Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv prt] [prep] local " in BNC.

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1 My staff and I welcome the opportunity to sit down with local exporters and importers to offer not only our own expertise but to provide the link to the truly international help that is available .
2 In fact , noise can be very helpful because it gives the network a chance to jump out of local minima .
3 It visited chiefs , and worked through them to find out about local resources , tools , apprenticeship patterns and market locations .
4 The place to find out about local organisations and classes is the local library .
5 Some employers will not allow you to ‘ job share ’ officially , but may be open to revising your job description to fit in with local service needs .
6 Well actually this is a matter for the police authorities and despite the fact that the Noble Lord , Lord Callaghan had said this is a centralising measure and er and a number of other Noble Lords have , have said er s similar things , what my Right Honourable Friend is trying to do is to give down to local authorities more power , more responsibility and not to keep that r responsibility to himself .
7 Even more important , they are allowed to opt out of local authority control .
8 AN AVALANCHE of applications by schools wanting to opt out of local authority control is now expected .
9 In education , although legislation promises increased power to parents and the opportunity for schools to opt out of local education authorities , it also promises a greater power for head teachers and , in the case of City Technology Colleges , a greater direct input from industry .
10 In a further attempt to restrict the role of local authorities in housing , council house tenants were given the right to switch to an alternative landlord — either in the form of a housing association or an approved private sector landlord — in other words , they were allowed to opt out of local authority control .
11 A COMPREHENSIVE school in Essex is poised to opt out of local authority control after parents overturned their own decision .
12 This apparently low level of active parental involvement has important implications for other aspects of current policy — especially the arrangements for schools to opt out of local authority control .
13 The most controversial sections of the Education Reform Act are those which allow secondary schools and primary schools with 300 or more pupils to opt out of local authority control .
14 A secret postal ballot of parents then determines the fate of the school , and once a decision to opt out of local authority control has been taken it can not be reversed at a later date , although there is , of course , nothing to stop a new government introducing a legislation to repeal this provision .
15 In July 1988 an independent trust was set up to advise schools on how to opt out of local authority control .
16 The 1988 Housing Act , as we have seen , offered tenants the opportunity to opt out of local authority control .
17 In education , schools were given a similar opportunity to opt out of local government control .
18 Last night parents in the North of Scotland gathered to protest at the decision by Dornoch Academy to opt out of local authority control .
19 Last night parents in the North of Scotland gathered to protest at the decision by Dornoch Academy to opt out of local authority control .
20 They say unless they get more cash they 'll be forced to opt out of local control , and seek funding directly from Whitehall .
21 They say unless they get more cash they 'll be forced to opt out of local control , and seek funding directly from Whitehall .
22 Parents of pupils at St Mary 's College , Wallasey , voted to reject proposals to opt out of local authority control by 552 to 211 .
23 ANY doubts parents might have had that the Government 's scheme to persuade schools to opt out of local authority membership was motivated by pure political dogma must now be dissolved .
24 There was a bid by Banbury School to opt out of local control , and in a poll among the parents sixty two percent voted against the Governor 's proposals to become the first school in Oxfordshire to leave County Council control .
25 Even so , some residents had started to venture out to local pubs and shops and were slowly becoming part of the community .
26 Within the limitations imposed by his hosts and his own inhibitions and scruples , the anthropologist has to mix in with local society and become the life and soul of the party .
27 They do look at the statistics the government statistics for fertility and mortality , but they have then the ability to amend , to adjust to local erm to match up with local information .
28 Partners who divorce are more likely to end up as local authority tenants even if they were previously owner-occupiers ( Holmans , Nandy , and Brown 1987 ) .
29 He sees the introduction of compulsory competitive tendering as a career turning point which encouraged him to move back to local government work .
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