Sentences with phrase «when failing infrastructure»

And when failing infrastructure slows down trucking, it slows down America, too.

Not exact matches

By crunching data, PG&E hopes to better predict when its infrastructure might fail.
That seems doomed to fail, as more than a century of case law dating back to the early days of the railroad suggests that provincial measures that directly thwart interprovincial infrastructure may be overruled by federal jurisdiction using 92 (10)(c) and this would be a prime example of when it should be (and has historically) been used.
How is it fair to blame Wenger when AFC are failing with the infrastructure?
When taxpayer dollars are used to purchase materials for infrastructure projects from overseas, we fail to support jobs...
The only time the public thinks about sewer and water infrastructure repairs, for the most part, is when that infrastructure fails.
When we confronted him with the failing infrastructure he asked what he could do in order to maintain the highest level of food safety,» said Joel Fierman, President of the Hunts Point Terminal Produce Cooperative Association.
The committee also called for increased investment through public and private funds in physical resources to ensure that critical electric infrastructure is robust and that society is able to cope when the grid fails.
When the inevitable problems occur with the SBAC and PARCC test administrations this year, the public outcry will be about how the technology infrastructure failed or how the tests were taking too much valuable time away from real instruction.
Amazon has also made some internal system changes, such as keeping an order active even when online transactions fail, something that is common with an unstable internet banking infrastructure.
When it comes to picking out the finer details of a city's architecture and street infrastructure, German photographer Matthias Heiderich — featured previously — is someone who never fails to impress with his ongoing series of fine art photography.
The existing land line telephone system, its infrastructure, regulations, the entire industrial halo of the telephone corporations (a near monopoly, despite the failed trust busting attempt of an earlier era) stifled and constrained North American mobile phone adoption, short - sighted governments taxed infant cell companies rather than freeing them of the uphill struggle they faced, and as a result, the average North American is backwards compared to the average denizen of an emerging economy when it comes to mobile life.
When substantial subsidies (implicit, explicit, through direct expenditure or tax expenditure, infrastructure favoritism or procurement favoritism) side - by - side with failure to price a diminishing resource, the economy is running under false metrics, and will crash over and over again until it ultimately fails.
During extreme heat events, nighttime temperatures in the region's big cities are generally several degrees higher28 than surrounding regions, leading to increased heat - related death among those less able to recover from the heat of the day.36 Since the hottest days in the Northeast are often associated with high concentrations of ground - level ozone and other pollutants, 37 the combination of heat stress and poor air quality can pose a major health risk to vulnerable groups: young children, the elderly, and those with pre-existing health conditions including asthma.29 Vulnerability is further increased as key infrastructure, including electricity for potentially life - saving air conditioning, is more likely to fail precisely when it is most needed — when demand exceeds available supply.
When some suggest that perhaps subsidized gas distorts the entire system and discourages conservation, and others worry about the nation's failing infrastructure, Mr. McCain of the Party of Free Markets wants to suspend collection of the federal gas tax for the summer.
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