The risk of no - readiness means personal and
policy level implications such as the:
Not exact matches
From 1990 to 2005, he was Director Fiscal
Policy Division Department of Finance, responsible for overall preparation of the federal budget; preparation and assessment of medium - and long - term projections of federal revenues and expenses and implications for fiscal policy; analysis of fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial levels; evaluation of various budget proposals; preparation of monthly Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial state
Policy Division Department of Finance, responsible for overall preparation of the federal budget; preparation and assessment of medium - and long - term projections of federal revenues and expenses and
implications for fiscal
policy; analysis of fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial levels; evaluation of various budget proposals; preparation of monthly Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial state
policy; analysis of fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial
levels; evaluation of various budget proposals; preparation of monthly Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting
policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial statements.
William C. Dudley, President and CEO (Panelist) Date: May 12, 2015 Time: 3:15 AM EDT (9:15 AM CEST) Event: 6th High
Level Conference on the International Monetary System Panel: the global
implications of diverging monetary
policy settings in advanced economies Location: Hotel Baur au Lac Zurich, Switzerland
Key themes are: a) The impact of maternal health
policy at a health system and service delivery
level, and on health outcomes and users» experiences b) The social and organisational
implications of the translation of innovative health technologies into health care.
Recent research traces the effects of fiscal
policies at the federal, state, and district
levels for their
implications on resources at school and classroom
levels.
Her calculations of dollar
implications and cost equivalent tradeoffs have prompted changes in education finance
policy at all
levels in the education system.
Dr. Roza's research traces the effects of fiscal
policies at the federal, state and district
levels for their
implications on resources at school and classroom
levels.
[2] The most important
implications relate to allocation of Title I funds among schools and Title I
policies requiring schools to be accountable for these funds by reporting achievement
levels specifically for students from low - income families and taking appropriate actions when those achievement
levels are inadequate.
The
Policy - Level PLDs include policy claims, which describe the educational implications for students who attain a particular performance level on the PARCC assess
Policy -
Level PLDs include policy claims, which describe the educational implications for students who attain a particular performance level on the PARCC assessm
Level PLDs include
policy claims, which describe the educational implications for students who attain a particular performance level on the PARCC assess
policy claims, which describe the educational
implications for students who attain a particular performance
level on the PARCC assessm
level on the PARCC assessments.
The PARCC
policy -
level PLDs describe what that performance means and convey the
policy implications for each performance
level on the PARCC assessments.
However, at a
policy level these findings have significant
implications.
The report stresses that these results have important
implications for state, district and school -
level policies.
The study will have a particular focus on systems» reform journeys and decision points, and what can be learned from those stories to develop a system -
level school leadership development strategy, drawing out
implications for
policy makers in the United States.
Another
implication is that state educational
policies may have a greater impact if related professional learning opportunities are focused simultaneously on more than one
level of change (i.e., classroom and building, or classroom and district).
I did not consider the
implications this could have at the college
level if schools are allowed to adopt this type of
policy.
As policymakers begin work on a major overhaul to the federal tax code, which could include eliminating or changing the deduction, and amid widespread concern about rising student debt
levels, leaders should bear in mind that altering the provision would have
implications for higher education and tax
policy across
levels of government.
This technical document presents the latest estimates of the emissions gap in 2020 and provides plentiful information, including about current (2010) and projected (2020)
levels of global greenhouse gas emissions, both in the absence of additional
policies and consistent with national pledge implementation; the
implications of starting decided emission reductions now or in the coming decades; agricultural development
policies that can help increase yields, reduce fertilizer usage and bring about other benefits, while reducing emissions of greenhouse gases; and, international cooperative initiatives that, while potentially overlapping with pledges, can complement them and help bridge the emissions gap.
Regional issues raised by sea -
level rise and their
policy implications.
To fully understand the nature of the harm caused by this delay it is necessary to understand the
policy implications of a «carbon budget» that must limit global emissions to avoid dangerous warming
levels..
As a result the international community is not likely to respond with sufficient urgency and ambition unless greater awareness of the
policy implications of the need to live within a carbon budget at
levels required of nations because of equity and fairness considerations.
Because of this, perhaps the most important immediate goal of climate change
policy proponents is to help educate civil society and governments about the need to move urgently to make extremely rapid decreases in ghg emissions whereever governments can and to the maximum extent possible in light of the
policy implications of limiting national ghg emissions to
levels constrained by a carbon budget and in response to what fairness requires of nations..
If we stick to the Framework Convention's GHG metric, we find that the CO2 stabilization
level is not 450 ppm or 400 ppm, it is 350 ppm and possibly lower with immediate
implications for
policy.
Moreover, if this sort of bias is indeed widespread then there are serious
implications for new
policies, both at the Federal
level and within the scientific community itself.
Even if that is the case, any decision on jurisdiction will have wide - ranging
implications for the power sector, which has been caught in the balance between federal and state -
level policy and regulation.
Decisions made in relation to Article 2 will determine the
level of GHG concentrations in the atmosphere (or the corresponding climate change) that is set as the goal for
policy and have fundamental
implications for emission reduction pathways as well as the scale of adaptation required.
Decisions made in relation to Article 2 would determine the
level of climate change that is set as the goal for
policy, and have fundamental
implications for emission - reduction pathways as well as the scale of adaptation required.
Addressing inequity in outcomes for children across health and education is an issue of timely and significant
policy interest at a state and federal
level.68, 69 If right@home is effective and demonstrates benefit, the study design enables replicability at scale, with significant
implications for the development of early childhood
policy and strategy throughout Australia and internationally.
Public Health Approaches to Child and Parent Screening:
Implications for Child Protection Smith (2012) Journal of Law and
Policy Examines the potential benefit of child and parent mental health screenings to State - and community -
level child protection efforts.
More than a how - to guide to effective implementation and scale - up, this volume also addresses the theoretical foundation of the stages of implementation science at all
levels of early childhood systems and considers research, practice, and
policy implications.