923 resultados para conforming bid (tender)
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The Ontario Tender Fruit Marketing Board operates under the Farm Producers Marketing Act. It covers all tender fruit farmers who produce either fresh or canned products. Today the board has over 500 grower-members. Tender fruit in the Niagara region includes: peaches, pears, plums, grapes and cherries. The fruits are used in a number of different ways, from jams and jellies to desserts, sauces and wine. Peaches were first harvested along the Niagara river in 1779. Peter Secord (Laura Secord’s uncle) is thought to be the first farmer to plant fruit trees when he took a land grant near Niagara in the mid 1780s. Since the beginnings of Secord’s farm, peaches, pears and plums have been grown in the Niagara region ever since. However, none of the original varities of peach trees remain today. Peaches were often used for more than eating by early settlers. The leaves and bark of the tree was used to make teas for conditions such as chronic bronchitis, coughs and gastritis. Cherries have been known to have anti-inflammatory and pain relieving properties. Like peaches and cherries, pears had many uses for the early pioneers. The wood was used to make furniture. The juice made excellent ciders and the leaves provided yellow dyes. Plums have been around for centuries, not only in the Niagara region, but throughout the world. They have appeared in pre-historic writings and were present for the first Thanksgiving in 1621. The grape industry in Ontario has also been around for centuries. It began in 1798 when land was granted to Major David Secord (brother-in-law to Laura Secord) slightly east of St. David’s, on what is Highway No. 8 today. Major Secord’s son James was given a part of the land in 1818 and in 1857 passed it onto Porter Adams. Adams is known to be the first person to plant grapes in Ontario1. Tender fruits are best grown in warm temperate climates. The Niagara fruit belt, stretching 65km from Hamilton to Niagara on the Lake, provides the climate necessary for this fruit production. This belt produces 90% of Ontario’s annual tender fruit crop. It is one of the largest fruit producing regions in all of Canada.
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Specifications and form of tender for grading for the Port Dalhousie and Thorold Railway, March (5 pages, handwritten), 1854.
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Note regarding the phone tender from Newman Brothers for the lily pond, n.d.
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Broadside, 47 cm. x 31 cm. with a coloured picture of a case engine and tender [steam engine] printed by Meyer-Rotier of Milwaukee. On the back is a sketch of a building. This has a stamp on the back which indicates that this is an exhibit in the High Court of Justice in Coburg in the case of Bigelow vs. Powers et al. This item has been torn down the middle and taped. This does not affect the text nor picture, Oct. 11, 1909.
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Los datos de ISBN y D.L. han sido tomados de los créditos del CD-ROM, en la carátula del mismo consta: 978-84-691-8422-6 y AS-07594-2008
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El propósito central de este estudio de caso es describir y analizar todo el proceso institucional entre la FIFA y el Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo (BID), para la gestión e implementación del movimiento “Football for Hope” en la región de América Latina, específicamente en la Fundación Colombianitos en Colombia, durante el periodo 2009-2012,visto inicialmente desde las Instituciones Internacionales, prosiguiendo a partir de una plano regionaly una perspectiva nacional, finalizando dentro de un ámbito organizacional, todo analizado por medio de los conceptos de Cooperación Internacional de Robert Keohane, el concepto de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo y junto a la teoría del Desarrollo Humano según Amartya Sen y Martha Nussbaum.
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El interés de este estudio de caso es explicar el rol del Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo [BID] y el Banco Mundial [BM] en el programa de transferencias condicionadas Familias en Acción de Colombia durante el 2001-2013. Se identificará cómo a través de estos programas el BID y el BM han contribuido con Familias en Acción para la reducción de la pobreza, la desigualdad de ingresos y el desarrollo del capital humano de familias vulnerables con el fin de evitar la pobreza inter-generacional. La importancia y crecimiento de la cooperación internacional por mejorar los aspectos sociales y económicos de países en vías desarrollo es indispensable para generar progreso entre las naciones con la finalidad de hacer un sistema internacional más equitativo e inclusivo.
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En este artículo se explican las características del Proyecto Roma, a través de un caso práctico en el que niños y niñas de cinco años deciden en asamblea ayudar a un compañero a solventar un problema económico. De acuerdo con los principios pedagógicos del proyecto, se organiza el aula en zonas de desarrollo, lo que permite atender a todos los niños y niñas a la vez. Se planifica lo que se va a hacer y cómo se va a hacer. La asamblea es un espacio en el que se comparten experiencias, vivencias y anécdotas, y de donde surgen los proyectos de investigación para cada grupo. En ella, los niños y niñas aprenden a expresar sus ideas, sus inquietudes, su forma de pensar y entender el mundo, y sobre todo, a escuchar con atención y a valorar la opinión de los demás.
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Resumen basado en el de la publicaci??n
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Formal and analytical models that contractors can use to assess and price project risk at the tender stage have proliferated in recent years. However, they are rarely used in practice. Introducing more models would, therefore, not necessarily help. A better understanding is needed of how contractors arrive at a bid price in practice, and how, and in what circumstances, risk apportionment actually influences pricing levels. More than 60 proposed risk models for contractors that are published in journals were examined and classified. Then exploratory interviews with five UK contractors and documentary analyses on how contractors price work generally and risk specifically were carried out to help in comparing the propositions from the literature to what contractors actually do. No comprehensive literature on the real bidding processes used in practice was found, and there is no evidence that pricing is systematic. Hence, systematic risk and pricing models for contractors may have no justifiable basis. Contractors process their bids through certain tendering gateways. They acknowledge the risk that they should price. However, the final settlement depends on a set of complex, micro-economic factors. Hence, risk accountability may be smaller than its true cost to the contractor. Risk apportionment occurs at three stages of the whole bid-pricing process. However, analytical approaches tend not to incorporate this, although they could.
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Tendering is one of the stages in construction procurement that requires extensive information and documents exchange. However, tender documents are not always clear in practice. The aim of this study was to ascertain the clarity and adequacy of tender documents used in practice. Access was negotiated into two UK construction firms and the whole tender process for two projects was shadowed for 6-7 weeks in each firm using an ethnographic approach. A significant amount of tender queries, amendments and addenda were recorded. This showed that quality of tender documentation is still a problem in construction despite the existence of standards like Co-ordinated Project Information (1987) and British Standard 1192 (1984 and 1990) that are meant to help in producing clear and consistent project information. Poor quality tender documents are a source of inaccurate estimates, claims and disputes on contracts. Six recommendations are presented to help in improving the quality of tender documentation. Further research is needed into the recommendations to help improve the quality of tender documents, perhaps in conjunction with an industry-wide investigation into the level of incorporation of CPI principles in practice.
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Research into the topic of liquidity has greatly benefited from the availability of data. Although bid-ask spreads were inaccessible to researchers, Roll (1984) provided a conceptual model that estimated the effective bid-ask prices from regular time series data, recorded on a daily or longer interval. Later data availability improved and researchers were able to address questions regarding the factors that influenced the spreads and the relationship between spreads and risk, return and liquidity. More recently transaction data have been used to measure the effective spread and researchers have been able to refine the concepts of liquidity to include the impact of transactions on price movements (Clayton and McKinnon, 2000) on a trade-by-trade analysis. This paper aims to use techniques that combine elements from all three approaches and, by studying US data over a relatively long time period, to throw light on earlier research as well as to reveal the changes in liquidity over the period controlling for extraneous factors such as market, age and size of REIT. It also reveals some comparable results for the UK market over the same period.