Sentences with phrase «union approval»

The city would need union approval for many of those.
In general, labor unions approval rating has been declining, and has settled at around 52 % approval.
The mayor agreed to that perk in order to win union approval for an experimental incentive - pay program.
Bayer AG cleared one big hurdle for its $ 66 billion takeover of Monsanto, winning European Union approval for the deal after agreeing to bolster BASF SE by selling it seeds, pesticides and digital agriculture technology.
In November, State Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia issued a ruling that Buffalo Schools Superintendent Kriner Cash has the power to impose changes at five persistently struggling schools without union approval.
Credit union approvals for May dropped about 1.4 percentage points to 43.6 percent, compared to a year earlier.
DOJ approval follows European Union approval in March and a «productive» meeting between Bayer and President Trump in January.
Los Angeles Unified has adopted the position, which is ambiguous under the Stull Act, that districts have the authority to design evaluation systems without union approval.
Though it's still a little way off production (and, again, needs European Union approval), the new BMW steering wheel uses a carbon skeleton and a carbon frame.
Customs and Border Protection previously concluded in 2015 after a yearlong study that body cameras were not yet suitable for widespread use due to cost, technological challenges and the need for labor union approval.
So far U.S. antitrust officials have signed off on the deal, and European Union approval is pending.
As long as they're swinging for the fences, owners ought to keep pushing to eliminate the designated hitter; they've offered to compromise and add a 26th roster spot and are awaiting the players» union approval.
Labor negotiations are typically conducted behind closed doors before a contract is presented for council and union approval.
But that last step was the critical one; union approval.
Colorado had 74 percent of districts participating, of which 41 percent had union approval.
Because of a quirk in District law, Michelle A. Rhee, then the schools chancellor, was able to design and implement IMPACT without union approval, but D.C. teachers — when they finally got a chance — overwhelmingly voted in favor of a contract that promised high salaries for exceptional performance.
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