In exchange
for operational freedom and flexibility, charter schools are subject to higher levels of accountability.
This offers less protection to customers, but allows investment banks a significantly greater amount
of operational freedom.
With many regional banks at present grouped alongside bulge brackets under the current minimum, increasing the threshold could grant regional banks
more operational freedom than their larger peers.
This is a significant operational weakness which could be exploited to apply asymmetric pressure on the Kim regime, limit current North Korean
cyber operational freedom and flexibility, and reduce the degree at which they are able to operate with impunity.
At the same time, they worry when regulators cloak their impulse to micromanage in the language of «accountability,» since they're also concerned that schools maintain
true operational freedom and the ability to innovate.
These are public schools of choice, unique in that they
trade operational freedom and flexibility for higher levels of accountability than other schools.»
The slim and lightweight nature of the device, combined with the ability to swivel the touchscreen through 360 degrees, gives it tablet -
like operational freedom.
Charters had much
more operational freedom than traditional schools because they weren't smothered by the micromanaging rules and regulations of the bureaucracy and union contract.
We want each of our schools to have
operational freedom and to be able to negotiate a school - level performance agreement with measures that fairly assess what that school does.
They argue that public oversight of authorizers limits the supply of schools and that forcing charters to follow many rules and regulations substantially limits
their operational freedom.
Charter schools are taxpayer - financed public schools that have more
operational freedoms than regular public schools.