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51. Real Estate Act -- REAL ESTATE REGULATIONS
- www.qp.gov.bc.ca
- REAL ESTATE REGULATIONS.
- Voting papers.
- Voting.
- Security and counting of voting papers.
- Division 9 — Other Conditions of Licences and General Regulations.
- Voting papers.
- (a) each agent or nominee, a voting paper in a form approved by the superintendent containing in alphabetical order the names of all agents or nominees nominated for election from the district in which such agent or nominee has his chief place of business, and.
- (b) each salesman, a voting paper in a form approved by the superintendent containing in alphabetical order the names of all salesmen nominated for election from the district in which is located the office at which such salesman is employed.
- Voting.
- (3) Each agent or nominee or each salesman shall mark his prospective voting paper with an "X" opposite the name of each candidate for whom he desires to vote, and shall return his voting paper to the secretary of the council in the envelope or envelopes that may be provided for that purpose.
- (4) A voting paper that is not marked in accordance with this regulation shall not be counted.
- (5) If any voting paper is received by the secretary on or after the day set for the election, the voting paper shall not be counted.
- 08 The inadvertent omission to mail a notice of the nomination of candidates, a nomination form or a voting paper to any licensee shall not invalidate an election.
- Security and counting of voting papers.
- 10 (1) The secretary shall safely keep, unopened, all envelopes containing voting papers lodged with him prior to the day of the election.
- (4) The secretary shall keep a record disclosing the number of voting papers received, the number of voting papers counted for each candidate and the number of spoiled papers.
52. Party Affiliation and Primary Voting 2000
- www.fec.gov
- Party Affiliation and Primary Voting 2000.
- All voters receive ballots for each political party before entering the voting booth but may only vote for candidates in one party; there is no Presidential primary.
- All voters receive ballots for each political party before entering the voting booth but may only vote for candidates in one party (the results of the Dem primary are not binding on the selection of delegates).
- All voters receive ballots for each political party before entering the voting booth but may only vote for candidates in one party.
- By 2nd Friday before the election if voting in person; by 3rd Friday before the election if registering by mail.
- All voter receive ballots for each political party before entering the voting booth but may only vote for candidates of one party. ... primary, a voter must choose one party ballot before voting; a public record of each voter's ballot choice is kept.
- All voters receive ballots for each political party before entering the voting booth but may only vote for candidates in one party.
- Voters receive the ballot for the party with which they are registered; same-day registration permits any voter to declare or change party affiliationat the polls and reverse the change after voting.
- O (pc) = Open (Private Choice) Voters receive ballots for each political party and make their choice of which primary to participate in within the privacy of the voting booth.
53. Consultative Document on Cross Border Voting in Europe
- www.icsa.org.uk
- YOU ARE IN: NEWS > CONSULTATION DOCUMENTS > Consultative Document on Cross Border Voting in Europe.
- Consultative Document on Cross Border Voting in Europe.
- Re: Consultative Document on Cross Border Voting in Europe.
- ICSA is also represented on a number of committees including the DTI working party on Electronic Proxy Appointments and the independent Shareholder Voting Working Group. ...
- to the Consultation Document onCross Border Voting in Europe.
- Q1 Do the problems associated with cross-border voting described above require regulation, or can they be solved efficiently and in due course by market forces?.
- Q2 If the problems associated with cross-border voting require regulation, do they require regulation on a European level or should and could regulation be left to the individual member states?.
- Perversely, increasing the number of Institutional shareholder votes may result in a reduction of private shareholders voting as their impact is seen to be lessened even further.
- Q3 Do you agree with these assumptions as a basis for regulation of the problems associated with cross-border voting?.
- In fact there should be nothing to prevent them from agreeing to give the voting rights to someone with no direct interest in the chain of investment at all if that is what they wish to do.
- Systems will have to ensure that all prior notifications regarding voting rights for the shares in question are voided whenever a transfer occurs no matter at what point in the chain it happens.
- Also, what happens as regards lent stock where the original "ultimate investor" may not even know that the stock has been lent and believes that they are still registered as having the voting rights?.
- When stock is lent it could be lent without voting rights which should remain with the initial "ultimate investor" (but see response to Q14). ...
- It would be up to the investor who wishes to retain the voting rights to establish his intentions at the time of purchase. ...
- There are however problems in enforcing such notices on non-UK investors/intermediaries and it would be an advance if the obligation to comply could be extended to apply throughout the EU, which could be achieved without the need for provisions on cross-border voting.
- In the event that regulations are introduced it should be on an opt-in basis. ...
54. American Voices Abroad 100,000 for 2004 FAQ: Voting
- www.americanvoicesabroad.net
- American Voices Abroad presents: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Voting From Abroad (But Were Afraid to Ask?) .
- and What About Taxes? Table of contents: INTRODUCTION WHY VOTE? WHO CAN VOTE FROM ABROAD? HOW DO I REGISTER AND VOTE FROM ABROAD? WHAT ARE THE DEADLINES? WHAT ABOUT TAXES? CALENDAR OF US PRIMARIES 2004 INTRODUCTION Voting from abroad is a four-step process: STEP ONE - Find the address of your local election official in the US, who serves your county/borough in the state in which you are registered to vote/plan to register to vote. ... US Consular Services at any US Embassy should have the Federal Voter Assistance Guide available for use and are required by law to assist you in voting. ... American Voices Abroad (AVA) welcomes your comments and suggestions regarding this voting information sheet. ... A Supreme Court decision of March 21, 1972 declared lengthy requirements for voting in state and local elections unconstitutional and suggested that 30 days living in a state was an ample period. ... Whether or not voting may have tax consequences for you is discussed in more detail in "WHAT ABOUT TAXES?" below. ... HOW DO I REGISTER AND VOTE FROM ABROAD? Is there a central place to find out the residency requirements and voting regulations for my state or territory? Every state and territory runs its own elections and has different registration requirements, different deadlines, and different mechanics for dealing with requests for absentee ballots. There are 55 different voting authorities, including the territories, and there are 55 different regulations for registering and voting. ... html will take you directly to your states page in the FVAP website, listing the voting regulations of your state and the addresses of all the local election officials in your state. US embassies and consulates, military voting officers, and local political/citizen groups such as Democrats Abroad and Republicans Abroad have copies of the Federal Voter Assistance Guide, which also lists your states voting regulations and the addresses of the local election official in your state. ... However, by Congressional mandate the Federal Voting Assistance Program (FVAP), in conjunction with several states and counties, has begun conducting a large internet registration and voting demonstration for the 2004 election called SERVE (Secure Electronic Registration and Voting Experiment). ... How do I vote from abroad? There are no voting booths for US citizens abroad.
55. RULES AND REGULATIONS ON LOCAL ABSENTEE VOTING IN CONNECTION WITH THE MAY 14, 2001 ELECTIONS - CHAN ROBLES VIRTUAL LAW LIBRARY
- www.chanrobles.com
- 3439 RULES AND REGULATIONS ON LOCAL ABSENTEE VOTING IN CONNECTION WITH THE MAY 14, 2001 NATIONAL AND LOCAL ELECTIONS. ... 157 PROVIDING FOR ABSENTEE VOTING BY OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES OF GOVERNMENT WHO ARE AWAY FROM THE PLACES OF THEIR REGISTRATION BY REASON OF OFFICIAL FUNCTIONS ON ELECTION DAY. ...
- 3439 RULES AND REGULATIONS ON LOCAL ABSENTEE VOTING IN CONNECTION WITH THE MAY 14, 2001 NATIONAL AND LOCAL ELECTIONS. ...
- 157 issued on March 30, 1987, resolved to promulgate, as it hereby promulgates, the following rules on absentee voting: .
- Absentee voting defined. - Absentee voting as provided under R. ... 157, is a system of voting whereby any person who by reason of public functions and duties, is not in his/her place of registration on election day may vote in the city/municipality where he/she is assigned on election day: Provided, That he/she is a duly registered voter. ...
- Who are entitled to avail of absentee voting. – Absentee voting shall be exercised by: (a) government officials and employees; .
- - Only the positions for Senator and Party-list shall be voted for under the absentee voting. ...
- Committee on absentee voting. - A Committee on Absentee Voting (Committee) is hereby created composed of the Director IV of the Election and Barangay Affairs Department as chairman, and the Directors III of the Law Department and the Election Records and Statistics Department respectively, as members, .
- The Committee shall have the following functions: (a) Receive applications for absentee voting; .
- (b) Verify whether the applicants are eligible for absentee voting; .
- (c) Act on applications for absentee voting; .
- (h) Deliver the absentee ballots contained in a ballot box immediately after the close of voting on May 14, 2001 to the special BEI for counting; .
56. Regulations / CITEL
- www.citel.oas.org
- Home ~ About CITEL ~ Regulations.
- Regulations.
- Regulations of CITEL .
- OfficersElection of the Chairman and Vice-Chairmen, Article 22 Duties of the Chairman of the CITEL Assembly, Article 23 Participation by the Assembly Chairman in Voting and Discussion, Article 24 Duties of the Vice-Chairmen Acting as Chairman, Article 25 Absence or Disability of the Chairman and Vice-Chairmen, Article 26 .
- VotingVoting on Proposals, Article 54 Abstentions, Article 55 Ties, Article 56 Repeat Vote, Article 57 Voting on Amendments, Article 58 Article 59 Article 60 Article 61 .
- Voting RulesArticle 94 .
- Other ProvisionsEntry into Force, Article 96 Amendments to the Regulations, Article 97 Suspension of provisions from Chapter II, Article 98 Unregulated matters, Article 99 .
- REGULATIONS OF CITELą.
- 1224 (XXIII-O/93), established the Inter-American Telecommunication Commission and approved its Statute; That in accordance with Article 33 of its Statute, the Inter-American Telecommunication Commission (CITEL) is governed by its Statute, its Regulations, and the resolutions of the General Assembly; That the first Assembly of the Inter-American Telecommunication Commission, held from February 21 to 25, 1994, in Uruguay, in accordance with Article 5. f of its Statute, approved its Regulations; and That in pursuance of Article 35 of the Statute, CITEL is required to submit its Regulations, together with its first Annual Report, to the General Assembly of the Organization of American States, .
- To take note of the annual report and the Regulations of the Inter-American Telecommunication Commission (CITEL) attached hereto. ...
- CITEL is governed by its Statute and these Regulations. The Regulations complement the Statute which was approved by Resolution AG/RES. ... In case of conflict between the Statute and these Regulations, the Statute shall take precedence. ...
- The organs shall include such committees, sub-committees, working groups and ad hoc groups, joint working groups and rapporteurs as may be established in accordance with these Regulations. ...
- Delegations shall have the right to participate with voice and vote, in all public and private meetings of the Assembly, including its committees, subcommittees, working groups and ad hoc groups, in accordance with these Regulations and any special Rules of Procedure adopted for such meetings. ...
57. Securities Regulations Voting Rights
- affordable-attorney.com
- Securities Regulations Voting Rights.
- whistleblowers, voting rights, contingency fee lawyer good law firms. ...
- securities regulations : civil wills and trusts, attorneys at law, credit repair, witnessed or experienced violence. ...
- understand impact of crime : securities regulations, family. ...
- victim witness program : securities regulations consumer protection. ...
- public accomadations law : securities regulations voting rights transportation law. ...
- securities regulations : living will, workers comp, file for waiver, arrange to meet at clients houses. ...
- securities regulations : pacts and treaties, probate estates voting rights. ...
- securities regulations voting rights : women s health issues, family law section, sports and entertainment. ...
- securities regulations voting rights : scopists, connecticut lawyers law firms attorneys. ... securities regulations, united states, reliable law firms, ssi. ...
- securities regulations property and real estate law : contract and commercial lawyers attorneys law firms, codes and acts. ...
- securities regulations, holocaust mediation consultation. ...
- motor vehicle accidents logging and timber : paralegal, protective services, searching for an attorney securities regulations. ...
- securities regulations small businesses law and legal : import export, assessment diagnosis treatment, regulation civil right cases. ...
- securities regulations : entertainment law statistics lemon law, law services. ...
58. S.I. No. 48/1978: WORKER PARTICIPATION (STATE ENTERPRISES) (POSTAL VOTING) REGULATIONS, 1978.
- www.irishstatutebook.ie
- 48/1978: WORKER PARTICIPATION (STATE ENTERPRISES) (POSTAL VOTING) REGULATIONS, 1978.
- 48/1978: WORKER PARTICIPATION (STATE ENTERPRISES) (POSTAL VOTING) REGULATIONS, 1978. ...
- WORKER PARTICIPATION (STATE ENTERPRISES) (POSTAL VOTING) REGULATIONS, 1978.
- WORKER PARTICIPATION (STATE ENTERPRISES) (POSTAL VOTING) REGULATIONS, 1978.
- 6 of 1977), and following consultation with the Taoiseach, the Minister for Finance, the Minister for Industry, Commerce and Energy and the Minister for Tourism and Transport and with each of the bodies specified in the Schedule to the said Act hereby make the following regulations:.
- These Regulations may be cited as the Worker Participation (State Enterprises) (Postal Voting) Regulations, 1978.
- In these Regulations—.
- "list of postal voters" has the meaning assigned to it by Regulation 8 of these Regulations;.
- "postal ballot box" means a ballot box provided under Regulation 12 of these Regulations for the reception of covering envelopes returned by postal voters;.
- "postal ballot paper" means a ballot paper issued pursuant to Regulation 11 of these Regulations;.
- "postal voter" means a person to whom a ballot paper is issued under these Regulations;.
- "the Principal Regulations" means the Worker Participation (State Enterprises) (General) Regulations, 1978.
- (1) A person whose name is on a list of electors referred to in Regulation 17(1) of the Principal Regulations shall be entitled to apply under this Regulation to vote by post at an election relating to the designated body to which the list relates.
- ( a ) the application shall be in the form set out in the Schedule to these Regulations,.
- and a notice given under this Regulation shall also include a statement of the provisions contained in Regulation 3(2) of these Regulations.
- At an election the returning officer shall, not later than seventy days before the nomination day, arrange for the provision of an adequate supply of application forms for use in applications under these Regulations and such an application form shall be supplied free of charge by the returning officer to any person applying therefor.
59. 3The Election regulations today
- www.eucybervote.org
- 3 - The Election regulations today.
- 3 THE ELECTION REGULATIONS TODAY.
- In this chapter, we investigate which rules national constitutions and/or legislation provide for public elections and how the basic principles, set forth in the international regulations analysed above, are being concretised.
- The analysis will mainly extend to the rules relating to the voting process. ... In the contrary, this report intends to point out, in general, the requirements, difficulties and restrictions for implementing an online voting system and to point out, in general, which changes in election regulation will have to be made in order an online voting system to be able to be implemented.
- The following aspects of the voting process will be important for implementing an online voting system:.
- Voting place.
- Notification of the voting procedure to the voter.
- Transfer of the ballot to the voting authority.
- In 1999, the Dutch Minister for Urban Policy and Integration of Ethnic Minorities has started a project "Distance Voting". ...
- This accords with stage 2 of the polling place Internet voting system, as provided by the California Internet Voting Task Force. 22 Therefore, a system of "electronic distance voting" is being developed. ...
- An other object of the project is to investigate if it will be possible in the future to implement a true remote Internet voting system, in which the voter could vote for instance from his home computer. ...
- The Election Regulations do prescribe rigorously the way in which elections have to be organized. Accordingly, also the new voting techniques will have to be described in these regulations. ...
- The Dutch "Expert Centre" (consultants for the application of Information Technology for government) has analysed the technical feasibility of such a voter's register, which would enable the implementation of future distance voting systems. In its final report ("Definition Report Distance Voting"23), the expert centre concludes that it would be technically possible to create such a countrywide voter's register and that this online register could be developed for the distance voting experiment in 2003. ...
60. Article: New Zealand elections
- en.wikipedia.org
- 1 Voting.
- 2 History of voting in New Zealand.
- 7 Lowering the voting age.
- Voting.
- Elections always occur on Saturday, so as to ensure that people are not prevented from voting due to work commitments. Voting is done at various polling stations, generally established in schools, churches, or other such public places. ...
- Voting itself is done on printed voting ballots, with voters marking their choices (one candidate vote and one party vote - see MMP) with an ink pen provided for them. ...
- It is compulsory for anyone who meets the requirements for voting to be on the electoral roll, even if they do not intend to vote. ...
- An electorate is a voting district. ...
- Voting stations close at 7:00pm on election day. ... Regular vote counting is generally completed on the night of the election, but special votes (see "Voting") can take longer than this, occasionally producing surprise upsets when they are announced. ...
- History of voting in New Zealand.
- Initially, the restrictions on voting rights were relatively high. ...
- In theory, this would have allowed Maori men to vote, but electoral regulations prevented land held communally from being counted under the property qualification. ... Despite the exclusion of Maori and women, however, New Zealand's voting franchise was highly liberal when compared to many other countries. ...
- Lowering the voting age.
61. Untitled Document
- www.law.ku.edu
- In the case of the Osages, although wealth did not bring about termination, at least not in the usual sense, it did bring about a slew of additional problems and federal regulations. ... Suppose further that Congress sealed the deal through legislation which also reorganized the tribal government and that later on, the BIA issued regulations providing that only stockholders could vote for the tribal government. ...
- Along with financial wealth came a wealth of congressional legislation, BIA regulations, and an invasion of non-Indian speculators and criminals on to the reservation. ...
- Not only is the form of government determined by congressional legislation but voting for the government is determined by BIA regulations. Under these regulations, in order to vote for the tribal council, one has to own a share otherwise known as a headright, 9 in the tribal mineral estate and, just like a corporation, the amount of votes one can cast is determined by the amount of shares one owns. ... Although both the Logan and Fletcher courts held that the Osage Tribal Council created under the 1906 Act was not only a Mineral Council but the only institution the United States could recognize as the Osage Tribal government, in both decisions left unanswered were the following questions: (1) Who constituted the present membership of the Osage Tribe? (2) Is the BIAs regulation limiting voting rights to headright owners denying other Osages the equal protection of the law? (3) Did the 1881 Osage Tribal Constitution, or at least parts thereof, survive the 1906 Act? .
- The larger question this article is discussing is whether the Osage Tribe has survived as an Indian tribe or whether the onslaught of wealth along with its seemingly inevitable by-product of federal legislation and BIA regulations has either quasi-terminated the Tribe or transformed it into more of a corporation than an Indian tribe. The narrower purposes of this article are to discuss who is a member of the Osage Tribe and whether the BIA Osage voting regulations, limiting the franchise to Osage Indians who own a headright interest, are constitutional. 10 These two issues are tied together since the issue of who is a tribal member has to be addressed before deciding whether the BIA voting regulations are constitutional, since presumably only tribal members can vote in a tribal election. The BIA regulations are arguably valid if the only members of the Osage Tribe are those Osages possessing a headright interest. 11 However, if the membership of the tribe goes beyond this list, the regulations would deny some Osages the equal protection of the law as well as their fundamental right to vote, which is guaranteed by the United States Constitution. ...
- Part II discusses the validity of the BIA regulations restricting voting for the Tribal Council to those Osages who own headright interests if it is assumed that the membership of the Tribe extends beyond these individuals. Having concluded that these regulations are constitutionally suspect, Part III discusses the procedural problems in legally challenging the regulations and offers some potential solutions.
- Considering the 1906 Act as a termination act is also contrary to the BIAs Osage voting regulations since they allow Osages who have inherited a headright but were not on the 1906 roll to vote in the election of the Osage Tribal government. ...
- However, it can also be argued that although Congress did not address the future membership of the Tribe in 1906, it eventually became aware of the fact that voting was restricted to headright owners, yet it did not do anything about it. ... However, even though congressional inaction can imply tacit approval of the voting restrictions, there is nothing that indicates that the reason for this silent approval was that Congress believed that the membership was restricted to headright owners and not that it just believed that among all tribal members, only headright owners should vote. ...
62. CT Secretary of the State - Main
- www.sots.state.ct.us
- Regulations.
- Notice: All Secretary of the State Regulations will be published on this site. The list that currently appears below is incomplete, but we will be adding sections until all effective regulations relating to the Secretary of the State's Office are available. ...
- Standards for Approval of Direct Recording Electronic Voting Machines.
- Voting machines approved prior to regulation. ...
- Standards for Approval of Marksense and Punchcard Voting Machines.
- Voting machines approved prior to regulation. ...
- In municipalities in which the Director of the Census has determined, pursuant to Section 4(f)(3) of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended, that more than five per centum of the citizens of voting age residing in such municipality are members of a Spanish language minority, the registrars of voters shall employ a Spanish speaking person on a full time basis or retain at least two Spanish speaking persons on a stand-by basis to assist Spanish speaking electors and citizens.
- In any municipality where the registrars of voters cause a canvass of the electors to be made by mail pursuant to subdivision (2) of section 9-32 of the general statutes, such canvass shall be conducted in accordance with these regulations.
- For purposes of these regulations, "last completed registry list" means the registry list for the municipality including any changes, additions and deletions made on or before the date when the notice of canvass is sent to the elector.
- Section 9-32-5 of The Regulations of Connecticut State Agencies is repealed.
- In any municipality where the registrars of voters cause a canvass of the electors to be made by telephone pursuant to subdivision (3) of section 9-32 of the general statutes, such telephone canvass shall be conducted in accordance with these regulations.
- If, on the basis of either a canvass by mail or a canvass by telephone conducted pursuant to section 9-32 of the general statutes and these regulations, the registrars determine that the name of an elector should be erased from the registry list because of his or her removal from the municipality, they shall proceed as provided in section 9-35 of the general statutes only after having made two (2) attempts during the canvass to contact the elector using at least two (2) of the following methods: by mail, telephone or in person, and only after making a written memorandum of the two methods used and the dates of the two attempts. ...
- Before the close of the polls, the registrar(s) must contact the polling place officials at the polling place in the voting district where the elector was formerly registered to notify such polling place officials to remove the elector from the registry list.
- STANDARDS FOR APPROVAL OF DIRECT RECORDING ELECTRONIC VOTING MACHINES.
- The secretary of the state may approve only those direct recording electronic voting machines which have been certified by an independent test authority, accredited by the National Association of State Election Directors, as meeting the voluntary performance and test standards for voting systems adopted by the Federal Election Commission on January 25, 1990, as amended from time to time, and which meet the standards specified in Sections 9-241-1 to 9-241-36, inclusive, of these regulations and the requirements of the Connecticut constitution and the general statutes.
63. FR Doc 03-20451
- www.bankersonline.com
- Federal Register: August 21, 2003 (Volume 68, Number 162) Rules and Regulations Page 50457-50461 From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access wais. ... gov DOCID:fr21au03-1 ======================================================================== Rules and Regulations Federal Register ________________________________________________________________________ This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U. ... The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents. ... The changes are mostly technical in nature or clarify previous FDIC positions; however, the final rule includes a waiver provision to its regulations. ... Background Part 303 of the FDIC's regulations (part 303) generally describes the procedures to be followed by both the FDIC and applicants with respect to applications and notices required to be filed by statute or regulation. ... On the same date, the FDIC issued the Notice of proposed rulemaking (``the notice of proposed rulemaking'') for revisions to parts 303, 347, 348, and 359 and technical corrections to other regulations in chapter III. ... The amendments merely clarify the regulations in this regard. ... 83(a) exemptions for acquisitions of the voting shares of bank holding companies, and for acquisitions of the voting shares of savings and loan holding companies, and adding technical conforming changes to various sections in 12 CFR 303. ... While no comments were received specifically with regard to the EGRPRA request, the FDIC notes that the federal financial regulatory agencies are soliciting comments on their plan to identify and eliminate outdated, unnecessary or unduly burdensome regulations imposed on insured depository institutions. ... The request for comment includes application regulations such as 12 CFR part 303. ... The commenters stated they believed that if the FDIC waived regulations not required by statute, it is likely that the agency will waive public comment, public notice requirements, and other vital parts of the merger application process.
64. Foundation Bylaws
- www.winstontrails.org
- All present and future Voting Members, and, where applicable, all Owners, and their tenants, future tenants, guests and invitees that might use the facilities of The Properties in any manner, are subject to the covenants, restrictions and regulations set forth in these Bylaws and in the Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions for WINSTON Trails (the "Declaration"), recorded or to be recorded in the Public Records of Palm Beach County, Florida.
- VOTING RIGHTS. ...
- Voting Rights. The Foundation shall have three (3) classes of Voting Members with voting rights, as provided in the Declaration and Articles.
- Unless a higher percentage is required expressly in these Bylaws or in the Declaration or Articles, any action which is required to be taken by voting Members of the Foundation may be so taken by a vote of a majority of a quorum of the votes of Voting Members of the Foundation, and for purposes hereof and of the Declaration and Articles, the term "majority of Voting Members" or reference to some specific percentage of Voting Members shall mean a majority or specific percentage of the votes of voting Members present at a meeting of the Foundation at which a quorum is attained and not of the Voting Members themselves.
- Except as otherwise provided in these Bylaws, the presence in person or by prosy of at least a majority of the total votes of the Voting Members of the Foundation shall constitute a quorum of the Voting Members. Such voting Members present at a duly called or held meeting at which a quorum thereof is present may continue to accomplish the business of the meeting until adjournment, notwithstanding the withdrawal during the meeting of enough Voting Members to leave less than such quorum. ...
- Proxies Votes of Voting Members may be cast in person or by prosy. ...
- The Foundation shall have the responsibility of administering the Common Areas, approving the annual budget, establishing and collecting all Assessments enforcing applicable rules and regulations and performing all other obligations of the Foundation hereunder and under the Declaration, including, but not limited to, arranging for the management of the Common Areas pursuant to an agreement containing provisions relating to the duties, obligations, removal and compensation of the Management Company. ...
- place of Meetings of Voting Members. Meetings of the Voting Members shall be held on the Winston Trails property, or such other suitable place in Palm Beach County as may be designated by the Board of Directors.
- Annual Meeting of Voting Members. The first annual meeting of Voting Members shall be held on the date at the place and at the time determined by the Board of Directors, provided, however, that said meeting shall be held within sissy (60) days after there is duly elected a Class A voting Member. Thereafter, the annual meetings of the Voting Members shall be held on the date, and at the time determined by the Board of Directors from time to time, provided that there shall be an annual meeting every calendar year and no later than thirteen (13) months after the last preceding annual meeting, if possible. At each annual meeting there shall be elected by ballot of the Voting Members a Board of Directors, in accordance with the requirements of these Bylaws, but subject to the Articles of Incorporation. ... The Voting Members may also transact such other business of the Foundation as may properly come before the meeting. Each First Mortgagee of a Lot may designate a non-voting representative to attend all annual meetings of the Voting Members.
65. untitled
- www.flinders.edu.au
- The regulations concerning elections were amended in August 2003. ... The Election Regulations are available as a download.
- Election Regulations (80k) .
- REGULATIONS.
- Election Regulations.
- All officers of the Association shall carry out the directions of General Student Meetings and the Student Council and act in accordance with the Constitution, Regulations and Policy of the Association.
- 5 shall be a non-voting member of the Student Organisation Committee and ensure that the Association's Auditor's report and budget proposal for the following calendar year are presented to a meeting of the Student Organisation Committee before October 31 in each year.
- 2 shall carry out the directions of General Student Meetings and the Student Council and act in accordance with the Constitution, Regulations and Policy of the Association;.
- 2 carry out the directions of General Student Meetings and the Student Council and act in accordance with the Constitution, regulations and Policy of the Association; .
- 5 Students' Council meetings shall be conducted in accordance with Schedule 1 (Standing Orders) of these Regulations.
- General Student meetings shall be conducted in accordance with Schedule 1 (Standing Orders) of these regulations.
- Applicability of Regulations and Timing of Elections.
- 1 These regulations shall apply for the conduct of elections of all elected positions of the Students’ Association with the exception of:.
- 5 of the Students’ Association’s Regulations;.
- 2 Student Radio Director (s) who shall be elected according to the procedure outlined in Schedule Three ‘Student Radio Department’ of the Students’ Association Regulations.
- 2 Paid office bearers elected according to these regulations shall normally hold office for the calendar year.
66. http://www.ffhsj.com/ginsburg_art/Comment.txt
- www.ffhsj.com
- COMMENTS ON THE PROPOSED REGULATIONS ON REVERSE TRIANGULAR MERGERS Martin D. ... These comments were prepared by Professor Ginsburg in response to a notice of proposed rulemaking (LR-1994) published in the Federal Register for December 31, 1980, which set forth proposed regulations under section 368(a)(2)(E) of the Code. ... As proposed, the regulations are to be effective for reverse triangular mergers occurring after the same date. * * * Almost exactly a decade intervened between the enactment of section 368(a)(2)(E) and the publication of proposed regulations under it. In light of the approach to the statute taken in the proposed regulations, sensible administration of the revenue laws would have been better served had the Internal Revenue Service delayed publication at least another decade. The apparent object of the proposed regulations is to make it as difficult as possible for taxpayers to use the reverse triangular merger device. If adopted in the form proposed, the regulations will convert section 368(a)(2)(E) to a trap for the ill-advised. The proposed regulations, in short, are inconsistent with sound tax policy, sensible tax administration, and the congressional intent manifested when the statute was enacted. These proposed regulations are all the more amazing when compared with the contemporaneously published proposed and temporary regulations, section 15A. ... Instead, it specified that 'in the transactions, former shareholders of the surviving corporation (X in the committee report, T hereafter in these comments) exchanged, for an amount of voting stock of the controlling corporation (P), an amount of stock in the surviving corporation (T) which constitutes control of such corporation (T). ' Under section 368(c), control is stock possessing at least 80 percent of the total combined voting power in T, and stock amounting to at least 80 percent of the total number of shares of each non-voting class of T stock.
67. Latrobe SRC Web Site
- www.latrobe.edu.au
- Home | Office Bearers | Clubs & Societies | Support & Services | Meetings/Minutes | Constitution/Regulations | About .
- Regulations.
- (1) In this constitution and the regulations, unless inconsistent with the context or subject‑matter:.
- (f) ŇregulationsÓ means regulations of the SRC under clause 51;.
- (o) Words not defined in this subclause, but defined in the University Act, Statutes or Regulations, have the same meaning as in the University Act, Statutes or Regulations;.
- (12) on behalf of the students of the University, by the decision of three-fifths of the members of the SRC present and voting to affiliate or co-operate with any other bodies or organisations as the SRC may think advantageous in order to pursue the purposes of the SRC;.
- (3) Elections shall be conducted using an optional preferential proportional representation voting system.
- (2) The hours of voting shall be prescribed by the SRC by regulation. ...
- (4) A person shall not be permitted to hold more than one position on the SRC as a voting member, however a person may nominated for more than one position and shall be entitled to nominate for alternate position should a vacancy occur.
- (4) Except as otherwise provided in this constitution, all matters shall be decided by a simple majority of members present and voting.
- (5) Voting by proxy shall not be permitted.
- (1) Except as otherwise provided in this constitution, all matters shall be decided by a simple majority of those present and voting.
- (2) Voting by proxy shall not be permitted.
- (4) The meeting may accept other motions relevant to the original motion, upon the decision to do so by two‑thirds of those present and voting.
- (3) The hours of voting shall be prescribed by the SRC by regulation.
- (1) The SRC shall, subject to the University Act, Statutes and Regulations:.
68. 1
- www.arema.org
- Regulations.
- REGULATIONS GOVERNING AREMA COMMITTEES .
- 1 Voting on Ballots.
- 0 VOTING PROCEDURES.
- 5 Letter Ballot Voting Requirements.
- 1 Purpose--The purpose of the Regulations Governing AREMA Committees is to provide rules and procedures that guide and facilitate the development of material for the AREMA Manuals of Recommended Practice, reports for information and continuing education in accordance with a systematic consensus process. ... These Regulations stipulate voting procedures and provide requirements for consideration of negative votes.
- These Regulations are prepared with the intent of assuring that individual members of the Committees of the Association have an equal opportunity to contribute to, and learn from, the business conducted at a meeting.
- 3 Authority—These Regulations are authorized by Section 4. ...
- 4 Maintenance--The Board of Directors Functional Groups are responsible for the content of these Regulations, and shall by conference with the Chairmen of the Committees, make such additions, deletions or revisions to the content, from time to time, as deemed necessary. The actions of the Board of Directors Functional Groups, with respect to these Regulations, are subject to the discretion of the Board of Directors of the Association.
- Committee members shall declare a conflict of interest, if one exists, when voting. ... Non-AREMA members may, upon invitation, attend informational portions of committee meetings; however, such non-members may not be present during the business or voting portions of committee meetings.
- 1 Member--Members of the Association and the committee will have full rights in the committee to include holding office, voting and in general assist in overall planning and management of the committee.
- Life members maintain the same voting rights as when a Member or Associate Member. ...
- Associate Members may participate in subcommittee membership and preparation of reports, general discussions in meeting sessions and other functions of the committee except voting and holding committee office.
69. SD#91: Policy and Regulations: 200 Board of School Trustees
- www.sd91.bc.ca
- Return to Policy and Regulations - Main Page .
- Specifically, the Board shall conduct itself in accordance with, and have all the powers and duties outlined in the School Act, School Regulations, Minister of Education Orders and Board policy and regulations.
- 91 (Nechako Lakes) policies and regulations; .
- 91 (Nechako Lakes), may, by by-law, determine various procedures and requirements to be applied in the conduct of local government elections and other voting;.
- "general voting day" means:.
- Voting Day Registration.
- 1 As authorized under section 54 of the Local Government Act, a person may register as an elector only at the time of voting;.
- 1 is effective only for the voting or other matters on which the opinion of the electors is being sought at the time of voting.
- Location of Voting Opportunities on General Voting Day.
- 91 (Nechako Lakes) authorizes the Chief Election Officer to establish voting opportunities on general voting day for all electoral areas in which an election is being conducted.
- Special Voting Opportunities.
- 91 (Nechako Lakes) will provide special voting opportunities as authorized under section 99 of the Local Government Act for each election and authorizes the Chief Election Officer to establish the special voting opportunities for each election and to designate the locations, the dates and the voting hours and procedures within the limits set out in section 99 of the Local Government Act for the special voting opportunities.
- 91 (Nechako Lakes) authorizes the Chief Election Officer to limit the number of candidates representatives who may be present at the special voting opportunity.
- Additional and Mail Voting Opportunities:.
- 91 (Nechako Lakes), authorizes the Chief Election Officer to establish additional and mail voting opportunities for general voting day for each election and to designate the voting places, voting hours and voting procedures within the limits set out in sections 98 and 100 of the Local Government Act, for such voting opportunities.
- Advance Voting Opportunities:.
70. Military Folks and Politics -- Political Activities by Military Personnel
- usmilitary.about.com
- Regulations.
- Military Regulations.
-
Federal Law (Titles 10, 2, and 18, United States Code), Department of Defense (DOD) Directives, and specific military regulations strictly limit a military active duty person's participation in partisan political activities.
- What career military officer or senior NCO has never had to pull a stint as unit "voting officer," or "voting NCO?" But, when it comes to actively campaigning for a specific political candidate or partisan objective, the military draws the line.
- See the Federal Voting Assistance Program Web site for complete details.
71. BY
- www.owcam.org
- OWCAM Membership and Voting Rights.
- 1 Membership and Voting Rights.
- 11 Cumulative Voting .
- All present and future Members are subject to the regulations set forth in these Bylaws and such rules and the Board of Directors of OWCAM may adopt regulations as. ...
- OWCAM Membership and Voting Rights.
- 1 Membership and Voting Rights. ...
- Only Candidate Manager Active Members, Community Association Management Professional® Active Members and Management Company Members shall be considered Voting Active Members, described below, shall have the right to vote and to hold office in OWCAM. Voting Active Members shall be entitled to one (1) vote on each matter submitted to a vote of the Active Membership except that Management Company Members shall have two votes. ...
- A voting Member actively engaged in Community Association Management who has met the qualification standards established by OWCAM and who will meet the criteria of a Community Association Management Professional within the five (5) year applicable period. ...
- A voting Member who has met the qualification standards established by OWCAM. ...
- Once there are five voting members from a management company, the Management Company’s Member’s votes shall be reduced to one vote. ...
- 5, below and such rules and regulations as the Board of Directors may adopt. ...
- Membership in OWCAM may terminate by voluntary withdrawal or otherwise in accordance with these Bylaws and rules and regulations as adopted by the Board of Directors. ...
- Sufficient cause for suspension or termination of membership or membership status shall include, but is not limited to, a violation of (i) these Bylaws, (ii) such rules and regulations as adopted by the Board of Directors, or (iii) the Code of Professional Ethics and Standards of Practice of OWCAM. ...
- Active Membership status may be reinstated in accordance with such rules and regulations and practices as the Board of Directors may adopt.
- Unless otherwise expressly provided in these Bylaws, any action, which may be taken by OWCAM, may be taken by a majority of a quorum of the Voting Active Members of OWCAM. ...
72. ACS Rules
- www.acs.org.au
- 10 Voting by Council.
- 7 Voting at General Meetings.
- Alteration of National Regulations.
- "Branch Executive Committee", in relation to a Branch, means the committee that controls and manages the Branch constituted under the National Regulations,.
- "Branch Funds" means the funds so described in the National Regulations,.
- "Branch Property" means the property so described in the National Regulations,.
- "Branch Regulations", in respect of a Branch, means its regulations made pursuant to the National Regulations, as amended from time to time,.
- "Branch Office Bearers", in relation to a Branch, means the persons so described in the National Regulations,.
- "Code of Ethics" means the code set out in the National Regulations,.
- "majority", in relation to voting, means the majority of votes cast by those persons entitled to vote who vote on the question,.
- "National Funds" means the funds so described in the National Regulations,.
- "National Property" means the property so described in the National Regulations,.
- "National Regulations" means the regulations made by Council pursuant to R18 and as amended from time to time,.
- "NR" preceding a number denotes a regulation in the National Regulations,.
- "Overseas Group" means the group of members who meet the qualifications set out in the National Regulations for Overseas Group,.
- "Regulations" means the Associations Incorporation Regulations, made under the Act, as amended from time to time,.
73. Schneier.com: Crypto-Gram: December 15, 2000
- www.schneier.com
- Voting and Technology .
- New Bank Privacy Regulations .
- Voting and Technology.
- In the wake of last November's election, pundits have called for more accurate voting and vote counting. ... But before jumping to conclusions, let's look at the security and reliability issues surrounding voting technology. ...
- The goal of any voting system is to establish the intent of the voter, and transfer that intent to the vote counter. ... But what if Alice wants _Charlie's Angels_ and Bob wants _102 Dalmatians_? Will Alice vote in front of his friends? Will Bob? What if the circle of friends is two hundred; how long will it take to count the votes? Will the theater still be showing the movie? Because the scale changes, our voting methods have to change. ...
- Scaling and speed requirements lead to mechanical and computerized voting systems. The ideal voting technology would have these five attributes: anonymity, scalability, speed, audit, and accuracy -- direct mapping from intent to counted vote. ...
- Mechanical voting booths and punch cards replaced paper ballots for faster counting. New computerized voting machines promise even more efficiency, and Internet voting even more convenience. ...
- Most of Florida's voting irregularities are a direct result of these translation errors. ...
- Certainly Florida's antiquated voting technology is partially to blame, but newer technology wouldn't magically make the problems go away. ...
- That's my primary concern about computer voting: There is no paper ballot to fall back on. Computerized voting machines, whether they have keyboard and screen or a touch screen ATM-like interface, could easily make things worse. ... And computers are fallible; some of the computer voting machines in this election failed mysteriously and irrecoverably. ...
74. BBC - h2g2 - Voting in the United States
- tickers.bbc.co.uk
- Voting in the United States .
- While these elections to federal offices tend to garner most of the media's interest, they are only a small step in the process of voting in the United States. ...
- Although federal law places certain requirements for the election of positions in the federal government, such as the date of the general election, availability to write in the name of a person not listed on the ballot and access to the polling places, the actual rules and conduct of voting are the domain of the states and local governing bodies. ...
- Some states use the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November as their voting date on odd-numbered years.
- Other Voting Issues.
- In 1971 the voting age was set at 18 years old by the XXVI amendment to the constitution. ... When you register, your address will be recorded, assigning you to a voting precinct. ...
- Voting Precincts.
- If you are a member of the military on active service, or a citizen who resides abroad there are special guidelines for federal elections by the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act. ...
- Inside you will find a registration table and voting area for each party that has candidates standing. ...
- This time there is only one table and voting area for each precinct. ... In addition, the other voting issues are quite often available for you to vote for or against. ...
- The responses to these are all under the control of the election officials and the local voting regulations.
- The Actual Voting Process.
- You will then be given a ballot or magnetic card and directed to a voting area. ...
- The original method of voting was to give each voter a piece of paper with a place to mark next to each candidate or race. ...
75. FIRST FEDERAL BANCORP INC/OH/(Form: DEF 14A)
- www.investquest.com
- To consider and vote upon the adoption of amendments to the existing Code of Regulations (the "Current Regulations") of Bancorp to (i) restrict the removal of directors; (ii) expand the indemnification of directors and officers; and (iii) make technical changes to the Current Regulations and remove obsolete provisions; .
- FOR the adoption of the Amended and Restated Code of Regulations of Bancorp (the "New Regulations"), attached to this Proxy Statement as Exhibit A, in its entirety. In connection with the vote upon the adoption of the New Regulations, each properly executed Proxy received before the Annual Meeting and not revoked will be voted as specified on the Proxy, or, in the absence of specific voting instructions on the Proxy, will be voted: .
- FOR the adoption of provisions in the New Regulations restricting the removal of directors; .
- FOR the adoption of provisions in the New Regulations expanding the indemnification of directors and officers; and .
- FOR the adoption of technical changes to the existing Code of Regulations (the "Current Regulations") and the removal of obsolete provisions. ...
- None of the proposals described above related to the New Regulations will be adopted unless all of the proposals are separately approved by the required vote of the shareholders. ...
- Only shareholders of record as of the close of business on December 23, 2002 (the "Voting Record Date"), are eligible to vote at the Annual Meeting. Bancorp's records disclose that, as of the Voting Record Date, there were 3,248,725 common shares of Bancorp (the "Shares") outstanding. ...
- Under Ohio law and the Current Regulations, the following matters must receive the corresponding vote to adopt the following proposals: .
- Adoption of each of the Affirmative vote of the holders of four proposals related to at least a majority of the the New Regulations outstanding shares. ...
- In compliance with the position of the Securities and Exchange Commission on the adoption of the New Regulations, Bancorp is asking shareholders to vote separately on three types of amendments to the New Regulations. In addition to a vote on the adoption of the New Regulations, therefore, shareholders will have an opportunity to vote separately on each of the three proposals described below related to the New Regulations. However, none of the proposals related to the New Regulations will be adopted unless all of the proposals receive the required vote for adoption. For example, if only two of the proposals related to the New Regulations are approved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding shares, then none of the proposals will be adopted. Even the first proposal related to the New Regulations, which is to adopt the New Regulations in their entirety, will not be adopted unless all four proposals are approved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding shares. ...
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