333 research outputs found

    Fair Treatment for Contractors Doing Business with the State of Maryland

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    Prior to 1981, there existed in Maryland a wide assortment of procurement laws, because virtually every state agency used different procedures to award procurement contracts. The passage of a Procurement Article, effective July 1, 1981, established a body of uniform procurement procedures for state agencies. This article examines past and present procurement practices in Maryland and provides suggestions to guide future modification of the Procurement Article. The author posits that by enacting the Procurement Article, the Maryland General Assembly enacted into positive law the important public policy of providing fair treatment for contractors who do business with the state. The policy of fair treatment benefits Maryland taxpayers and contractors and should remain the focus of procurement law in Maryland

    Fair Treatment for Contractors Doing Business with the State of Maryland

    Get PDF
    Prior to 1981, there existed in Maryland a wide assortment of procurement laws, because virtually every state agency used different procedures to award procurement contracts. The passage of a Procurement Article, effective July 1, 1981, established a body of uniform procurement procedures for state agencies. This article examines past and present procurement practices in Maryland and provides suggestions to guide future modification of the Procurement Article. The author posits that by enacting the Procurement Article, the Maryland General Assembly enacted into positive law the important public policy of providing fair treatment for contractors who do business with the state. The policy of fair treatment benefits Maryland taxpayers and contractors and should remain the focus of procurement law in Maryland

    Principles of Maryland Procurement Law

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    Principles of Maryland Procurement Law

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    Crop supply dynamics and the illusion of partial adjustment

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    We use field-level data to estimate the response of corn and soybean acreage to price shocks. Our sample contains more than eight million observations derived from satellite imagery and includes every field in Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana. We estimate that aggregate crop acreage responds more to price shocks in the short run than in the long run, and we show theoretically how the benefits of crop rotation generate this response pattern. In essence, farmers who change crops due to a price shock have an incentive to switch back to the previous crop to capture the benefits of crop rotation. Our result contradicts the long-held belief that agricultural supply responds gradually to price shocks through partial adjustment. We would not have obtained this result had we used county-level panel data. Standard econometric methods applied to county-level data produce estimates consistent with partial adjustment. We show that this apparent partial adjustment is illusory, and we demonstrate how it arises from the fact that fields in the same county are more similar to each other than to fields in other counties. This result underscores the importance of using models with appropriate micro-foundations and cautions against inferring micro-level rigidities from inertia in aggregate panel data. Our preferred estimate of the own-price long-run elasticity of corn acreage is 0.29 and the cross-price elasticity is -0.22. The corresponding elasticities for soybean acreage are 0.26 and -0.33. Our estimated short-run elasticities are 37 percent larger than their long-run counterparts

    A Survey for Satellites of Venus

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    We present a systematic survey for satellites of Venus using the Baade-Magellan 6.5 meter telescope and IMACS wide-field CCD imager at Las Campanas observatory in Chile. In the outer portions of the Hill sphere the search was sensitive to a limiting red magnitude of about 20.4, which corresponds to satellites with radii of a few hundred meters when assuming an albedo of 0.1. In the very inner portions of the Hill sphere scattered light from Venus limited the detection to satellites of about a kilometer or larger. Although several main belt asteroids were found, no satellites (moons) of Venus were detected.Comment: Published in July 2009 (Sheppard, S. and Trujillo, C. 2009, Icarus, 202, 12-16.

    Implementation of a mentored professional development programme in laboratory leadership and management in the Middle East and North Africa.

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    Laboratories need leaders who can effectively utilize the laboratories' resources, maximize the laboratories'capacity to detect disease, and advocate for laboratories in a fluctuating health care environment. To address this need, the University of Washington, USA, created the Certificate Program in Laboratory Leadership and Management in partnership with WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, and implemented it with 17 participants and 11 mentors from clinical and public health laboratories in 10 countries (Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen) in 2014. Designed to teach leadership and management skills to laboratory supervisors, the programme enabled participants to improve laboratory testing quality and operations. The programme was successful overall, with 80% of participants completing it and making impactful changes in their laboratories. This success is encouraging and could serve as a model to further strengthen laboratory capacity in the Region
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