Example sentences of "[noun pl] ' pay and " 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 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 .
9 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 .
10 Teachers ' pay and conditions are legally fixed by law ( such as the Teachers ' Pay & Conditions Act 1987 ) and set out in successive annual documents .
11 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 .
12 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 .
13 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 .
14 ( It was repealed by the 1987 Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act . )
15 1987 Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act
16 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 .
17 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 .
18 increase in real terms in teachers ' pay and that there was an increase of only 6 per cent .
19 Teachers ' Pay and Conditions
20 I beg to move That the draft Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act 1987 ( Continuation )
21 In each of the past two years , Parliament has approved continuation orders extending the life of the Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act 1987 .
22 The School Teachers ' Pay and Conditions Act 1991 received Royal Assent on 25 July .
23 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 .
24 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 .
25 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 .
26 Substantial elements of teachers ' pay and conditions will be subject to local determination , at the levels of the LEA and the school .
27 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 .
28 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 .
29 Unlike other countries in Europe , teachers ' pay and status in Britain is not high and the support and assistance they receive is minimal compared to counterparts in Germany and France .
30 Similarly , ex the excellent output of the research department is essential to formulate effective responses to the ever more sophisticated management who constantly employ new techniques in human resource management and attacks on our members ' pay and conditions .
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