In addition to economic damages, individuals can also seek compensation specifically for emotional distress caused by governmental actions or negligence.
Claims can be filed with the Office of the Los Angeles City Clerk or by mail with City's Claim for Damages Form. Upon successful online submission of your claim, you will receive a confirmation email. If you have trouble filing a claim online, call the Office of the Los Angeles City Clerk at 213-978-1133.
If the case involves a county, city or other local governmental entity or employee, the claim should be filed directly with the local city or county's governing board or clerk. Please contact the city or county directly for information on how to file a claim with the specific entity.
Claims can be filed with the Office of the Los Angeles City Clerk or by mail with City's Claim for Damages Form. Upon successful online submission of your claim, you will receive a confirmation email. If you have trouble filing a claim online, call the Office of the Los Angeles City Clerk at 213-978-1133.
An indenture is a particular formal contract or deed made between two or more parties. Beginning in medieval England, an indenture can be defined as a specific agreement within a contract noted with a specific duration or significance.
In the context of the County's work, First Peoples refer to the original inhabitants of Los Angeles County – Tongva, Tataviam, Serrano, Kizh, and Chumash – and all descendants, not just those with formal tribal affiliations to present-day Tribes.
To be indentured is to be forced to work by some contract. It started out as a word for a contract between masters and apprentices. Now it describes anyone bound to work, like it or not, because of some deal. Use the adjective indentured to describe someone who's bound or attached in a legal sense.
If you start any work at all without filing your DAS 140, you're considered out of compliance and could be subject to fines of $100 per day for every day that your forms are late (and up to $300 per day on subsequent violations).
The council holds an open quarterly meeting to conduct the business of apprenticeship in California and fulfill its statutory responsibilities: issuing rules and regulations on specific apprenticeship subjects to be published in the California Code of Regulations, and conducting appeals hearings.
The state of California requires 4,500 hours of work to be eligible to take the residential electrician exam, and 8,000 hours of work for the general electrician exam. Both require 150 hours of classroom and lab-based technical training for every year you participate in an electrical training program or apprenticeship.