Event Permits And Regulations

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  • View profile for Vitaly Friedman
    Vitaly Friedman Vitaly Friedman is an Influencer

    Practical insights for better UX • Running “Measure UX” and “Design Patterns For AI” • Founder of SmashingMag • Speaker • Loves writing, checklists and running workshops on UX. 🍣

    227,214 followers

    European Accessibility Act (EAA): Why WCAG AA Isn’t Enough (https://lnkd.in/eHXE3YFK), a guide on why meeting WCAG standards alone doesn’t mean that digital products are compliant with EAA, and what EAA covers beyond the usual suspects. Put together by fine folks at Stark. WCAG guidelines focus on web content accessibility — color contrast, headings, navigation order, focus states, etc. It’s necessary, but not sufficient. The EAA adds requirements that go beyond the UI layer: 1. Interoperability with assistive technology 2. Third-party vendors, tools, services 3. Accessible support and cancellation flows 4. Conformance statements and technical docs 5. End-to-end usability (e.g. across devices, platforms) 6. Full-service accessibility (before, during, after) 7. Information delivery at every stage of use (e.g. emails). Frankly, it’s very difficult to imagine that an end-to-end accessible experience that covers the points above would emerge with a few accessibility-focused sprints running a few times a year. Yet in many organizations, accessibility initiatives are one-off efforts. As the time comes, there is a big effort to make digital products and services compliant, document these efforts and leave it be — until the next round of compliance work. Accessibility is treated as necessary work that must be done every now and again, rather than an ongoing investment and opportunity to reach wider audience. I love the point that organizations need to operationalize accessibility like they govern privacy and security. It requires people who enable and establish accessibility efforts, track their success and inform product development. It’s easier to achieve when it’s an ongoing effort, and when it involves a diverse group of users in research, design and testing. Accessibility never happens by accident. There must be a deliberate effort to make products and services more accessible. It doesn’t have to be challenging if it’s considered early. No digital product is neutral. Accessibility is a deliberate decision, and a commitment. Not only does it help everyone; it also shows what a company believes in and values. And once you do have a commitment, it will be so much easier to retain accessibility, rather than adding it last minute as a crutch — because that’s where it’s way too late to do it right, and way too expensive to make it well. And yet again, a kind word of support to everyone speaking for and supporting accessibility work, often with a lot of resistance, with very little budget and with a lot of care and persistence — to help people who often need help the most, and add benefits for everybody else. 👏🏼👏🏽👏🏾 Useful resources: The New European Accessibility Act (EAA), And What It Means For You https://lnkd.in/eH-5Q3Mr #ux #WebAccessibility

  • View profile for Devu Parmar

    Human Resources Professional | CIPD Level 5 | Talent Acquisition & Employee Relations | UAE Labor Law | Government & Corporate HR

    18,608 followers

    MOHRE & GDRFA Updates Every HR in the UAE Should Know. The UAE has announced a series of important procedural changes that directly impact visa processing and labour compliance. These are not just regulatory updates, but they influence how we plan renewals, onboard staff, and manage risk as HR professionals. Here’s a quick summary of the 5 key changes: 1. Grace Period After Visa Expiry is Now Only 30 Days The grace period after visa expiry or cancellation has now been officially standardised to 30 days. Once this period ends, overstay fines will apply. Previously, grace periods varied depending on the designation, but now it’s a fixed 30 days for everyone. It’s important to begin renewal processes well before the visa expires to avoid penalties. 2. Labour Card Must Be Renewed Before Visa Renewal You will no longer be able to renew a residence visa unless the labour contract has been renewed first. This is now mandatory under MOHRE procedures. 3. Tawjeeh Training is Required Before Visa Stamping (for New Work Permits) For new hires, especially under certain skill levels, the Tawjeeh awareness training must be completed before stamping the visa. Missing this step will delay the process. 4. ILOE Insurance and Any Fines Must Be Paid to Approve Labour Card If your ILOE (Unemployment Insurance) registration is pending or if there are fines, the system will not allow labour contract renewal. 5. All Traffic Fines (Dubai Police) Must Be Paid Before Visa Stamping A recent update now links traffic fine clearance to visa renewal. If there are unpaid fines in the Dubai Police system, visa stamping will be blocked. Why It Matters: Whether you are an HR professional handling renewals or an employee planning to renew your visa soon, these changes affect processing timelines, system approvals, and overall readiness. Overlooking even one of these items may result in delays, fines, or blocked visa issuance. #UAEHR #MOHRE #GDRFA #LabourLawUAE #VisaRenewal #HRCompliance #Tawjeeh #ILOE #HRProfessionals #EmployeeExperience #HRUpdates #UAEWorkforce #DubaiHR #LinkedInHR #PeopleAndCulture #WorkInUAE #UAEEmployment

  • View profile for Egidija Benotiene, RCIC 🇨🇦

    TR→PR in Canada | Approval Is in the Details | Express Entry · OINP · Federal PR · Refusals & PFLs

    8,263 followers

    Still calling it “implied status”? It’s 2025, and the rules are stricter than they used to be. Many DMs, emails, and consultations lately - people are genuinely confused 😵💫 Maintained status (yes, not implied!) lets you legally stay and keep working or studying in Canada while IRCC processes your extension - if you applied before your permit expired and stayed in Canada. More and more applicants were submitting a follow-up application while their first one was still in process, hoping to fix a mistake, add documents, or buy more time. Now they’re dealing with the consequences... Because submitting a second application doesn’t always protect you 🔥 If your first application is refused, what happens next depends on when you submitted the second one: → If it was submitted before your status expired, you stay on maintained status while IRCC processes it. → But if it was submitted after your status expired, your legal stay ends immediately. That application will be refused, and you may need to apply for restoration. And no, you can’t leave the country and expect to return to work. ✖️ Leave Canada? You lose maintained status ✖️ You can’t resume work or study until IRCC approves your new permit ✖️ You could face gaps in status, or worse, inadmissibility ✖️ Switch to visitor? You lose work/study rights ✖️ Apply too late? You risk status loss and ineligibility for restoration 💡 Maintained status only keeps your original conditions - nothing more! 💡 To prove you’re on maintained status, you’ll need your expired permit and proof of timely submission. 📩 If your permit is expiring soon, or you’re already on maintained status, don’t guess your next move. A second set of eyes could save your status.

  • View profile for Vysakh Mohanan

    Public Relations Officer | 10+ Years in UAE | Government Liaison (MOHRE, GDRFA, ICP, DED, Amer, Tas-heel) | Business Development

    2,021 followers

    🚨 Important UAE HR Update: MOHRE & GDRFA Announce New Visa & Labour Procedures 🚨 If you’re an HR professional, employer, or employee in the UAE, these latest updates will directly impact how you manage visa renewals, labour contracts, and compliance. Here’s a quick summary of the 5 key changes every HR should know: 1️⃣ Grace Period After Visa Expiry Is Now Only 30 Days The grace period after visa expiry or cancellation is now standardized to 30 days. Overstay beyond this will incur fines. 👉 Start renewal processes well before expiry. 2️⃣ Labour Card Must Be Renewed Before Visa Renewal You can no longer renew a residence visa unless the labour contract has already been renewed. 👉 This is now mandatory under MOHRE procedures. 3️⃣ Tawjeeh Training Required Before Visa Stamping (for New Hires) New employees (especially in specific job categories) must complete Tawjeeh awareness training before visa stamping. 👉 Missing this step will delay the process. 4️⃣ ILOE Insurance & Any Fines Must Be Paid Before Labour Card Approval If ILOE (Unemployment Insurance) registration is pending or fines are unpaid, the system will block labour card renewal. 👉 Ensure all dues are cleared in advance. 5️⃣ All Traffic Fines (Dubai Police) Must Be Cleared Before Visa Stamping Traffic fines are now directly linked to visa processing. 👉 Unpaid fines in the Dubai Police system will block visa renewal/stamping. 💡 Why This Matters These changes affect processing timelines, system approvals, and compliance. Missing even one step can lead to delays, fines, or blocked visa issuance. 🤝 LET'S CONNECT *If your company needs support with visa processing, labour compliance, or HR solutions, feel free to contact me* +971581315393 #UAEHR #MOHRE #GDRFA #LabourLawUAE #VisaRenewal #HRCompliance #Tawjeeh #ILOE #HRProfessionals #HRUpdates #DubaiHR #UAEEmployment #PeopleAndCulture #WorkInUAE #BusinessOpportunities

  • View profile for Masood Mallick

    Managing Director & Group CEO at Re Sustainability

    15,461 followers

    Something fundamental just changed in India. No headlines. No fanfare. On January 27, 2026, India's environmental permitting regime was quietly transformed. For 50 years, Indian industries lived by the renewal calendar. Every 1 to 5 years, depending on your pollution category, you had to renew your Consent to Operate. The licence to run your factory. Your plant. Your operations. Miss the deadline? Risk shutdown. Documents incomplete? Delays. Different states? Different systems. Air consent? One application. Water consent? Another application. Hazardous waste? A third. A regulatory maze that consumed time, money, and management attention. On January 27, 2026, that system was quietly dismantled. The Government of India amended the Uniform Consent Guidelines under the Air Act (1981) and Water Act (1974). The changes are sweeping: 1. Indefinite CTO Validity: Consent to Operate, once granted, now remains valid until cancelled. No more periodic renewals. The burden shifts from proving compliance every few years to maintaining compliance continuously. 2. Consolidated Consent Air and water consents, plus hazardous waste authorisations: now processed through a single integrated application. One form. One process. One decision. 3. Deemed Consent for MSMEs: Micro and small enterprises in notified industrial areas now receive automatic Consent to Establish upon submitting a self-certified form. Paperwork replaced by accountability. 4. Third-Party Verification: Registered Environment Auditors can now conduct site inspections. Decentralised verification. Faster processing. SPCBs freed to focus on high-risk enforcement. 5. One National Portal: Within 6-12 months, CPCB will launch a single unified digital platform for all consent applications, inspections, and compliance data. Every state. Every industry. One system. 6. Faster Processing: Red category industries — the highest-risk — now get decisions in 90 days, down from 120. The philosophy has fundamentally shifted. Old approach: Periodic permission renewal. New approach: Continuous compliance monitoring. Old approach: Government as gatekeeper. New approach: Self-certification with consequences. Old approach: Paperwork as proof. New approach: Real-time data as evidence. This isn't deregulation. It's smarter regulation. Environmental standards remain. Compliance requirements remain. Cancellation powers remain. What's eliminated is the repetitive bureaucratic theatre of renewal. What's added is continuous accountability. This is India's quiet revolution in environmental governance. India is changing. Did you know? Is the world watching? — ReThink// #5 Challenge the obvious. Follow the data. #ReThink #Sustainability #India #EnvironmentalGovernance #RegulatoryReform #EaseOfDoingBusiness #Policy

  • View profile for Pragash Ramadoss

    Food Safety & Quality Leader | Driving Safe & Zero-Defect Food Manufacturing at Scale

    10,691 followers

    Big Update from FSSAI: Fixed Renewal Cycles & Long-Term License Validity Proposed! FSSAI has released a consultation paper proposing key reforms in the renewal process of food business licenses, aimed at reducing administrative load and simplifying compliance. Here are the 3 major proposals on the table: 1. Fixed Renewal Dates (Quarterly Options) Food businesses can choose any of the 4 fixed dates for renewal: 15th Jan | 15th Apr | 15th Jul | 15th Oct Helps companies plan better and align all unit renewals across India! 2. Long-Term Licenses for Trade/Retail Sectors A new 10-year license validity is being proposed for: Storage (Cold/Non-cold) Wholesale & Retail Distribution, Importers, eCommerce, etc. Less paperwork, more focus on food safety! 3. Minimum 3-Year Validity for Basic Registration Small FBOs will no longer be allowed to pick 1–2 year terms. This avoids frequent renewals and consultant dependency. Why this matters: These changes can significantly reduce compliance chaos — especially for multi-unit operators and pan-India brands struggling to track multiple renewal dates. A great move towards ease of doing business and building a strong compliance culture. FSSAI is currently seeking feedback! Stakeholders can submit comments via Google Form

  • View profile for sudheesh sudharsanan pillai

    International Recruiting Consultant | Freelance HR Recruiter | Expert in Production, Manufacturing & Cable Industry | Logistics, Warehouse, Truck Drivers & CNC Recruitment

    10,671 followers

    🇭🇷 Croatia Work Permit Update (2025–2026) – Explained Simply 1️⃣ Language Requirement (at renewal stage) Workers do NOT need fluent Croatian After about 1 year, they must show basic Croatian (A1–A1.1 level) Only basic workplace communication Language courses may be supported by employer or government 👉 This is mainly checked during permit renewal, not always at first entry. 2️⃣ Longer Validity of Permits Standard work permits: up to 3 years Seasonal work permits: up to 9 months EU Blue Card: valid up to 4 years 👉 Good for stability and long-term workforce planning. 3️⃣ Job Flexibility for Workers Workers can change employer after 12 months Only notification required, not full reapplication 👉 This protects workers but means employers must follow rules strictly. 4️⃣ Stronger Worker Protection Equal pay with Croatian workers Strict action against illegal employment 👉 Employers using shortcuts or fake contracts face penalties. 5️⃣ Employer Obligations (Very Important) Legal accommodation is mandatory Minimum employment continuity (turnover rules) Violations can result in: ❌ Fines ❌ Hiring bans ❌ Work permit cancellation 👉 Documentation must be 100% compliant. 6️⃣ Who This Applies To ✔ Mainly non-EU / non-EEA nationals (India, Nepal, Philippines, Pakistan, Bangladesh, etc.)

  • View profile for Stefano Bolletta

    MHS Europe Sales Manager

    35,785 followers

    SAHPRA South Africa Update. On June 11, 2025, SAHPRA announced new instructions for the Medical Device Establishment Licence Renewal Process. If you operate in South Africa as a manufacturer, importer, distributor, or wholesaler you need to know: - Renewals must be submitted 90 days before licence expire - Applications are now electronic only - Expect 6–8 weeks processing with only two chances to fix deficiencies - Key docs: ISO 13485:2016 certificate, GMDN codes, quality manual, and proof of fees. #sahpra #southafrica #13485 #GMDN #quality

  • View profile for Maryam Ndope

    Experience Design Lead | Accessibility Strategist | Simplifying Digital Product Accessibility for Enterprise Teams  | 2M+ Users Impacted

    7,176 followers

    “Designed with accessibility in mind.” UX portfolios love this sentence. And these: “Ensured WCAG compliance.” “Met accessibility standards.” None of these tells me anything. Here are four mistakes designers make when describing accessibility in UX portfolios, and what to say instead. 1. "I ensured the design was WCAG compliant.” - No level specified, criteria referenced or testing process Say this instead: -“Tested designs against WCAG 2.2 Level AA for contrast (1.4.3) and focus visibility (2.4.7) using Stark and keyboard testing.” 2. "Designed with accessibility in mind.” This is vague and impossible to verify. It sounds like an afterthought. Say this instead: -“Defined heading structure and semantic layout in wireframes, designed visible focus states for all interactive components, and ensured 4.5:1 contrast for body text.” 3. “The final design met accessibility standards.” Which standards? Who verified them? What issues were found? Say this instead: “Conducted WCAG 2.2 Level AA design QA. Identified 12 contrast failures and 8 missing focus states, all resolved before development handoff.” 4. Claiming compliance on unshipped work. i.e., “The design is WCAG 2.2 AA compliant.” This is misleading because WCAG compliance is for implemented products that can be audited. Say this instead: “Designed following WCAG 2.2 AA guidelines for contrast, keyboard navigation, and semantic structure.” Here's a simple framework I use for case studies:  •What I did (WCAG criteria addressed) •How I tested (Tools and methods) •What I found (Issues) •What I fixed (Changes made) •Result (Outcome) 👇🏽What accessibility red flags do you see in design portfolios? Drop your thoughts in the comments. ♻️ Share and save this for your team. — ✉️ Subscribe to my newsletter for accessibility and design insights here: https://lnkd.in/gZpAzWSu — Accessibility note: Full carousel transcript included in this post for screen reader users.

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