date of notification definition

date of notification means the date on which a notice is served as contemplated in section 35 or published in the media or Provincial Gazette;
date of notification means the date of a request for additional information from the department or the approval/denial letter sent to the applicant by the department.
date of notification means the date of a request for additional information from the contractor or the approval/denial letter sent to the applicant by the contractor.

More Definitions of date of notification

date of notification means the date on which a notification referred to in subsection (1)(a) is issued by the Executive;
date of notification means the earlier of
date of notification means the date on which a notice is served as contemplated in section 50(6) or published in the media or
date of notification means the date on which a notice is served or delivered on a person or body as contemplated in the provisions of this By-law or published in the media or Provincial Gazette as the case may be;
date of notification means the date on which the department publishes in a newspaper of general circulation and in the department’s office of management and policy ch. 150, Stats., newsletter notice of receipt of and the proposed period for review of all applications being reviewed.
date of notification means the date on which a notice is served as contemplated in Section 48(7) or published in the media or Provincial Gazette; ‘‘Department’’ means the provincial department responsible for land use planning; ‘‘departure’’ means an altered development parameter granted on a permanent basis or a right to utilise land for a purpose granted on a temporary basis;
date of notification means the date of a request for additional information from the department or the approval/denial letter sent to the applicant by the department. "Examination" is any examination required by this sec- tion. Each examination must be unique and must provide ran- domized questions, except for classroom training. Each examination question bank must be at least two times larger than the number of questions in any individual examination. Examinations must not direct or point the individual to a cor- rect answer or reference. Individuals must be responsible to determine the correct answer without the assistance of the sponsor. No more than twenty percent of an examination's questions may have a true/false answer. Competency is demonstrated by scoring at least seventy-five percent on the