Sentences with phrase «public bodies refuse»

Not exact matches

Last week, public officials with the city of Utica and Oneida County announced that their government bodies will take the responsibility of seizing the properties that owners refuse to sell on behalf of MVHS.
If your dog lunges, barks, growls, shakes, refuses to walk forward and displays fearful body language, then your dog doesn't like public walks.
The French Republic observes that specific procedures, which do not give creditors any guarantee that they will recover all of their claims, are applicable to [EICCs]-LSB-...] the primary objective of which was to regulate situations in which public entities, although solvent, refused to honour certain debts, established a scheme of enforcement remedies, which give the governing body the power to substitute itself for the executive of a publicly - owned establishment so as to release the «necessary credits» — and not State resources — in that establishment's budget, with a view to satisfying potential creditors.
The Court of Appeal recognized that the issue was not decided by an earlier case — Trinity Western University v. British Columbia College of Teachers, 2001 SCC 31 — a case where a regulatory body refused to accredit TWU on the basis that the covenant might affect the ability of TWU graduates to teach in public schools in a non-discriminatory matter.
Generally, in those cases, a legislative body has to authorize the appropriation «voluntarily» from whatever source of funds it choses to impose, and usually, when push comes to shove, state and local governments do pay the judgments they owe (there are limited federal bankruptcy options for municipalities and states), although there are instances of state governments stubbornly refusing to take the actions necessary to comply with court orders directing that public schools be funded for many, many years.
That the power of the Privacy Commissioner to require disclosure uses different language than the power of the public body to refuse production is significant, and suggests that the provisions «must be understood to have different meanings» (at para 53).
Solicitor - client privilege is a legal privilege but, here, is «not clearly a «privilege of the law of evidence»», with the result that a public body may refuse to disclose documents over which it claims solicitor - client privilege, and the Commissioner can not require that they be disclosed for the Commissioner to review (at para 57).
Justice Côté also noted that the statutory context supported this position, and in particular the legislation's reference to «legal privilege» in the provision allowing a public body to refuse to disclose privileged information — i.e., «information that is subject to any type of legal privilege, including solicitor - client privilege» (at para 52, citing FOIPP s 27).
However, it went on to say that «it is only in the clearest cases that it will be appropriate for the public body concerned to refuse relief on the basis of the manifest inadequacy of the purported fresh grounds».
A public body would be required to refuse an accommodation request if the requested accommodation would cause a security risk, prevent identification or otherwise be inappropriate because of the level of communication required.
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