Example sentences of "[noun pl] [modal v] [verb] access " in BNC.

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1 Appreciating the central role local education authorities would increasingly play in the development of education , this Report 's recommendations included the proposal that authorities must have access to an adequate level of specialist educational guidance ( Bolam et al , 1978 ) .
2 In any forthcoming election for a constituent assembly , all parties should have access to all parts of South Africa , including the ten ‘ homelands ’ , without intimidation .
3 However , the parties would have access to a specialized competition policy tribunal ( a restructured MMC ) , if they were unhappy with the conclusions of the Office of Fair Trading , and further rights of appeal to the High Court on points of law , on the interpretation of evidence , and on the level of fines .
4 When complete , readers will have access , via the online catalogue terminals , to detailed holdings of all current periodicals held by NLS .
5 The intention behind the Social Work Department 's ‘ Open Access ’ policy , agreed by the Regional Council in January 1988 , is that clients will have access to the information we hold about them , as an everyday part of our work with them .
6 The feeling is growing that since the occupiers of rural land benefit considerably from tax-payers ' money then tax-payers should have access to , and a degree of control over the use of such land .
7 The union proposed that in principle parents should have access to their children 's files .
8 ‘ It is obviously crucial to the UK 's economic recovery that smaller companies should have access to development capital . ’
9 The proposed post-divorce reform of a jointly agreed statement of parenting arrangements for children is welcome in principle , but many parents will require access to conciliation to enable them to concentrate on their children 's needs .
10 Access into the high-bay areas is usually inter-locked with the power supply and only personnel with keys can acquire access .
11 Passes and disclaimers should gain access to Range West
12 But the Labour party was emotionally more committed to the plain principle that the workers should have access to the good things which in the past could be bought for money — health , security , places in grammar schools .
13 Potential buyers would have access to the book which , it is suggested , would provide them with more meaningful information when they are ‘ shopping around ’ for a home .
14 This would be subject to strict regulation and only banks would have access to deposit insurance .
15 The three stages of the exercise are : examination of personal values of the participants ; evaluation of existing services in the light of values expressed ; and a focus on ways of changing services so that carers can have access to ‘ valued lifestyles for themselves , as well as for the people they care for ’ .
16 National reflections currently focus upon the need for college to be ‘ responsive ’ in order to ensure that individuals can gain access to the curriculum ‘ regardless of any disability or special learning need they may have ’ ( FEU 1990 : 11 ) .
17 Whether it is the purchaser 's accountants or the vendor 's accountants who prepare the first draft , the other party 's accountants should have access to their working papers if the rules are properly negotiated .
18 We are anxious that all industrial customers should have access to competitively priced electricity and I am pleased to say that an independent survey showed that in the first year after privatisation three quarters of those customers experienced at least a 10 per cent .
19 farms with more than 20 head of cattle must have access to stores for slurry and effluent with at least six months ' capacity .
20 With the destruction of state socialism in Hungary , the old and relatively comfortable set-up in which officially approved writers could have access to funds , however limited , via the Writers ' Union , will come to an end , since the Union itself will no longer have any official funding .
21 For a rent of £6 per month farmers would have access to programmes on feed rations/chemical control of diseases/fertiliser rates , etc .
22 In new assured tenancies fair rents will give way to market rents freely negotiated between the landlord and the tenant , and neither assured nor assured shorthold tenants will have access to a Rent Officer under the fair rent procedures .
23 Such groups are also likely to reinforce their existing role in the mobilization of savings , and it will be in mutual savings organizations , rather than formal financial institutions , that small-scale producers will find access to credit .
24 Although some bureaux can make access for disabled clients feasible , there are still many disabled clients for whom coming to a bureau may not be worthwhile even if their problem is pressing .
25 Continued vigilance will be necessary to monitor and to protect the principle that patients should have access on clinical rather than financial grounds .
26 Obviously , in the initial stages not all activists would have access to terminals , but most will .
27 Leys ' ( 1978 ) recent account of China ; Crouse 's ( 1974 ) account of American presidential campaigns and the role of the mass media ; and Wolfe 's brilliant essays on such topics as navy fighter pilots in Vietnam ; all these represent areas to which sociologists would find access rather difficult .
28 Funded by the Museums and Galleries Improvement Fund , the Henry Moore Foundation and the North West Museums Service , the extension will mean , says the director , Mary Gavagan ‘ that an important fine art collection will now be on display not only for the university population but also for the general public ’ , even those with mobility problems for whom ramps and chairlifts will give access to the works of among others Chillida , Derain , Miro , Max Ernst and Terry Frost .
29 Topics to be debated will include how museums can increase access for the different audiences they serve without trivialising their message or damaging their collections , and how they can deal with competition from theme parks and other ‘ heritage ’ industries .
30 Perhaps it was this symbolic importance which led Home Secretary Kenneth Baker , when responding to the Woolf report in February 1991 , to announce that all prisoners would have access to toilet facilities by the end of 1994 ( more than a year earlier than Woolf asked for ) .
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