Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Hyundai was among the automakers testifying for the overcompliance rule.
Medication was over-dispensed by 20% to enable detection of overcompliance.
Medication was dispensed with a 20% surplus to allow for detection of overcompliance.
Don’t be restrictive and avoid overcompliance.
Bach said the BOA case involved "overcompliance" rather than any failure to adhere to the rules.
Under a state law, it has been held to stricter standards than those set by Washington, and passage of the act turned that "overcompliance" into a salable asset.
Caregivers are seen as a source of fear with the result that children endeavour to control their caregivers through manipulation, overcompliance, intimidation or role reversal in order to keep themselves safe.
The provision for overcompliance with the federal fuel economy standards, which require automakers to achieve fleetwide averages of 54.5 miles per gallon in 2025, may cause further debate in coming years.
Mary D. Nichols, the CARB chairwoman, said in a conference call after the vote that the overcompliance allowance was “a valuable piece of the overall package.”
“We’re disappointed to see a special overcompliance carve-out for manufacturers included,” Simon Mui, a clean vehicles scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said in a telephone interview.
“It’s really a matter of flexibility,” said John Cabaniss, the environment and energy director for the trade group Global Automakers, which lobbied during the negotiations for the so-called overcompliance provision.
The CCUSA2 scenario corresponds to the actual legislated levels expected in 2010 with voluntary overcompliance from some major point sources (further described in Environment Canada, 1997, Section 3.4.1.1).
One critic noted the law could lead to overcompliance and false reports by parents wary of becoming suspects, wasting police resources and leading to legitimate abductions going uninvestigated during the critical first few hours.
A utility that adds a scrubber to its biggest, dirtiest plant would save so much sulfur dioxide that it could apply its "overcompliance" to smaller units that it did not clean up.
In her study of Irigaray, Grosz does not question for one moment the possible subversiveness of mimicry: like the hysteric, the writer-mimic's "defiance through excess, through overcompliance, is parody of the expected" (134).
"All available evidence suggests that carmakers in Europe are heading for very significant ?overcompliance? with the CO2 regulation and are hence likely to hit the target for 2015 years in advance," said author Jos Dings in the report.
I was the one who figured out that Jonah's sour breath equaled strep throat, that quietude and overcompliance meant it was time to start the Tylenol and that head-scratching could mean a headache or an allergic skin rash.
Thus, utilities have been reluctant to take the risk of investing in scrubbers or other equipment to create "overcompliance" because their shareholders might not benefit, and if the sale of the allowances does not recoup the costs, their shareholders might actually suffer.
This serious shortcoming will be addressed by the Official Languages Program Transformation Model (OLPTM), which moves the CF away from the "universal" overcompliance approach to meeting their legal official languages obligations towards a more focused and fair "compliance" approach.