The Other Mrs Vk

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Cherie Trojak

unread,
Aug 4, 2024, 3:38:43 PM8/4/24
to juncvingwattwork
BeginningMay 7, 2025, if you plan to use your state-issued ID or license to fly within the U.S., make sure it is REAL ID compliant. If you are not sure if your ID complies with REAL ID, check with your state department of motor vehicles.

In the event you arrive at the airport without valid identification, because it is lost or at home, you may still be allowed to fly. The TSA officer may ask you to complete an identity verification process which includes collecting information such as your name, current address, and other personal information to confirm your identity. If your identity is confirmed, you will be allowed to enter the screening checkpoint. You will be subject to additional screening, to include a patdown and screening of carry-on property.


You will not be allowed to enter the security checkpoint if your identity cannot be confirmed, you choose to not provide proper identification or you decline to cooperate with the identity verification process.


TSA accepts variations on suffixes on boarding passes and ID. Suffixes are not required on boarding passes. If there is a suffix on the boarding pass, and there is not one on the ID or vice versa, that is considered an acceptable variation.


In Minnesota, you can vote early with an absentee ballot starting 46 days before Election Day. You can request an absentee ballot online for federal, state, and county elections. Read about other options and more information about absentee voting at the links below.


Voters with print disabilities may request an accessible absentee ballot.



Print disabilities are disabilities that interfere with the effective reading, writing, or use of printed materials. This definition includes:


Below are listed information and materials available on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (cdc.gov) website translated into other languages. Topics include emergency preparedness and response, diseases and conditions, data and statistics, environmental health, healthy living, injury, violence and safety, life stages and populations, travelers' health, and workplace safety and health among others. The information comes in various formats available for sharing and downloading. All of the resources are free to print and share. Additional resources will be added periodically, so please visit often. For information in Spanish only, please visit CDC en Espaol.






This toolkit is for valued partners of the IRS: social organizations, colleges, universities, trade and technical schools, tribal and local government, tax return preparers and more. It brings you tools and resources for certain credits other than the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) -- that is, the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC) and the refundable part of the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC). We also provide resources for the non-refundable Child Tax Credit (CTC), Credit for Other Dependents (ODC), Lifetime Learning Credit (LLC) and the non-refundable part of the AOTC.


*Academic Period can be semesters, trimesters, quarters or any other period of study such as a summer school session. The schools determine the academic periods. For schools that use clock or credit hours and do not have academic terms, the payment period may be treated as an academic period.


Whether you are a social or civic organization, a government office or agency, a county or municipal agency or a tax return preparer, find out what you need to know about CTC, ACTC and ODC.


Be an "A plus" student on the Form 1098-T, Tuition Statement, and go to the "head of the class" on eligibility requirements and documentation. Find out more or view the be and "A student on the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) and other education benefits here.


Whether you are a social or civic organization, a government office or agency, a county or municipal agency or a tax return preparer, find out What You Need to Know about CTC and ACTC


Government and tax-exempt entities can now benefit from clean energy tax credits with new options enabled by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. Find out about elective pay and transferability of clean energy tax credits.


Political organizations

A party, committee, association, fund or other organization organized and operated primarily for the purpose of directly or indirectly accepting contributions or making expenditures, or both, for an exempt function.


Other nonprofits

Organizations meeting specified requirements may qualify for exemption under subsections other than Section 501(c)(3). These include social welfare organizations, civic leagues, social clubs, labor organizations and business leagues.


OFAC publishes a list to identify persons operating in sectors of the Russian economy identified by the Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to Executive Order 13662. Directives found within the list describe prohibitions on dealings with the persons identified.


The FSE List is not part of the Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) List. However, individuals and companies on the FSE List may also appear on the SDN List. FSE List targets will appear in OFAC's Sanctions List Search tool with the program tag beginning with "FSE-" and "Non-SDN" as the list type.


Section (b) of General License 4 issued pursuant to the Global Terrorism Sanctions Regulations (31 C.F.R. Part 594), the Terrorism Sanctions Regulations (31 C.F.R. Part 595), and the Foreign Terrorist Organizations Sanctions Regulations (31 C.F.R. Part 597) authorizes U.S. financial institutions to reject transactions with members of the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) who were elected to the PLC on the party slate of Hamas, or any other Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO), Specially Designated Terrorist (SDT), or Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT), provided that any such individuals are not named on OFAC's list of Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons (SDN List).


In order to uniquely identify these names, OFAC has created the program code [NS-PLC]. The prefix "NS" stands for "non-SDN". NS-PLC List targets will appear in OFAC's Sanctions List Search tool with the program tag "NS-PLC" and "Non-SDN" as the list type.


The CAPTA List contains identifying information of FFIs for which the opening or maintaining of a correspondent account or a payable-through account is prohibited or is subject to one or more strict conditions pursuant to the authorities listed below.


The CAPTA List is not part of the Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) List. Information that appears on the CAPTA list will be included in the data formats associated with the Consolidated Sanctions List.


Upon the imposition of less than full blocking sanctions or blocking prohibitions subject to a statutory exception for the importation of goods, as provided by statute or other authority, OFAC will place the name and other relevant identifiers of the sanctioned person on the NS-MBS List. The NS-MBS List also will specify the type of sanction or sanctions imposed on the listed person and the legal authority under which the person is sanctioned.


The latest changes to the NS-MBS List may appear here prior to their publication in the Federal Register, and users of this list can rely on changes indicated in this document. Such changes reflect official actions of OFAC or the Department of State and will be published as soon as practicable in the Federal Register. Users are advised to check the Federal Register and this electronic publication routinely for additional names or other changes to the NS-MBS List.


Information that appears on the NS-MBS List will be included in the data formats associated with the Consolidated Sanctions List NS-MBS List targets will appear in OFAC's Sanctions List Search tool with the program tag beginning with "CAATSA - RUSSIA" and "Non-SDN" as the list type..


Information that appears on the NS-CMIC List will be included in the data formats associated with the Consolidated Sanctions List. NS-CMIC List targets will appear in OFAC's Sanctions List Search tool with the program tag beginning with "CMIC-EO" and "Non-SDN" as the list type.


The (other) row is a row that appears in a report, exploration, or Data API response when the number of rows in a table exceeds the table's row limit. When this happens, Analytics surfaces only the most common dimension values and condenses less common values under the (other) row.


For example, if the row limit for the table supporting the Pages and screens report is 100k, but the property has 150k unique pages, then Analytics will sort the rows from most to least common and then group together the last 50k rows under the (other) row.


Each dimension in Analytics can have a number of assigned values. The number of values assigned to a dimension is its cardinality. For example, the Is key events dimension might have two assigned values ('true' or 'false'). In contrast, the Page path dimension might have a different value for each URL path on your website.


Many tables include multiple dimensions. For these tables, the number of rows needed can be as many as the multiplication of the number of values for each dimension. For example, if a report includes the Device dimension (3 values: desktop, tablet, and mobile) and the Age dimension (6 age groups), then the table can have up to 18 rows, depending on if you collect data for each combination of the dimension values.


Any dimension with more than 500 values should be considered a high-cardinality dimension, as it will significantly increase the cardinality of all the tables storing that dimension, and increase the likelihood that those tables will have some data condensed in the (other) row. The 500 values per dimension is not a limit, but a guidance. The most values collected for your dimensions, the higher the risk of having data condensed in the (other) row.


Note: You may see a warning about the (other) row in the data quality icon, but no (other) row appears in the report or exploration. This may happen when the (other) row affects the results, but is not necessarily visibile in your current view. For example, if you've applied a filter to the report that hides results grouped under the (other) row, you won't see the (other) row but you will see the warning.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages