Sentences with phrase «controlled by the parties involved»

The Collaborative Divorce process is controlled by the parties involved.

Not exact matches

Schneiderman's Medicaid Fraud Control Unit issued subpoenas last week to eight parties involved with the sale of Rivington House, which was once a school owned by the city and is now set to become a high - end residential complex on the Lower East Side.
Free of animal testing: The development and / or manufacture of the product, and where applicable its ingredients, must not involve, or have involved, testing of any sort on animals conducted at the initiative of the manufacturer or on its behalf, or by parties over whom the manufacturer has effective control.
Your Business Cooperation Agreement should include details like: the names of the parties involved; the purpose, goals and objectives of this agreement; the date and initial term of the agreement; each party's responsibilities; any additional warranties or promises; how many days each party has to correct any problem; who will own any intellectual property created by either party; whether both parties can be excused from obligations due to causes beyond their control; any arbitration, assignment, and non-disclosure clauses; and more.
Without a central authority that can monitor, control, some would say spy, on the transactions and the parties involved, it was (and still is) hailed or feared by many as a powerful privacy preserving tool to conduct transactions.
• Disputes are resolved in private / skeletons are not paraded in the courtroom • Scheduling and speed of resolution is controlled by the parties, not the court or the attorneys involved • Chaos / hostility between the parties and / or their children is reduced • The process results in better communication between the parties • The monetary and emotional costs of divorce are significantly reduced • The settlement options are endless • Control of the process by the parties versus control by the judge • Safety in decision making process / provides Control of the process by the parties versus control by the judge • Safety in decision making process / provides control by the judge • Safety in decision making process / provides closure
There are several reasons: (a) it's less adversarial than going to court; (b) it's more private; (c) you retain control of the process — i.e., you are not bound by what the mediator thinks (indeed, most mediators see their role as helping the parties effectuate their goals, not imposing the mediator's ideas); (d) it's usually much less expensive; (e) if there are children involved, the process is less likely to embroil them in a painful conflict; and (f) mediation often gives divorcing couples a better chance of successfully negotiating issues that may come up in the future (such as child support, alimony, or custody and visitation issues).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z