Cooperating Agency Sample Clauses

Cooperating Agency. A “cooperating agency” is a social service agency which is licensed to provide adoption services, home study services, and/or post-placement services and engaged to provide such services in connection with this Agreement.
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Cooperating Agency. PARTICIPATION -------------------------------- The WMP has been prepared through the cooperative efforts of PDA and the NH Department of Environmental Semites ("NHDES") and has been reviewed by the Air Force and the United States Environmental Agency (EPA).
Cooperating Agency. A federal agency that has federal actions related to the Undertaking and one or more associated Planned Projects, which has designated the Corps as LFA for compliance with Section 106, pursuant to 36 C.F.R. § 800.2(a)(2), and whose responsibilities under Section 106 for the Undertaking and associated Planned Projects is covered by the Corps compliance under the terms of this PA. Such Cooperating Agencies do not have to sign the PA in order to be covered by the Corps compliance under the terms of this PA
Cooperating Agency. Under Section 2–4(d) of the Executive Order, Federal Environmental Protection Agency Pt. 7
Cooperating Agency. A Cooperating Agency is the County Sheriff or County Attorney who provides child support services for the COUNTY pursuant to a Cooperative Arrangement. “Cooperating Agencies” refers to both the County Sheriff and the County Attorney.
Cooperating Agency. If, for any reason, the adoptive parent(s) use an agency in the United States other than FamilyCore to provide select adoption services, this “cooperating agency” must enter a Supervised Provider Agreement. The other agency, known as the “Primary Provider,” “Primary Service Provider,” or ”Cooperating Agency” will be responsible for the following services: home study review, provision of a referral for a potential adoption, identifying a child for adoption, securing the necessary consent to termination of parental rights and to adoption, obtaining and supplying to the adoptive parent(s) available information about the child, arranging and scheduling administrative, judicial, and/or other proceedings required by the child’s country of origin to effect the placement of the child for adoption, communicating with officials authorities and/or orphanage personnel in the child’s country of origin on behalf of the adoptive parent(s), review of post-placement or post-adoption reports and services, when necessary due to a disruption, assuming custody of the child and providing any child care or any other social service pending an alternative placement. FamilyCore is willing to work with a cooperating agency of the adoptive parent(s) choosing, provided the agency meets applicable standards and agrees to the requirements set forth in the Supervised Provider Agreement. A cooperating agency is an agency separate and distinct from FamilyCore; therefore, FamilyCore has no control over the means or manner of the services provided, and adoptive parent(s) must act in accordance with any contract entered into between the adoptive parent(s) and the cooperating agency, including a fee agreement.
Cooperating Agency. These agencies are interested in participating in the development of the grant application but they do not have qualifying projects or programs they wish to be included in the grant application at this time. As a cooperating agency, the agency is not required to share in any professional services costs, however, they may be requested to provide in-kind services to support the preparation of the grant application. There is no financial commitment being made by the agency at this time. The draft and final grant application will be made available to the cooperating agency. Purpose of the East Contra Costa County Prop 50 Chapter 8 Regional Grant Application The East Contra Costa County area is a unique hydrological region from a water management perspective because 1) all of the water related activities either involve or depend on the San Joaquin River or Bay-Delta and, 2) the agencies in the area have a history of working together on water management issues and developing regionally based solutions. These attributes make the regionally based water management projects and programs in the Eastern Contra Costa County prime candidates for grant funding under Chapter 8 of Proposition 50. As such, the signatories to this letter agreement will participate in the preparation of a joint grant application for Proposition 50 funding. The funding under Chapter 8 of Proposition 50 is expected to be made available by the State in two phases. This letter agreement covers the first phase of funding, which is expected to be Letter Agreement for Preparation of East County Prop 50 Chapter 8 Regional Grant Application February 25, 2005 issued sometime in 2005. A separate agreement or amendment to this agreement will be entered into for phase two Prop 50 Chapter 8 funding. Any funds awarded as a result of the grant application will be distributed in conformance to the State’s determination regarding the individual projects and programs. If the State designates grant funding for priority areas or any other manner that does not direct money to a specific project or program, then the sponsoring agencies agree to meet and determine an appropriate distribution of the awarded funds. It is expected that each sponsoring agency receiving funds under this grant application would enter into a grant award contract with the State directly. Functionally Equivalent IRWM Plan Approach To be eligible for implementation grants under Chapter 8, Prop 50, grant applications must be consistent with an...
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Cooperating Agency. As a Cooperating Agency pursuant to NEPA for the Remand EIS, to the extent that its limited fiscal, staff, and other resources permit, the responsibilities of the Cooperating Agency include taking the following actions in a timely manner consistent with the schedule for developing and completing the EIS and with direction provided by the NEPA Lead Agency:
Cooperating Agency. This MOU establishes the Xxxxxx SWCD as a Cooperating Agency in the environmental impact analysis and documentation process and establishes procedures through which the Xxxxxx SWCD will participate with the BLM to help develop the Oregon Subregion EIS. The Xxxxxx SWCD has been identified as a Cooperating Agency because it has special expertise concerning management and local land use information within the Xxxxxx SWCD, as well as with livestock and grazing baseline information within the District that may be used in the environmental impact statement relating to the Greater Sage-Grouse habitat conservation strategy (40 CFR 1508.5). This MOU applies specifically to the Xxxxxx SWCD.
Cooperating Agency. Any agency other than a lead agency that has jurisdiction by law or special expertise with respect to any environmental impact involved in a proposal (or reasonable alternative) for legislation or other major federal action/project significantly affecting the human environment. A state or local agency of similar qualifications, or, when the effects are on a reservation, an Indian Tribe, may by agreement with the lead agency become a cooperating agency. 40 CFR 1508.5. Corridor A strip of land between two termini within which traffic, topography, environment, and other characteristics are evaluated for transportation purposes. Cumulative impact The impact on the environment that results from the incremental impact of the action when added to other past, present, and reasonably foreseeable future actions regardless of what agency (federal or non-federal) or person undertakes such other actions. Cumulative impacts can result from individually minor but collectively significant actions taking place over a period of time. 40 CFR 1508.7 or WAC 000-00-000 of SEPA. Demand The quantity of transportation desired. Design concept The type of facility identified by the project; e.g., freeway, expressway, arterial highway, grade-separated highway, reserved right-of-way rail transit, mixed-traffic rail transit, exclusive busway, etc. 40 CFR 51.392. Design scope The design aspects that will affect the proposed facility’s impact on regional emissions, usually as they relate to vehicle- or person-carrying capacity and control; e.g., number of lanes or tracks to be constructed or added, length of project, signalization, access control including approximate number and location of interchanges, preferential treatment for high occupancy vehicles, etc. 40 CFR 51.392. Determination of nonsignificance (DNS) Determination of significance (DS) Discharge of dredged material Discharge of fill material The written decision by the responsible official of the lead agency (SEPA) that a proposal is not likely to have a significant adverse environmental impact, and therefore an EIS is not required. WAC 000-00-000. The written decision by the responsible official of the lead agency (SEPA) that a proposal is likely to have a significant adverse environmental impact, and therefore an EIS is required. The DS form is in WAC 000-00-000 and must be used substantially in that form. WAC 000-00-000. Any addition of dredged or excavated material into (including redeposit of dredged material) Waters of ...
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