Five states — California, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, and Nevada — have waiver applications that are pending approval, and 12 states — Alabama, Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Texas, West Virginia, and Wyoming — have not
yet requested a waiver.
Not exact matches
Gerstenmaier said at a hearing a year ago that NASA would need another INKSNA
waiver in late 2012 or early 2013, but the Obama Administration has not
yet sent a
request to Congress for that
waiver.
Yet the Department's
waiver policy says that, in order to receive
waivers, states «must submit a
request that addresses each of the following four principles, consistent with the definitions and timelines described later in this document, to increase the quality of instruction for students and improve student academic achievement in the State and its [districts].»
And
yet just the other day, Governor Malloy, Commissioner Pryor and the Connecticut State Board of Education were talking about changes and flexibility associated with Connecticut's absurd teacher evaluation system, but there was virtually no mention that the federal
waiver Malloy, Pryor and the state
requested and received puts severe limitations on just how much «flexibility» Connecticut has in some of these areas.
Yet the target will fear that
waiver of privilege over that material may open it up to collateral
waiver risk and an inability to defend speculative discovery
requests in civil claims at a later date.