Examples of Defense resources in a sentence
Under DTRA, Department of Defense resources, expertise and capabilities are combined to ensure the United States remains ready and able to address the present and future WMD threats.
Construction - This section shall not be considered to restrict the use of Department of Defense resources under this Act in the provision of assistance in a major disaster.
Procedures to ensure that Department of Defense resources are not applied exclusively to the program receiving the assistance.
In today’s fast-changing threat environment, given tight Defense resources and the exciting possibilities offered by development of laser weapons, the U.S. cannot afford the wasted time or resources of such mistakes in developing one of the next breakthrough technologies.
Other sources cited by Rohmann include (1) 10 U.S.C. §129a, which previously stated that “[t]he Secretary of Defense shall use the least costly form of personnel consistent with military requirements and other needs of the Department;” (2) Under Secretary of Defense (Personnel and Readiness)’s Guidelines and Procedures for Implementation of 10 U.S.C. §2463, which reads, “[r]equests for manpower shall be fiscally informed and closely managed to ensure responsible stewardship of Defense resources.
This section shall not be considered to restrict the use of Department of Defense resources under this Act in the provision of assistance in a major disaster.
This shall not be consid- ered to restrict the use of Department of Defense resources in the provision of Federal Emergency Management Agency, DHS § 206.14 major disaster assistance under the Stafford Act.
Balance cost, schedule, and require- ments for major defense acquisition pro- grams to ensure the most efficient use of De- partment of Defense resources.
In conjunction with interagency partners, prioritizing, coordinating use, and mobilizing Department of Defense resources and National wildfire response resources; see guidelines in National Mobilization Guide, (NFES 2092).
Decisions may include such possibilities as the mobilization of National Guard and U.S. Department of Defense resources prior to the event, the imposition of special procedures or drills at potentially hazardous facilities, such as nuclear reactors or dams, the condemnation or evacuation of particularly unsafe buildings with the subsequent need for temporary housing, and the provisions of special protection of fragile inventories.