Examples of National Consumer Council in a sentence
CAP proposed a National Consumer Council and liased with the SCA throughout 1970 –1971.40 But at this time government scrutiny of the SCA’s activities had led to a formal protest and the resignation of the entire SCA committee.
We find support in our view by research conducted by the National Consumer Council (NCC) which indicated that consumers are most likely keen to participate directly in issues that have an immediate and local impact on their lives.
The Consumer Council thereby took on the functions of the National Consumer Council (which was abolished) relating to consumer matters in NI for postal services.
The statistical goal is usually simple data description or estimation of acharacteristic in the study population (Burns et al 2014:237).
A member of theadvisory board of the National Consumer Council and Governor of the Pensions Policy Institute.
The Order transfers to the Consumer Council certain functions of the National Consumer Council under the Postal Services Act 2000 the Consumer Estate Agents and Redress Act 2007 and the Postal Services Act 2011 which are all UK acts.
These members believed instead that ABSs would simply be a hazard to access to justice, allowing companies to “cherry pick” profitable business.115 In committee, Lord Whitty (then chair of the National Consumer Council) relayed his concern that the bill’s stated aim to advance the public interest “includes a big chunk of the interests of the legal profession itself.”116 Similar debates unfolded in the House of Commons.
Responses to the 2007 Billing and Metering Consultation and the May 2009 Consultation on Smart Metering for Electricity and Gas by a number of consumer organisations, such as the National Consumer Council, confirmed that there are a range of potential consumer related issues.
The seven P’s of the marketing mix are equally applicable, but only with the developments advocated by the Department of Health and the National Consumer Council (2005) and summarised by Proctor (2007).
Having ‘asked parents what mattered to them’, the report of the education consultation exercise (National Consumer Council et al., 1999b) distinguished between what could and what could not be addressed within the existing framework, and reported accordingly to parents.