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AROUND THE BLUEGRASS - January '99

ASHLAND

  • Ashland Inc. has pledged to continue its support of area charities through 2001 and perhaps beyond. The annual gifts will begin in '99 at a level near to what the groups have been receiving. The company's move to Covington's RiverCenter I office tower becomes official this month, with 110 of the company's top executives and other managers moving into the new offices.

BELFRY

  • The Kentucky Cabinet for Families and Children has opened a satellite office in Belfry in an effort to improve access to services for residents of the northeastern part of Pike County. Prior to opening the satellite office, some CFC clients were forced to drive up to 45 minutes or more over mountainous terrain to reach the county seat of Pikeville.

CAMPBELLSVILLE

  • Campbellsville University has received approval for a $2 million federal grant for a Technology Center for Occupational Training that will focus on training for business and industry, entrepreneurship/small business ownership, and advanced computer operations.

CENTRAL CITY

  • Construction is expected to begin this month on The Courtyard, a $4 million assisted living project to be located in downtown Central City. The three-story structure, which will include 38 one- and two-bedroom apartments, should be complete by the end of the year. City officials are hoping that the new project will serve to revitalize a downtown area that has been lackluster since the area's economy soured with the depletion of its coal industry.

CORBIN

  • A new $4 million facility in Corbin is one of only four in the nation that will produce tamper-resistant alien registration cards (green cards) for the Immigration and Naturalization Service. The 18,000-square-foot facility, located in the Corbin Tri-County Industrial Park, will employ approximately 70 people.

COVINGTON

  • Grand opening ceremonies for the $30.5 million Northern Kentucky Convention Center are scheduled for next month. The center, which features 50,000 square feet of exhibit hall space, is aimed at attracting mid-sized groups and has already booked 150 events through the next four years.
  • Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation is investing $350,000 for the development of two specially-dedicated smoking lounges in the main terminal of the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. Airport officials have approved 10 smoking lounges in all, to be built in each of the airport's terminals. Construction on the new lounges, which will incorporate the latest in ventilation technology, is expected to begin this month.

HEBRON

  • Pomeroy Computer Resources, Inc. (Nasdaq:PMRY) has acquired Access Technologies, Inc., a Memphis, Tennessee-based telecommunications and computer networking provider with 1997 revenues of approximately $18 million.
  • COMAIR Inc. will introduce nonstop jet service between Bangor, Maine and the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport effective March 2.

HIGHLAND HEIGHTS

  • Northern Kentucky University and Fidelity Investments have partnered to create a 401(k) Customer Service Phone Center on NKU's campus that will employ 180 students. The center is the first of its kind for Fidelity.

HOPKINSVILLE

  • Amfine Chemical Corporation, a Japanese joint venture established between Asahi Denka Kohyo K.K., Mitsubishi International Corporation and Mitsubishi Corporation, has announced that it will locate in Hopkinsville.

LEXINGTON

  • An anonymous $100,000 gift to the Lexington Theological Seminary will be used to establish the Franklin B. Moosnick Visiting Professorship in Judaic Studies.
  • Keeneland's November Breeding Stock Sale totaled $264,657,700, the greatest dollar volume in Thoroughbred auction history.
  • The University of Kentucky College of Allied Health Professions has been ranked among the top 22 allied health research programs to be funded by the National Institute of Health. UK officials expect the national recognition to help recruit additional faculty members already known for their research expertise.
  • Saint Joseph Hospital has finalized its purchase of Jewish Hospital Lexington, which will now be known as Saint Joseph East.
  • Caudill's Climatemaster has received Trane's National Distinguished Dealer Award for an unprecedented second year in a row and is one of only 10 percent of Trane dealers in the nation to be selected for the award.

LOUISVILLE

  • The Physicians Inc. of Louisville has partnered with UniPhy Healthcare Inc. of Nashville to create a new company known as UniPhy Healthcare of Louisville Inc. which will operate TPI Health Systems. The Physicians Inc. is a network of 1,800 doctors serving a 27-county region of Kentucky and Southern Indiana.
  • Century 21 Joe Guy Hagan Realtors and Rainey, Jones & Associates have merged their real estate firms. With a 390-member sales staff, the new firm will be the largest Century 21 franchise in the region.
  • Res-Care Inc. has acquired Texas Living Centers of Garland, Texas, an organization with annual revenues of $1.4 million that provides services to approximately 25 people with developmental disabilities.
  • Dayton Freight Lines, Inc. has purchased approximately 10 acres in southwestern Louisville to construct a new $1.5 million transportation center. The Dayton, Ohio-based company is currently leasing space in the area and anticipates moving to its new facility by May.
  • Universal Coach Parts, Inc. (UCP) has announced plans to open a 350,000-square-foot warehouse facility by July of this year. Officials at UCP, the country's largest distributor of after-market parts of motor coaches and buses, said Louisville's status as a hub city for the nation's two largest air and freight carriers will enable their company to enhance its customer deliveries. The company expects to hire some 225 people (average wage $31,500) at the new facility.
  • The Bourbon Stock Yard has been purchased for $3.4 million by The Home of the Innocents, which plans build a new village for abused and neglected children. The Home of the Innocents plans to spend up to $11 million to transform the 20-acre property.
  • Paul Schultz Advertising has been named the agency of record for The Louisville and Jefferson County Convention and Visitors Bureau, Shelby County Trust Bank and Louisville Bedding.
  • Work has begun on the final phase of the $6 million effort to make Louisville's Riverfront Plaza more inviting. The project includes a landscaped garden and lawn that will accommodate up to 2,000 people for outdoor concerts and presentations.
  • The Combined Health Appeal of Kentucky, Inc. and the Kentucky National Voluntary Health Agencies, Inc. have merged to form the state's largest charitable health federation.
  • Liqui-Dri Foods, Inc., a Louisville company that makes biscuit and pancake mixes for commercial food use, has been sold by owner Quaker Oats, which plans to focus on its consumer goods. The new owner is Wind Point Partners, a private equity company based in Michigan. Company officials with Wind Point say no staffing changes are expected for the staff of 350.
  • ThermoView Industries, Inc. continues its aggressive expansion efforts with the acquisition of Precision Window Manufacturing, Inc., a St. Louis company with annual sales of approximately $7.4 million. Since becoming a publicly-traded company last April, ThermoView has completed 10 mergers or acquisitions. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.
  • Strategia Corp., which specializes in computer disaster recovery, has announced that it will be reducing its workforce by 15-20. Company officials say that work on the Year 2000 computer problems is turning out to be less than anticipated due to both lack of awareness among many managers of the potential of the Y2K problem and the fact that some companies are opting to handle the situation from within rather than hiring a consulting firm.

MIDWAY

  • The Midway City Council has approved issuing $2.2 million in bonds to help finance a $5.5 million University of Kentucky Basketball Museum in nearby Lexington. In return, the UK museum will donate $20,000 to Midway to begin a community museum that city officials hope will help rejuvenate the community's downtown area.

OWENSBORO

  • Hausner Hard-Chrome Inc. has announced that it plans to relocate its corporate headquarters from the Chicago area to Owensboro, where the company operates a 40,000-square-foot chrome plating plant that employs approximately 80. The company plans to build a 5,000-square-foot administrative building adjacent to the plant and is expected to move in by late spring. The relocation will result in about 15 new jobs over the next several years.
  • Kentucky Wesleyan College has received a gift of $2 million from John W. Jones, Leland C. Jones and James E. Jones, three brothers who are all alumni of the college. The majority of the donation, the largest ever made to KWC by a living donor, will be used to support the school's campus master plan. The plan features a new science building, a campus community center and a new fine arts center, among other improvements.

PADUCAH

  • LYNX Services, which processes automotive replacement glass claims and first-notice-of-loss for insurance and fleet companies, has selected Paducah's Information Age Park as the site of a new insurance claims service center. Construction on the 35,000-square-foot facility is expected to be complete by August and the company anticipates hiring up to 150 people by the end of the year, with average pay running $8-8.50 per hour plus benefits. Employment figures are expected to rise to 300 within the next two years.

PARIS

  • American Commercial Window, a subsidiary of Ohio-based American Architectural Products Corp., has announced plans to invest some $12 million in locating its operations in the former Millennium Chemical plant in Paris. The company expects to employ up to 300 people within two years of full operation and more than 500 within the next five years.

PIKEVILLE

  • Pike County has received $12.5 million in state funding for the construction of a new civic center for the Pikeville area. The proposed 108,000-square-foot facility, which will seat up to 10,700 is expected to create some 100 new jobs and generate more than $10 million annually.
  • A new organization known as the Pikeville-Pike County Economic Development Council Inc. has been formed to serve as an umbrella agency for the Pike County Chamber of Commerce, Pikeville Main Street Program and the Pikeville-Pike County Tourism Commission. In addition to the leaders of the aforementioned groups, the new agency will also include the mayor of Pikeville, the Pike County judge-executive and local business people.
  • Walter May, president of East Kentucky Broadcasting, has been named as interim chief executive officer of Pikeville Methodist Hospital. Former CEO Martha O'Regan Chill resigned in September.
  • Community Trust Bancorp, Inc. has announced a stock repurchase program involving the purchase of up to 500,000 shares of its outstanding common stock. The $2.25 billion asset bank holding company has 69 branches in central and eastern Kentucky and West Virginia.

RICHWOOD

  • Messier-Bugatti, a French manufacturing company, is investing more than $30 million in the development of a new plant to manufacture carbon disks for Airbus and Boeing aircraft brakes. The plant will be run by A-Carb, Messier-Bugatti's first American subsidiary, and is expected to be completed by the end of this year.

SHELBYVILLE

  • Jewish Hospital has begun construction on a $5.5 million addition that will add a three-story, 20,000-square-foot clinical services wing to the 76-bed hospital. Jewish also plans to renovate 10,000 square feet of existing hospital space.

SOMERSET

  • Toledo, Ohio-based Carstone Industries, which manufactures chairs for industrial and commercial clients and a line of ergonomically-correct garden tools among other things, has announced that it plans to move its operations to Somerset. The company will move into the 36,000-square-foot building once occupied by Quality Woodworks, creating approximately 30 new jobs for the area that will pay up to around $12 per hour.

VANCEBURG

  • Nine West Group Inc. has announced that it will lay off approximately 200 workers this month as part of a companywide reduction that will eliminate 700 jobs. Last year, the company cut 300 jobs at the Vanceburg facility and closed a plant in nearby Fleming County, taking 400 jobs.

 

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