Thruway Mainline Sample Clauses

Thruway Mainline. On the Thruway Mainline, the Contractor shall install broken lines a minimum of 4 feet long at 40-foot spacing to separate traffic lanes in the same direction. The Contractor shall install solid edge lines for a minimum of 100 feet either side of the apex of the xxxx. In addition, the Contractor shall install solid edge lines prior to opening the lane to traffic unless STARs are in place, in which case the Contractor has up to 7 calendar days to install the solid edge lines.”
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Thruway Mainline. On the Thruway Mainline, the Contractor shall install broken lines a minimum of 4 feet long at 40-foot spacing to separate traffic lanes in the same direction. The Contractor shall install solid edge lines for a minimum of 100 feet either side of the apex of the xxxx. In addition, the Contractor shall install solid edge lines prior to opening the lane to traffic unless MIARDs are in place, in which case the Contractor has up to 7 calendar days to install the solid edge lines. The temporary pavement markings shall be installed in accordance with the NYSTA Standard Sheet TA 685-04, TEMPORARY PAVEMENT MARKING DETAILS (DRAWING PM-T) found in the Authority’s website.”

Related to Thruway Mainline

  • Electric Storage Resources Developer interconnecting an electric storage resource shall establish an operating range in Appendix C of its LGIA that specifies a minimum state of charge and a maximum state of charge between which the electric storage resource will be required to provide primary frequency response consistent with the conditions set forth in Articles 9.5.5, 9.5.5.1, 9.5.5.2, and 9.5.5.3 of this Agreement. Appendix C shall specify whether the operating range is static or dynamic, and shall consider (1) the expected magnitude of frequency deviations in the interconnection; (2) the expected duration that system frequency will remain outside of the deadband parameter in the interconnection; (3) the expected incidence of frequency deviations outside of the deadband parameter in the interconnection; (4) the physical capabilities of the electric storage resource; (5) operational limitations of the electric storage resources due to manufacturer specification; and (6) any other relevant factors agreed to by the NYISO, Connecting Transmission Owner, and Developer. If the operating range is dynamic, then Appendix C must establish how frequently the operating range will be reevaluated and the factors that may be considered during its reevaluation. Developer’s electric storage resource is required to provide timely and sustained primary frequency response consistent with Article 9.5.5.2 of this Agreement when it is online and dispatched to inject electricity to the New York State Transmission System and/or receive electricity from the New York State Transmission System. This excludes circumstances when the electric storage resource is not dispatched to inject electricity to the New York State Transmission System and/or dispatched to receive electricity from the New York State Transmission System. If Developer’s electric storage resource is charging at the time of a frequency deviation outside of its deadband parameter, it is to increase (for over-frequency deviations) or decrease (for under-frequency deviations) the rate at which it is charging in accordance with its droop parameter. Developer’s electric storage resource is not required to change from charging to discharging, or vice versa, unless the response necessitated by the droop and deadband settings requires it to do so and it is technically capable of making such a transition.

  • Air and Water Subrecipient agrees to comply with the following regulations in so far as they apply to the performance of this Contract: Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C., 1857, et seq. Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as amended, 33 U.S.C. 1251, et seq. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations pursuant to 00 XXX 00 xxx 00 XXX 00.

  • Utility Services Company agrees to pay the full cost and expense associated with its use of all utilities, including but not limited to water, sanitary sewer, electric, storm drainage, and telecommunication services.

  • PROJECT FINANCIAL RESOURCES i) Local In-kind Contributions $0 ii) Local Public Revenues $289,416 iii) Local Private Revenues iv) Other Public Revenues: $0 - ODOT/FHWA $0 - OEPA $0 - OWDA $0 - CDBG $0 - Other $0 SUBTOTAL $289,416 v) OPWC Funds: - Grant $275,000 - Loan $137,500 SUBTOTAL $412,500 TOTAL FINANCIAL RESOURCES $701,916

Time is Money Join Law Insider Premium to draft better contracts faster.