Emergency Response Requirements Sample Clauses

Emergency Response Requirements. Within three months of the execution of this Contract, the Contractor shall prepare and make available to the County upon request, the necessary plans, procedures and protocols to: A. Respond to and recover from a natural disaster or major disruption to Contractor operations such as a work stoppage. B. Continue operations during a prolonged event such as a pandemic. If the Contractor does not have any such plan as of the start of this Contract, the Contractor may request (i) an extension of the time needed to create a plan, and (ii) for assistance from the County in preparing such a plan. At a minimum, any plans, procedures, or protocols described in this section must include how the Contractor plans to continue to provide the services described in or funded by this Contract.
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Emergency Response Requirements. (1) Each University must post notification procedures, location of emergency response equipment to be used by laboratory workers and evacuation procedures; (2) Emergency response equipment and procedures for emergency response must be appropriate to the hazards in the laboratory such that hazards to human health and the environment will be minimized in the event of an emergency; (3) In the event of a fire, explosion or other release of laboratory waste which could threaten human health or the environment outside the laboratory, the laboratory worker must follow the notification procedures under paragraph (f)(1).
Emergency Response Requirements. Within three months of the execution of the contract, the Contractor shall prepare and submit to the County the necessary plans, procedures and protocols to: A. Respond to and recover from a natural disaster or major disruption to contractor operations such as a work stoppage. B. Continue operations during a prolonged even such as a pandemic. By signing this contract, the contractor certifies they have read and agree to the additional emergency response requirements at the DCHS website at xxxx://xxx.xxxxxxxxxx.xxx/DCHS/contracts IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereby agree to the terms and conditions of this Contract: KING COUNTY CONTRACTOR FOR King County Executive Signature Date Name (Please type or print) Date Placeholder – Certificate of Insurance
Emergency Response Requirements. An operator must— (1) Activate emergency response services to protect the public and prop- erty following a mishap as necessary including, but not limited to: (i) Evacuating and rescuing members of the public, taking into account de- bris dispersion and toxic plumes; and (ii) Extinguishing fires; (2) Maintain existing hazard area sur- veillance and clearance as necessary to protect public safety; (3) Contain and minimize the con- sequences of a mishap, including: (i) Securing impact areas to ensure that no members of the public enter; (ii) Safely disposing of hazardous ma- terials; and (iii) Controlling hazards at the site or impact areas. (4) Preserve data and physical evi- dence; and (5) Implement agreements with gov- ernment authorities and emergency re- sponse services, as necessary, to satisfy the requirements of this section.
Emergency Response Requirements. Within three months of the execution of the contract, the Contractor shall prepare and submit to the County the necessary plans, procedures and protocols to:

Related to Emergency Response Requirements

  • Primary Frequency Response Developer shall ensure the primary frequency response capability of its Large Generating Facility by installing, maintaining, and operating a functioning governor or equivalent controls. The term “functioning governor or equivalent controls” as used herein shall mean the required hardware and/or software that provides frequency responsive real power control with the ability to sense changes in system frequency and autonomously adjust the Large Generating Facility’s real power output in accordance with the droop and deadband parameters and in the direction needed to correct frequency deviations. Developer is required to install a governor or equivalent controls with the capability of operating: (1) with a maximum 5 percent droop ± 0.036 Hz deadband; or (2) in accordance with the relevant droop, deadband, and timely and sustained response settings from an approved Applicable Reliability Standard providing for equivalent or more stringent parameters. The droop characteristic shall be: (1) based on the nameplate capacity of the Large Generating Facility, and shall be linear in the range of frequencies between 59 and 61 Hz that are outside of the deadband parameter; or (2) based on an approved Applicable Reliability Standard providing for an equivalent or more stringent parameter. The deadband parameter shall be: the range of frequencies above and below nominal (60 Hz) in which the governor or equivalent controls is not expected to adjust the Large Generating Facility’s real power output in response to frequency deviations. The deadband shall be implemented: (1) without a step to the droop curve, that is, once the frequency deviation exceeds the deadband parameter, the expected change in the Large Generating Facility’s real power output in response to frequency deviations shall start from zero and then increase (for under-frequency deviations) or decrease (for over-frequency deviations) linearly in proportion to the magnitude of the frequency deviation; or (2) in accordance with an approved Applicable Reliability Standard providing for an equivalent or more stringent parameter. Developer shall notify NYISO that the primary frequency response capability of the Large Generating Facility has been tested and confirmed during commissioning. Once Developer has synchronized the Large Generating Facility with the New York State Transmission System, Developer shall operate the Large Generating Facility consistent with the provisions specified in Articles 9.5.5.1 and 9.5.5.2 of this Agreement. The primary frequency response requirements contained herein shall apply to both synchronous and non-synchronous Large Generating Facilities.

  • Accessibility Requirements Under Tex. Gov’t Code Chapter 2054, Subchapter M, and implementing rules of the Texas Department of Information Resources, the System Agency must procure Products and services that comply with the Accessibility Standards when those Products are available in the commercial marketplace or when those Products are developed in response to a procurement solicitation. Accordingly, Grantee must provide electronic and information resources and associated Product documentation and technical support that comply with the Accessibility Standards.

  • Contingent Emergency Response 1. In order to ensure the proper implementation of contingent emergency response activities under Part 4 of the Project (“Contingent Emergency Response Part”), the Recipient shall ensure that: (a) a manual (“CERC Manual”) is prepared and adopted in form and substance acceptable to the Association, which shall set forth detailed implementation arrangements for the Contingent Emergency Response Part, including: (i) any structures or institutional arrangements for coordinating and implementing the Contingent Emergency Response Part;

Draft better contracts in just 5 minutes Get the weekly Law Insider newsletter packed with expert videos, webinars, ebooks, and more!