employer decide to start a pilot program, after one (1) year upon request, the Employer and Union will meet to discuss the program’s progress. This side letter expires on June 30, 2026.
Visa Sponsorship. The Employer shall continue to reimburse the governmental costs of visas it is sponsoring on behalf of employees it has engaged, and to directly engage and cover the legal fees of the lawyer selected by CPJ for obtaining the visa.
Visa Sponsorship. The company will take the steps necessary to secure and maintain appropriate work authorization that will allow you to be employed legally in the United States. Failure to maintain appropriate work status in the United States will result in termination. Should the company fail to take such steps during your employment, thereby causing you to lose your work status, resulting in termination, such termination will be considered a termination by the Company without cause.
Visa Sponsorship. If Talent requires visa sponsorship to work in a particular country, Manager agrees to sponsor Talent for a visa. Talent shall bear all costs associated with such sponsorship and visa. Manager at it’s sole discretion may elect to advance necessary costs for any visas and deduct this from future earnings.

Related to Visa Sponsorship

  • Sponsorship As required by section 286.25, F.S., if the Provider is a non-governmental organization which sponsors a program financed wholly or in part by State funds, including any funds obtained through this Contract, it shall, in publicizing, advertising, or describing the sponsorship of the program state: “Sponsored by (Provider's name) and the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families”. If the sponsorship reference is in written material, the words “State of Florida, Department of Children and Families” shall appear in at least the same size letters or type as the name of the organization.

  • Company Benefit Plans (a) Section 4.13(a) of the Company Disclosure Letter sets forth a complete list, as of the date hereof, of each material Company Benefit Plan. For purposes of this Agreement, a “

  • Employee Benefit Plans and Related Matters; ERISA (a) Section 4.17(a) of the Parent Disclosure Schedule sets forth as of the date of this Agreement a true and complete list of the material Parent Benefit Plans, including all Parent Benefit Plans subject to ERISA. With respect to each such material Parent Benefit Plan, Parent has made available to the Company a true and complete copy of such Parent Benefit Plan, if written, or a description of the material terms of such Parent Benefit Plan if not written, and to the extent applicable, (i) any proposed amendments, (ii) all trust agreements, insurance contracts or other funding arrangements, (iii) the most recent actuarial and trust reports for both ERISA funding and financial statement purposes, (iv) the most recent Form 5500 with all attachments required to have been filed with the IRS or the Department of Labor and all schedules thereto, (v) the most recent IRS determination or opinion letter, and (vi) all current summary plan descriptions.

  • Transition Planning The AGENCY will be responsible for the development of the student’s Transition Plan, which begins upon entry and is completed prior to the student’s exit.

  • Employee Benefit Plans and Employee Matters (a) Schedule 2.12(a) of the Company Disclosure Letter lists, with respect to the Company and (i) all “employee benefit plans” within the meaning of Section 3(3) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (“ERISA”), (ii) all material stock option, stock purchase, phantom stock, stock appreciation right, restricted stock unit, supplemental retirement, severance, sabbatical, medical, dental, vision care, disability, employee relocation, cafeteria benefit (Section 125 of the Code), dependent care (Section 129 of the Code), life insurance or accident insurance plans, programs or arrangements, (iii) all material bonus, pension, profit sharing, savings, severance, retirement, deferred compensation or incentive plans (including cash incentive plans), programs or arrangements, (iv) all other material fringe or employee benefit plans, programs or arrangements and (v) all material employment, individual consulting, retention, change of control or executive compensation or severance agreements, written or otherwise, as to which any unsatisfied obligations of the Company remain for the benefit of any present or former employee, consultant or non-employee director of the Company, other than any such plan, program, or other arrangement mandated and maintained by a Governmental Entity (all of the foregoing described in clauses (i) through (v), collectively, the “Company Employee Plans”). Notwithstanding the foregoing, for purposes of the other representations in this Section 2.12, all references to Company Employee Plan shall include arrangements that would be listed in this Section 2.12(a) but for the “material” qualifiers in (ii), (iii), (iv), and (v), and shall include plans that are mandated by a Governmental Entity, but sponsored or contributed to by the Company or any Subsidiary thereof.

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