describe the risks associated with their working environment (such as the tools, materials and equipment that they use, spillages of oil, chemicals and other substances, not reporting accidental breakages of tools or equipment and not following laid-down working practices and procedures)
You should report to a higher member of staff to seek adivce or extra training. For example, shift manager, team leader, health and saftety manager if it is health and safety related, engineering manager if it is engineering related.
One of the primary reasons to open an estate is to resolve such issues, including taxes. The estate has to pay off the debts. If the estate cannot do so, they distribute as best they can. If the court approves the distribution, the debts are ended.
Collection, summarization, and reporting of financial information about various decision centers (responsibility centers) throughout an organization; also called activity accounting or profitability accounting. It traces costs, revenues, or profits to the individual managers who are primarily responsible for making decisions about the costs, revenues, or profits in question and taking action about them. Responsibility accounting is appropriate where top management has delegated authority to make decisions. The idea behind responsibility accounting is that each manager's performance should be judged by how well he or she manages those items under his or her control.Responsibility and Cost CentersThe concept of responsibility accounting has emerged to accommodate the need for management information at a more specific level of detail than can be provided by financial accounting procedures. Responsibility accounting attempts to report results (actual performance) in such a way that: (1) significant variances from planned performance can be identified, (2) reasons for variances can be determined, (3) responsibility can be fixed, and (4) timely action can be taken to correct problems.Under this approach, pertinent costs and revenues are assigned to various organizational units--departments, bureaus, and programs--designated as responsibility centers. In the private sector, responsibility centers may take several forms:(1) A cost center is the smallest segment of activity or area of responsibility for which costs are accumulated.(2) A profit center is a segment of a business, often called a division, that is responsible for both revenue and expenses.(3) An investment center, like a profit center, is responsible for both revenue and expenses, but also for related investments of capital.Outside of relatively large corporations, the cost center is the most common building block for responsibility accounting. In fact, the terms cost center and responsibility center are often used interchangeably. Responsibility accounting placing emphasis on specific costs in relation to well-defined areas of responsibility. Managers often inherit the effects of their predecessors' decisions. Long-term effects of such costs as depreciation, long-term lease arrangements, and the like, seldom qualify as controllable costs on the performance report of a specific manager.Most models that measure performance in the private sector are tied to profits--for example, profit percentage (profit divided by sales), return on investment (profit divided by initial investment), or residual income (profit minus a deduction for capital costs). Profits are seldom a viable measure at the cost center level, however. Rather, performance is most often measured by comparing actual costs against a budget. A variance is defined as the difference between the amount budgeted for a particular activity and the actual cost of carrying out that activity during a given period.Variances may be positive (under budget) or negative (over budget).Performance data can be developed for management purposes independent of the budget and control accounts. This kind of performance reporting has been used in the justification of resource requests and in the assessment of cost and work progress where activities are fairly routine and repetitive. Under this approach, units of work are identified, and changes in quantity (and, on occasion, quality) of such units are measured as a basis for analyzing financial requirements. The impact of various levels of service can be tested, and an assessment can be made of changes in the size of the client groups to be served. This approach is built on the assumption that certain fixed costs remain fairly constant regardless of the level of service provided and that certain variable costs change with the level of service or the size of the clientele group served. Marginal costs for each additional increment of service provided can be determined through such an approach. With the application of appropriate budgetary guide-lines, these costs can then be converted into total cost estimates.Variances, budgeted results, and other techniques of responsibility accounting are relatively neutral devices. When viewed positively, they can provide managers with significant means of improving future decisions. They can also assist in the delegation of decision responsibility to lower levels within an organization. These techniques, however, are frequently misused as negative management tools--as means of finding fault or placing blame. This negative use stems, in large part, from a misunderstanding of the rationale of responsibility accounting.Passing the buck is an all-too-pervasive tendency in many large organizations. This tendency is supposedly minimized, however, when responsibility is firmly fixed. Nevertheless, a delicate balance must be maintained between the careful delineation of responsibility, on the one hand, and an overly rigid separation of responsibility, on the other. Many activities may fall between the cracks when responsibility is too strictly prescribed. This problem is particularly evident when two or more activities are interdependent. Under such circumstances, responsibility cannot be delegated too far down in the organization, but must be maintained at a level that will ensure cooperation among the units that must interact if the activities are to be carried out successfully.
A bad debt is a debt which cannot be recovered from the debtor, either because he does not have the money to pay it or because he cannot be found and/or forced to pay.
Quickbooks cannot use LIFO or FIFO for Inventory Costing.
If you cannot solve a problem at work, you should report to your supervisor or manager.
it is your own responsibility to work safely and not to do anything that may endanger yourself or others. if there is something you are uncertain about you should always ask for help from your work partner or supervisor.
if you are aware of some one acting unsafe or putting others at risk you have the authority to correct them and/or stop them from carrying on what they are doing. other problems you cannot resolve, see your team leader and/or health and safety representative.
Yes i will release the car back to the dealer even if i did made a first payment. Sandile
Accept what you cannot change and change what you can
The estate has the responsibility. One of the primary reasons someone should open an estate is to resolve debts. The estate has to pay off the debts. If the estate cannot do so, they distribute as best they can. If the court approves the distribution, the debts are ended.
You cannot make a bigger word using the letters in 'responsibility'.To make a bigger word, you must add a letter, and since you cannot add a letter, and can only use the letters you have in 'responsibility', you cannot make a bigger word. You can make 0 bigger words.
no they cannot hear and talk but they have life and responsibility
The estate has the responsibility to settle the debts. One of the primary reasons to open an estate is to resolve such debts. The estate has to pay off the debts. If the estate cannot do so, they distribute as best they can. If the court approves the distribution, the debts are ended.
you resolve the problem copy find the specified file make sure you specify the correct path and file name
Once you buy a car it's your's. Problems and all. Unless you had a warranty. Then only the problems may be covered for repair. But, you cannot return the car. If you buy a car "as is" the dealer has no responsibility what so ever for the cars condition once you sign the papers. He may want to treat you fair in fear of you spreading a bad reputation of his company. But, he has no legal responsibility.
Since you never said what "said conflict" might be, we cannot answer the question.