Enforcement remedy definition

Enforcement remedy means one or more of the department's responses to a boarding home's noncompliance with chapter 18.20 RCW and this chapter, as authorized by RCW 18.20.190.
Enforcement remedy means one or more of the department's re- sponses to an assisted living facility's noncompliance with chapter
Enforcement remedy means one or more of the department's responses to an assisted living facility's non- compliance with chapter 18.20 RCW and this chapter, as authorized by RCW 18.20.190.

More Definitions of Enforcement remedy

Enforcement remedy means one or more of the department's responses to a boarding home's noncompliance

Related to Enforcement remedy

  • enforcement order means a final enforcement order or a provisional enforcement order;

  • law enforcement means the prevention, detection or investigation of terrorist offences or other serious criminal offences;

  • Enforcement Notice means a written notice delivered, at a time when an ABL Default or Note Default has occurred and is continuing, by either the ABL Agent or the Notes Agent to the other announcing that an Enforcement Period has commenced, specifying the relevant event of default, stating the current balance of the ABL Obligations or the Note Obligations, as applicable, and requesting the current balance of the ABL Obligations or Note Obligations, as applicable, owing to the noticed party.

  • Enforcement Action means any action to enforce any Obligations or Loan Documents or to exercise any rights or remedies relating to any Collateral (whether by judicial action, self-help, notification of Account Debtors, exercise of setoff or recoupment, exercise of any right to vote or act in a Loan Party’s Insolvency Proceeding, or otherwise), in each case solely to the extent permitted by the Loan Documents.

  • Remedies means actions designed to restore or preserve the complainant’s equal access to education after a respondent is found responsible. Remedies may include the same individualized services that constitute supportive measures, but need not be non-punitive or non-disciplinary, nor must they avoid burdening the respondent.