Example sentences of "[noun pl] ' pay [coord] " in BNC.

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1 Now can we look at his pay cos you all been busy on the directors ' pay and this chartered secretary is really important and so that he could be available on a Saturday afternoon if he was wanted .
2 From July , IBM will give departing employees a maximum of 26 weeks ' pay and as much as six months paid medical coverage .
3 Councillor Rodgers said , ‘ They are interfering with the democratic process in this by-election and seeking to buy political influence with what amounts to bribes ’ , and noted the offer was personally embarrassing for him as he negotiated as a union official with the companies over workers ' pay and conditions .
4 The two largest union federations , Turk-Is and Hak-Is , which organized the strike , demanded an increase of 500 per cent in workers ' pay and called for an end to restrictive labour laws .
5 The current maximum is one years ' pay and 18 months of medical coverage .
6 Despite this , at lunchtime Kathleen presented me with four hours ' pay and pressed me for a few more details to help her with her enquiries .
7 The company plans to dock the officers ' pay and is threatening disciplinary action .
8 Teachers ' pay and conditions are legally fixed by law ( such as the Teachers ' Pay & Conditions Act 1987 ) and set out in successive annual documents .
9 The Chilvers Report on School Teachers ' Pay & Conditions ( 1990 ) points towards far-reaching changes which give governing bodies considerable discretionary powers to enhance the salaries of individual teachers .
10 Tuesday : Criminal Justice ( International Co-operation ) Bill , second reading ; Contracts ( Applicable Law ) Bill , second reading ; Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act 1987 ( Continuation ) Order ; Medicines ( Intermediate Medicated Feeding Stuffs ) Order ; debate on the disbandment of the COI 's photographic library .
11 With our new spirit of centralization , both as an interim in the matter of teachers ' pay and conditions , and in that of the curriculum , and the more general removal of powers from Local Authorities , it may well be that we are imperceptibly going down the French road .
12 Teachers ' pay and conditions are legally fixed by law ( such as the Teachers ' Pay & Conditions Act 1987 ) and set out in successive annual documents .
13 Education Secretary John Patten is also fighting off a cut in teachers ' pay and campaigning for his budget to push through education reforms and repair crumbling schools .
14 That dispute , which concerned , among other things , teachers ' pay and conditions of service , was sustained partly because teachers could exploit contractual arrangements which were imprecise .
15 The Secretary of State has made regulations specifying teachers ' contractual obligations ; a comprehensive list of duties ; he has decided to scrap the long-established machinery in which teachers ' pay and conditions were negotiated and has assumed temporary powers to determine these himself ; and he has introduced a national curriculum .
16 ( It was repealed by the 1987 Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act . )
17 1987 Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act
18 This Act abolished the negotiating procedures set up in the 1965 Remuneration of Teachers Act , replacing them until 1990 by authorising the Secretary of State to appoint an interim advisory committee and to impose teachers ' pay and conditions .
19 In 1987 , the Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act abolished the existing salary scales ( see the introduction to Figures 7.5–7.8 below ) , and also the Burnham Committees , in which representatives from the teachers ' unions , the LEAs and the DES had negotiated salary structure , levels of pay and conditions of service .
20 increase in real terms in teachers ' pay and that there was an increase of only 6 per cent .
21 Teachers ' Pay and Conditions
22 I beg to move That the draft Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act 1987 ( Continuation )
23 In each of the past two years , Parliament has approved continuation orders extending the life of the Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act 1987 .
24 The School Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act 1991 received Royal Assent on 25 July .
25 On 20 September , my right hon. and learned Friend the Secretary of State for Education and Science asked the review body to submit its first report in January 1992 , making recommendations on teachers ' pay and conditions in the year commencing 1 April 1992 .
26 As the Minister knows , we had our disagreements on the School Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Bill and on the School Teachers ' Pay and Conditions ( No. 2 ) Bill last year .
27 As the Minister knows , we had our disagreements on the School Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Bill and on the School Teachers ' Pay and Conditions ( No. 2 ) Bill last year .
28 Substantial elements of teachers ' pay and conditions will be subject to local determination , at the levels of the LEA and the school .
29 The prescriptions which had emerged in 1988 and from those conditions of service for teachers which had been introduced by the 1987 Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act had , despite criticisms and resistance , created some new certainties .
30 The result of Mr Kenneth Baker 's current thinking on a national curriculum , on a new negotiating structure for teachers ' pay and conditions ind on increasing the independence ind financial responsibility of individual schools would be to make local education authorities largely redundant .
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