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What is an Investment Policy Statement? The IPS provides the foundation for all future investment decisions to be made by an investor.It serves as a guidepost, identifying goals, creating a system and discipline for a decisions. A client said,"Once the trustees adopted the Investment Policy Statement, we found that we were making our decisions in a deliberate fashion, rather than in the "heat of battle."Since we'd already thought about how things would get done under a variety of circumstances, we no longer found ourselves getting emotional. Planning ahead makes it easier for all of us when the investment markets get turbulent." If you are an investment advisor, financial planner, stock broker, insurance agent, CPA or attorney advising your clients about their money, this innovative book will be a key tool for working with clients.
This document focuses on town centre planning policy applicable throughout England, which should be taken into account by regional and local planning bodies in the preparation of regional spatial strategies and local development policies. It contains four chapters which cover the following topics: the Government's objectives; pro-active town centre plans; development control; monitoring and review. This document replaces revised planning policy guidance note PPG6 ('Town centres and retail developments', 1996 ed., ISBN 0117532940) and subsequent relevant policy statements.
Presents step-by-step instructions for librarians on creating a core collection from scratch or revitalizing an existing collection, providing sample core lists in seven subject areas.
National Policy Statements (NPS) are a key component of the new planning system for nationally significant infrastructure projects, introduced by the Planning Act 2008. The Act stipulates that a proposal for a National Policy Statement will be subject to public consultation and allows for parliamentary scrutiny before designation as national policy by the Secretary of State. The draft Ports National Policy Statement (Department for Transport, 2009) has been welcomed by many organisations as a good start which can be built upon. The Committee has recommended a number of modifications and expects the Department will improve the draft as a result of the consultation and scrutiny processes. The Committee has reservations regarding the Government's 2007 policy for ports and the lack of guidance on location for port development in the NPS but this, of itself, does not make the NPS unfit for purpose. But the Committee cannot recommend designation at this stage on two counts. Firstly, a key, related policy statement - the National Networks NPS - has yet to be published. Secondly, the organisation likely to be one of the principal decision-makers for port development - the Marine Management Organisation - has yet to be established and so has been unable to comment on guidance that will be of great importance to its role. These are fundamental flaws in the consultation process and the Ports NPS should not be designated until they are rectified.