Not exact matches
The growing
use of the internet, especially in social networking, meant that through the debates of the US Bishops» Conference (commendably held in
public session) the general Catholic
public became
increasingly aware of just what thinking was behind what was coming to be known
by consensus as the «lame - duck translation», an expression popularised
by Fr Zuhlsdorf who has spent many years analysing «What does the prayer really say?»
Maintaining access to
public libraries is particularly needed
by residents facing the challenges of coping with a struggling local and national economy who have
increasingly turned to their
public libraries for assistance, resulting in large increases in projected 2010 library
use: visits rising 12 %, circulation rising 12 %, and
public access computer
use rising 92 % across the System vs. 2007 pre-recessionary levels.
The report notes the «
increasingly blurred distinction between genomics research and clinical care» highlighted
by the PHG Foundation, and particularly that the broad consent process
used in the 100,000 Genomes Project is «unlikely to be feasible for routine genomic medicine in the NHS without an extensive and continuing
public debate to raise
public understanding and acceptance».
The free schools programme, established
by Michael Gove in 2010 as a way for members of the
public and teachers to set up their own schools, is
increasingly used by large, established academy chains to start their own schools.
The campaign comes at a time when
public education is
increasingly riven
by battles over the
use of standardized testing in teacher performance evaluations and the rollout of the Common Core, new benchmarks for what students need to know and be able to do between kindergarten and the end of high school.
Additionally Barnes and Noble, Sony and Apple have boasted that even more titles are accessible, and free,
by using one of the many online
public libraries that are
increasingly replacing paperbacks and hard covers with eBooks.
Given our current obligations under the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive, coupled with the introduction of nZEB for all
public buildings in 2018 followed
by all new buildings in 2020, it will be
increasingly difficult to demonstrate compliance with each relevant standard via the
use of default thermal bridging values.
In place of the suburb, it wants Soviet - style high density housing; changes in zoning laws that
increasingly make it impossible to maintain single family residences (let alone build new ones); mandated
use of
public transportation (thus positioning the high density housing near railroad or bus depots and excluding from those «human residential zones» most roadways and parking installations); and severe limitations on private food, water, and energy consumption, in return for enormously high taxes that will fund «cradle to grave» care
by the nanny government.
«We should not be
using public money to pay for faster and faster computers so that
increasingly fine - grained climate models can be subjected to ever larger numbers of simulations until we have got the data to test whether the predictions of existing models are confirmed (or not disconfirmed)
by the evidence.»
As the
public sector looks
increasingly towards commissioning services and increased
use of outsourcing,
public sector clients should be advised to undertake detailed reviews of existing insurance policies, improve where necessary contract management prior to inception and contract performance throughout the term of the contract, underpinned
by regular risk assessment of third party service providers.
In this digital information age, I don't think our «
public» law libraries (law school and law society libraries) are the first place a citizen would think to go to access legal information; and I wonder if our libraries» maintenance of expensive print subscription services — like published law reporters and law digest services — is justified when these print resources are no longer
used by our own «expert» users (students, faculty and practising lawyers), are incomprehensible and effectively inaccessible to the non-expert
public, unaffordable, and
increasingly unmanageable.
This is
increasingly being
used by organisations to communicate with staff, customers and the wider
public.