Not exact matches
In
addition, Innovative Dining Group may disclose personally identifiable information about you
to other companies or individuals in the following circumstances: - Innovative Dining Group utilizes third party service providers
to provide products, services or functions on IDG's behalf (such as sending emails or processing credit cards or fulfilling orders placed online) and asks these service providers
to agree
to maintain the confidentiality of your personally identifiable information and not
to use your personally identifiable information for any reason except
to carry out the purpose (s) for which we retained them; - Innovative Dining Group needs
to protect its legal rights (e.g., if Innovative Dining Group is trying
to collect money you owe); - Innovative Dining Group must comply with applicable laws, regulations or legal or regulatory processes; - Innovative Dining Group has reason
to believe that someone may be causing injury
to someone or interfering with - In connection with a sale, merger, transfer, exchange or other disposition of all or a portion of the business conducted by the web site.
In
addition, the memo says, debts too difficult
to collect must be written off as operating losses and may not be covered by the food service account, but by finding
money «which may come from the district's general fund, special funding from the state or other local sources, or any other non-Federal sources.»
In 2014, parents of students at Horace Mann Elementary School in Northwest Washington, D.C., spent over $ 470,000 of their own
money to support the school's programs.1 With just under 290 students enrolled for the 2013 - 14 school year, this means that, in
addition to public funding, Horace Mann spent about an extra $ 1,600 for each student.2 Those dollars — equivalent
to 9 percent of the District of Columbia's average per - pupil spending3 — paid for new art and music teachers and classroom aides
to allow for small group instruction.4 During the same school year, the parent - teacher association, or PTA, raised another $ 100,000 in parent donations and
collected over $ 200,000 in membership dues, which it used for similar initiatives in future years.5 Not surprisingly, Horace Mann is one of the most affluent schools in the city, with only 6 percent of students coming from low - income families.6
• Some schools have ceded almost total control of their staff and finances
to for - profit management companies that decide how the schools»
money is spent... • Many management companies also control the land and buildings used by the schools — sometimes
collecting more than 25 percent of a school's revenue in lease payments, in
addition to management fees... • Charter schools often rely on loans from management companies or other insiders
to stay afloat, making charter school governing boards beholden
to the managers they oversee...
At RMG, we help
to ease the burden of paying taxes for our customers by
collecting a portion of
money for taxes in
addition to each mortgage payment.
In
addition to collecting time premium, you may also make or lose
money on the underlying stock, but that's called capital gain (upside potential) or, if negative, capital loss.
At RMG, we can help
to ease the burden of paying taxes for our customers by
collecting a portion of
money for taxes in
addition to each mortgage payment.
In
addition to being mayor, players are also residents, and can earn
money to spend at local businesses on Main Street, get
to know their neighbours and
collect myriad items like insects, fish, fossils and fruit, some of which can be donated
to the town museum for visitors
to admire.
In
addition the actual cost of enforcing the charge and the practicalities of trying
to collect money from people who do not have anything does not appear
to have been fully considered by the government.
* Please note that in
addition to the agreed upon contingency fee, should we
collect money on your behalf via settlement or judgment, you will be liable for costs and / or expenses.
6.11 In
addition to an investment permitted under the Act, for the purposes of section 95 (2)(a) or 108 (4)(b)(i) of the Act, as applicable, a strata corporation may invest
money held in the contingency reserve fund or
money collected on a special levy in one or more of the following investments:
If we receive enough donations
to zero - out their travel expenses, any
addition money collected by The Childress Institute will be used
to purchase an event table at the AFCC convention.