Submission of Disputes Sample Clauses

Submission of Disputes a. A formal dispute by Contractor must be filed in writing to OGS by mail, email or facsimile.
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Submission of Disputes. Either party may submit the dispute under this Agreement to arbitration in accordance with the terms of this Part.
Submission of Disputes. In the event that the Union disputes either a classification decision or a valuation decision contained in the Board’s report, then within thirty (30) calendar days of receipt of such report the Union shall submit in writing to the Board both the specific reasons for its disagreement and the remedy being sought. The Union shall in respect of both its disagreement and its proposed solution limit its argument to the criteria set out in paragraph 10. Further, the Union shall limit its disagreement to: a) factual errors or omissions in the class specifications; b) inappropriate allocation of positions to classes; and/or c) valuation of decisions.
Submission of Disputes. A Contractor must submit any dispute arising out of this Contract to the Town for adjustment. In doing so, it shall provide all relevant evidence that bears on the Town’s liability for the amount claimed or responsibility to grant any non-monetary relief requested.
Submission of Disputes. The Contractor shall include similar provisions for termination in any subcontractors and shall require subcontractors to make reasonable efforts to mitigate damages if the Contract is terminated. Failure to include such provisions shall bar the Contractor from any recovery from the Town whatsoever for loss or damage sustained by a subcontractor as a consequence of termination.
Submission of Disputes. Disputes properly submitted to the Board shall be addressed to the Chairperson with copies to the Vice Chairperson and the Vice President-Flight Operations. The written appeal shall include: • The grievant's name and address, • A statement of the question at issue, • A summary of the facts giving rise to the grievance, • A statement setting forth the position of the grievant, • A statement setting forth the position of the Company, • The relief sought, and • A copy of the Step 2 decision.
Submission of Disputes. A Contractor must submit any dispute arising out of this Contract to the Town for adjustment. In doing so, it shall provide all relevant evidence that bears on the Town’s liability for the amount claimed or responsibility to grant any non-monetary relief requested. Claims are forever barred unless (a) written notice of the Contractor’s intention to file a claim is given at the time of the occurrence or beginning of the work upon which the claim is based and (b) the claim and all relevant evidence that bears on the claim is submitted to the Town within 60 days of receipt of final payment.
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Submission of Disputes. The parties hereby irrevocably agree to submit all claims, controversies, and demands currently existing by and between them to binding arbitration, except to the extent specifically excluded under Additional Terms below. The Arbitrator shall decide the claims, controversies, and demands submitted to the arbitration and the nature and amount of relief, if any, arising under all claims, controversies, and demands submitted to the arbitration proceeding unless expressly excluded by the parties. Upon an affirmative finding by the Arbitrator with regard to the claims, controversies, and demands submitted, the Arbitrator shall decide what nature and amount of relief, if any, will be paid by one party to the prevailing party.
Submission of Disputes. All disputes arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be referred to and finally resolved by a single arbitrator (the “Arbitrator”) pursuant to the Commercial Arbitration Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 55, as amended.
Submission of Disputes. Within 30 calendar days after the original mailing of the Notice Packets, any Class Member who disagrees with the accuracy of any part of the Class Information in their Notice Packet, shall provide the Administrator with an explanation to show contrary Class Information.
Draft better contracts in just 5 minutes Get the weekly Law Insider newsletter packed with expert videos, webinars, ebooks, and more!