The rules guys will be along shortly to tell you the callout for datum feature A is invalid and must be a perpendicularity tolerance and not a position tolerance unless there is another feature that also uses only datum feature A in the feature control frame for a position or a profile geometric characteristic control.
After that the true position is exactly where it is depicted as being - that is the definition of true position.
If you want to measure how far off the actual manufactured feature is from the true position you need to align to datum feature A, locate the axis of datum feature B, and then clock the coordinate system to pass through datum feature C in the A|B datum reference frame.
After that is set up, translate to where the feature is, [15.00] and set the measurement origin there. With that origin measure where the axis of the feature is; the distance from the measurement origin to the axis is the radial offset; if one is concerned about conformance, look at where the axis is farthest from the true position as measured within the depth of the feature. Double this largest radial amount to get the variation that is used to compare to the tolerance for the feature.
The X and Y position is tougher to determine as the axis may not be orthogonal to the datum reference frame, so you need to decide where along the axis those values are to be measured. It may be at one end the X offset is zero and the Y offset is some value; at the other end of the feature the X offset is some value and the Y offset is zero. This is why it is normal to simply record the maximum diameter of the variation from the true position.