Planning ahead and packing properly can facilitate the screening process and ease your travel experience at the airport. Know what you can pack in your carry-on and checked baggage before arriving at the airport by reviewing the lists below. Even if an item is generally permitted, it may be subject to additional screening or not allowed through the checkpoint if it triggers an alarm during the screening process, appears to have been tampered with, or poses other security concerns. Read about civil penalties for prohibited items.
Check with your airline before bringing any alcohol beverages on board. FAA regulations prohibit travelers from consuming alcohol on board an aircraft unless served by a flight attendant. Additionally, Flight Attendants are not permitted to serve a passenger who is intoxicated.
Alcoholic beverages with more than 24% but not more than 70% alcohol are limited in checked bags to 5 liters (1.3 gallons) per passenger and must be in unopened retail packaging. Alcoholic beverages with 24% alcohol or less are not subject to limitations in checked bags.
Check with your airline if ammunition is allowed in checked bags. Small arms ammunitions must be securely packed in fiber, wood or metal boxes or other packaging specifically designed to carry small amounts of ammunition. Ask the airline about limitations or fees. Read the guidelines for traveling with firearms.
You may transport this item in carry-on or checked bags. For items you wish to carry on, you should check with the airline to ensure that the item will fit in the overhead bin or underneath the seat of the airplane.
Measures must be taken to prevent unintentional activation of the heating element while on board the aircraft. Examples of effective measures to prevent unintentional activation include, but are not limited to: removing the battery from the lighter; placing the lighter into a protective case; and/or using a protective cover, safety latch, or locking device on the lighter's activation button.
This report identifies a list of permitted sites* in the location selected. Permitted sites require permit maintenance, e.g., permit modifications and renewals, in order to keep the standards up to date. The list can be narrowed down by selecting sites with certain unit types (processes) on the second line below.
*The "Permitted Sites" identified in the list above are the ones with at least one unit having (1) the following legal status: operating permit, post-closure permit, pre-mod authorization, and (2) also having the following operating status: operating, actively managing hazardous waste, inactive/closing, but not yet RCRA closed, closed with waste in place, converted, delay of closure, newly transferred ownership to this site, and referred to corrective action for closure/post-closure. The legal and operating statuses are codes in RCRAInfo. Each unit at a facility has a legal and operating status.
PROLOGUE: On a whim, I was able to move the folders by copying them to my desktop, then copying them from there into Dropbox. So, I got my mission accomplished. But I am still curious about why "permission" was not granted.
I save a bunch of files, with dates in the names of the files. I later created folders named after the years, "2015", "2016", "2017". Within each year folder, I created month folders, "1", "2", ... , "12". Displaying my files from the "root", I see "2015", "2016", "2017", and all the individual files. I selected the first file for Jan 2015 (checkboxed the first file for Jan 2015) and SHIFT clicked the last file for Jan 2015. I see this last file and the ones above (that are visible on the screen) get checked. I assume I've selected all my Jan 2015 files. I then move them, using the MOVE menu item, and get the "this operation isn't permitted" message. It's because the UI dropbox as implemented is braindead, in my opinion. It looks like a fairly standard file UI, but isn't. SHIFT clicking the last Jan 2015 file selected EVERYTHING above it, not just between my clicked and SHIFT clicked items. So, I had selected all my Jan 2015 files AND the folders 2015, 2016, and 2017. The error message makes sense, I'm not allowed to put the folder 2015 into a folder which is a subfolder of 2015. The terse error message that tells you very little and the BAD UI (IMHO) combine to give this error that you cannot understand. When I manually clicked all the Feb 2015 files (there were just a couple), the move worked just fine.
Did this post not resolve your issue? If so please give us some more information so we can try and help - please remember we cannot see over your shoulder so be as descriptive as possible!
Specifically, what method or technique were you using to move the files or folders? What is generating the error message? (e.g., Is this a Windows error message? Is it emitted from the Dropbox web interface at ?) Is there an error code?
I am having the same problem. It's just a plain ol' folder that I'm trying to move into my new team folder (I upgraded to the business account). It's not a shared folder. Were you able to resolve the issue?
I ran into this same problem. It may help to clarify that this is happening on the web client (for me anyway).
I suspect the size of the folder may be the key to reproducing this. It may also have something to do with the number of changes you've recently made - I only seem to get the error when I've been reorganizing large numbers of folders/files?
I managed to get around it by using the desktop client.
I have the same issue. I am using the Dropbox web interface since i cannot store the large number of large files on my computer so I access the folder and files only through the web interface. I am using Chrome on a MacBook running Sierra. Everything is the latest version.
I try to move a folder and drop it into another folder by selecting the folder by clicking to the right of the folder name which highlights the name. I then select "Move" at the top of the file list. A window appears and asks me to select where I want to move it to. I do so and then select the folder I want to drop the other folder into and click the "Move" button.
Imperiled Beach-nesting Bird (IBNB) Permitted Monitors are trained, dedicated individuals with proven shorebird and seabird identification skills and avian survey experience. IBNB Permitted Monitors are qualified to assist FWC Incidental Take Permittees with minimizing and avoiding harm or harassment of imperiled beach-nesting birds (American oystercatchers, snowy plovers, least terns, black skimmers) during project activities.
The FWC Commissioners approved the IBNB Species Conservation Measures and Permitting Guidelines in July 2022. At the October 2023 Commission Meeting, Commissioners approved an effective date delay from September 2023 to October 1, 2024. This delay gives interested individuals time to meet the minimum qualifications for becoming an IBNB Permitted Monitor, including conducting at least three surveys that involve locating and documenting Active Nests of IBNBs.
IBNB Permitted Monitors have many roles and responsibilities depending on the permitted activity type. Some examples include but are not limited to, conducting Breeding Activity Checks, establishing disturbance-free buffer zones, and conducting education/identification programs with project staff. IBNB Permitted Monitors must read, understand and abide by the applicable conditions in the FWC Incidental Take Permit associated with project activities for which they are providing services. Please refer to the IBNB Guidelines for specific roles and responsibilities associated with different project types.
Interested in getting experience surveying IBNB Active Nests? If you are interested in becoming an IBNB Permitted Monitor and would like to gain survey experience with skilled bird monitors in the network, please contact your local FSA partnership.
North Carolina General Statute 143-215.1(a) requires that the treatment of contaminated soil be permitted by the N.C. Department of Environmental Quality. Petroleum-contaminated soil removed from the source site must be remediated in accordance with 15A NCAC 2T and 15A NCAC 2L.
Permitted soil treatment facilities that are permitted to receive soil from numerous sources are referred to as dedicated contaminated soil facilities. Dedicated contaminated soil facilities are designed to receive contaminated soil on a repeated basis. These facilities may use conventional rate land application, production facility storage or containment and treatment methodologies. Dedicated facilities may receive shipments of contaminated soil from many sources. Each shipment must be individually tracked. The facility permit may require additional conditions outside the minimum design requirements associated with one-time use methodologies. Permits for these sites require soil, groundwater and possibly surface water and air monitoring to ensure protection of human health and the environment. These permits are issued for up to five years and require the payment of a permit fee as set by statute.
If a land application facility has previously been approved for a one-time use (including under a Certificate of Approval), any subsequent use of that facility will require the facility to be re-permitted as a dedicated facility, unless it can be demonstrated by soil testing that fuel hydrocarbons or other contaminants from previous applications have been remediated below treatment goals and that soil conditions are suitable, subject to the guidelines and rules for dedicated facilities.
The Hazardous Waste Bureau manages and implements Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) permits and corrective action at treatment, storage and disposal facilities and permitted hazardous waste facilities throughout the state, exclusive of Indian lands.
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