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FAST LANE - January
2002
STATE
Think Your Taxes are Too High?
You May be Right
A
recent survey by a Cincinnati accounting firm reveals that many construction
firms throughout Kentucky may be paying more taxes than necessary.
The survey, conducted
by Jackson, Rolfes, Spurgeon & Co. this fall, asked heads of construction
and contracting firms about their business climates and the financial
workings of their companies.
When asked
what revenue recognition method they used for tax purposes, over 60
percent responded they use the percentage of completion (POC) method,
said Jeff Oehler, tax partner-in-charge of the firms Construction
Industry Service Team. This is somewhat unusual since most of
the respondents annual revenue fell into the range of $1-10 million
and the POC method does not offer the same tax advantages the completed
contract method would.
The percentage of
completion method requires the profit on each contract to be recognized
as work is performed. The completed contract method, on the other hand,
allows a contractor to defer recognition of the profit on each contract
until the contract is completed.
For example, if
a contractor uses the percentage of completion method, and has jobs
in process at the end of the year with $3,000,000 of revenue recognized
and 15 percent gross profit margin on those jobs, they would recognize
$450,000 of taxable income on the jobs in process.
Had the same contractor
used the completed contract method, the $450,000 of gross profit and
related $180,000 of income tax (assuming a 40 percent tax bracket) could
be deferred to future years.
Another startling
finding was that over half of the construction firm and contracting
respondents do not have a strategic plan, nor do they intend on creating
one.
A strategy
is like a roadmap. It provides direction, but allows for course corrections
and new developments, said Jim Rolfes, managing partner of Jackson,
Rolfes, Spurgeon & Co. To run a business without a strategic
plan is like floating in a lifeboat without oars. A formal strategic
plan provides the structure, goals and benchmarks for growth and expansion.
STATE
Fischer, Field Packing Cos. Acquired
by Premium Foods
Fischer Packing
Company and Field Packing Company, both of which have been headquartered
in Kentucky since the early 1900s, have been acquired by Glencoe Capital,
LLC, a Chicago-based private equity firm.
Fischer and Field
will be consolidated into Glencoe Capitals Premium Foods Group,
a leading U.S. producer of premium specialty meat products.
Fischer is located
in Louisville; Owensboro is home to Field.
Premium, which is
headquartered in Crestview Hills, Kentucky, produces and markets under
brand names such as Nathans Famous, Mickelberrys, Moseys,
Scott Petersen and Liguria Italian Specialties. The company operates
processing facilities in Chicago; Bloomfield, Connecticut; Falls City,
Nebraska; and Humboldt, Iowa.
With the addition
of Fischers and Fields premium brands Field, Kentucky
Gold, Fischer, William Fischer Premium Deli, and Kentucky Legend
Premium Foods Group is on the track to becoming one of the largest specialty
meat companies in North America with pro-forma combined revenues of
over $300 million.
STATE
Tell the State What Your Business
Needs
Attention Kentucky
business owners: Nows your chance to let the state government
know what you need.
The Kentucky Workforce
Investment Board and the Cabinet for Workforce Development have mailed
surveys to 15,000 Kentucky businesses in hopes of better aligning training
and recruitment efforts with the needs of the business community.
The survey requests
information on:
- job vacancies
- education and
training requirements
- benefits offered
to employees.
Responses will be
held in strict confidence and will not be released in any form that
could identify an individual company. Only aggregate or grouped results
will be published.
The University of
Kentucky and the University of Louisville will collect and analyze the
information, which will be available in a Web-based format to help businesses
make decisions in areas such as business expansion and benefit packages.
Were
encouraging businesses to take the time to complete these surveys because
our data will only be as good as the business participation we get across
the state, noted Allen Rose, Cabinet for Workforce Development
secretary.
If you have received
a survey and have questions, contact Mark Berger (University of Kentucky)
at 859/257-1282 or Bruce Gale (University of Louisville) at 520/852-8151.
STATE
Kentucky's Alternative Fuel Program
Garners National Recognition
The
U.S. Department of Energy has selected Kentuckys alternative fuel
vehicle program as one of the top in the nation.
The Commonwealth
Clean Cities Partnership is a voluntary program administered by the
Kentucky Clean Fuels Coalition, a non-profit group based in Louisville.
The KCFC provides education, technical support, communications and funding
resources for alternative fuel vehicle projects across the state.
The program was
recognized by the Department of Energy for the number of alternative
fuel vehicles and alternative refueling sites placed in operation in
2000.
There are currently
more than 3,000 vehicles across the state that operate on fuels other
than conventional gasoline or diesel, including compressed natural gas,
ethanol, electricity, propane and bio-diesel. The state government operates
more than 200 flex-fuel Ford Taurus sedans in its fleet
that run on a mixture of regular gasoline and ethanol.
Other programs recognized
in the annual review were Dallas/Ft. Worth, Cleveland, Tulsa, Los Angeles,
San Diego, Phoenix, North Jersey, Atlanta, Syracuse, New York and Denver.
STATE
Kentucky Cattle Industry Rustles
Up More Business with Mexican State
The Kentucky Department
of Agriculture (KDA) reports significant inroads with the Mexican state
of Nayarit regarding the trade of beef and dairy cattle, produce and
thoroughbreds.
KDA marketing officials
recently hosted a group from Nayarit, who plan to return to Kentucky
in early February for the National Farm Machinery Show in Louisville
and to select Kentucky beef to purchase.
Kentucky is home
to more than 1.1 million beef cows and is the largest cattle-producing
state east of the Mississippi River.
We are very
pleased with the progress we have made in developing an agricultural
trade relationship between Kentucky and Mexico, said Kentucky
Agricultural Commissioner Billy Ray Smith. Kentucky farmers have
sold more than $1 million worth of beef and dairy cattle to Mexican
ranchers in recent years, and Mexican horsemen spent nearly $1 million
on thoroughbreds at the Keeneland September yearling sale.
Nayarit is situated
on the western coast of Mexico and has a population of nearly 900,000.
STATE
State Ag Commissioner Leads National
Trade Mission to Asia
Kentucky
Agriculture Commissioner Billy Ray Smith recently met with representatives
from the retail, import and food service industries in China and South
Korea as part of a trade mission sponsored by the National Association
of State Departments of Agriculture.
International
trade offers great opportunities for the producers and agribusinesses
of Kentucky and the nation as a whole, said Smith, who was named
president of NASDA this past fall. As doors in Asia open and global
demand increases, we must take advantage of these opportunities to sell
U.S. food and agricultural products.
During the course
of his two-week journey, Smith met with trade representatives in Shanghai,
Dalian, Beijing, Huagzhou, and Seoul in an effort to develop a better
understanding of the opportunities available in major international
markets.
Ten years
ago, China had virtually no American-style supermarkets, noted
Smith. Now, it has thousands. Korean membership in the World Trade
Organization is opening trade channels and Chinas membership could
accelerate opportunities for private entrepreneurship in the food sector.
STATE
Virtual University Continues to
Expand, Enhance Services
Kentucky
Virtual University is expanding its services for the Spring 2002 semester,
adding free online tutoring, Sunday call center hours and an online
writing center.
Students can schedule
tutoring sessions in subjects ranging from basic math to Calculus II,
accounting, chemistry, economics, Spanish and statistics.
The tutoring will
remain free through mid-May 2002 and is available through an arrangement
the virtual university has with the University of Kentucky.
A second tutoring
service, the KYVU WritePlace, is an online writing lab made possible
through the UK and KYVU partnership. At the WritePlace, students can
get help with essays, research papers and even resumes. (There is a
cost associated with this service.)
Students can access
both tutoring services at http://www.kyvu.org. All courses are offered
by accredited Kentucky colleges and universities and accredited professional
development providers.
The Kentucky Virtual
University was established by the 1997 General Assembly to provide accessible
education for all citizens and employers.
For more information,
call 877-740-4357 or visit http://www.kyvu.org.
LEXINGTON
UK Researchers Developing New Technology
for Fuel Cell Hydrogen
Researchers at the
University of Kentucky are part of a project to develop new technology
to reduce the cost of producing hydrogen for use in fuel cells.
H2Fuel, LLC, an
affiliate of Illinois-based Avista Labs, recently awarded a research
and development contract to the University of Kentucky to synthesize,
characterize and test a family of chemical transport membranes that
efficiently and selectively remove the oxides of carbon from a gas mixture.
The H2fuel research
at the University of Kentucky is being supplemented by a parallel effort
funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
According to H2Fuel
President Serge Randhava, this membrane-based approach to the extraction
and purification of hydrogen from natural gas or propane is a departure
from other methods currently in use, and is expected to be less expensive
than other methods.
Dr. Winston Ho of
the University of Kentucky's Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering
is the principal investigator for both the H2fuel and the DOE programs.
The H2fuel technical team is led by Dr. Richard Kao, H2Fuel vice president
of technology.
LEXINGTON
Class Action Lawsuit Claims Lexmark
Misled Shareholders
A
shareholder class action lawsuit has been filed against Lexmark International,
alleging that the company issued false and misleading statements regarding
the companys financial situation.
According to a statement
issued by the Pennsylvania law firm of Schiffrin & Barroway, one
of the groups handling the lawsuit, Lexmark made highly positive
statements regarding the companys financial results, including
strong sales and growth of its printers
Unbeknownst to the investing
public, Lexmark was plagued with an increasing backlog of unmarketable
inventory, which defendants failed to properly account for in Lexmarks
publicly reported financial results, causing the Companys financial
results to be overstated by at least $25 million during the Class Period.
By failing to timely take a charge to earnings for the unmarketable
inventory, defendants and other Lexmark insiders were able to divest
themselves of thousands of Lexmark shares at prices well above $60 per
share, generating proceeds of over $8,000,000.
The lawsuit charges
that when it was announced on October 22 that Lexmark would record a
$25-$35 million inventory write-down in the fourth quarter of fiscal
2001 and implement a major restructuring, expected earnings per share
dropped from 70-80 cents per share to 40-50 cents per share, resulting
in a substantial loss for shareholders.
LEXINGTON
Renovated Woolworth Building to
House Hi-Tech Business Incubator
Lexington Mayor
Pam Miller has announced plans to renovate the former F.W. Woolworth
building in downtown Lexington to create a high-tech center called The
Factory.
The facility will
serve as an incubator for high-tech start-ups and house young but established
high-tech companies. Services that cater to high-tech firms (i.e. venture
capital companies, etc.) will also be housed there. The Kentucky Science
and Technology Corporation will locate in and manage the facility.
Initial plans call
for the reopening of both the Main and Limestone Street entrances to
the 38,000-square-foot building. The Art Deco, glazed tile façade
on Main Street, complete with its bold red signage, will be preserved,
as will the complex yellow brick façade on Limestone.
The renovation is
expected to be completed in 2003.
LOUISVILLE
Louisville Businessman Tapped to
Head Providian Financial Corp.
Louisville
banker and financier J. David Grissom has been named chairman of Providian
Financial Corporation, a San Francisco-based credit card company. Grissom
has been a Providian director since 1997.
Grissoms appointment
comes in the midst of a management shakeup brought about due to the
companys declining business.
Grissom was executive
vice president of Humana during the early 70s. He later served
as vice chairman and chief operating officer of Citizens Fidelity Bank
and Trust Co., which was acquired by PNC Financial Corp. in 1987. He
retired from Citizens/PNC in 1989 and formed a venture capital firm,
Mayfair Capital. Grissom also serves on the board of directors at Churchill
Downs.
LOUISVILLE
High-Tech Training Center to be
Created in Downtown Louisville
Louisville Mayor
Dave Armstrong has announced plans for a technology training center
to be located in downtown Louisville, enabling area students and employers
to have access to state-of-the-art communication technologies.
The Jefferson County
school system and the University of Louisville have joined the city
as sponsors of
TheCommunity@eMain,
which will be located in the Clocktower Building on East Main Street.
Armstrong and community leaders envision that the center will become
a central agency that pairs students with companies providing technology
internships, which in turn will build a more technologically-skilled
workforce.
STATE
Kentucky Now Home to Three National
Basketball League Teams
Kentucky,
known across the country for its enthusiasm in the game of basketball,
now boasts three teams in the newly-formed National Alliance Basketball
League.
The organization,
which has been formed by five Elite AAU mens basketball teams,
is the revival of the former National AAU Basketball League, which operated
in the 1960s and 70s. AAU Mens Basketball holds the distinction
of being the oldest continuous organized basketball league in the world
The three Kentucky
teams operating this year are the Owensboro Showboats, the Frankfort
Cattle Barons and the Kentucky Coyotes (Lexington). The Evansville (IN)
Orbits and the Charleston (WV) Bombers round out the league.
Players in the NABL
are the equivalent of second division international players. For the
most part, they are collegiate stars looking to continue their career
either in the NBA or international basketball. The purpose of the NABL
is to develop these players for eventual placement in pro basketball.
The Kentucky Coyotes
roster includes former UK stars Sean Woods and Jeff Brassow, along with
former Transylvania players Collier Mills, Kyle Green and Andrei Kholodov.
The Coyotes will play at the Kentucky Basketball Academy in Lexington.
The Owensboro Showboats
will play at the historic Owensboro Sports Center, while the Frankfort
Cattle Barons can be seen at the Farnham Dudgeon Civic Center.
The teams have already
begun playing a 20-game conference schedule, which will run through
March 14.
LOUISVILLE
West Nile Virus Confirmed in Death
of Horse Stabled at Churchill Downs
The state veterinarians
office has confirmed that the West Nile Virus caused the death of a
two-year-old horse that had been stabled at Churchill Downs.
The horse, Rocket
Express, was euthanized October 25 after developing severe neurological
symptoms. Eight horses in Kentucky now have been confirmed as having
contracted West Nile Virus (WNV).
A ninth horse confirmed
as having WNV was diagnosed in Kentucky, but was exposed to the virus
in Florida and is being counted as a Florida case, said Rusty Ford,
equine programs manager for the state veterinarian, Dr. Don Notter.
That horse has recovered and has been returned to Florida.
West Nile Virus
causes encephalitis, or inflammation of the brain, in older horses,
humans and birds. It is transmitted by mosquitoes and is not contagious.
However, WNV can be fatal in humans. Individuals over age 50 and those
with weak immune systems are particularly at risk, according to the
Department for Public Health.
Business Briefs
STATE
- In an effort
to make banking easier for Mexican nationals, Firstar Bank has begun
accepting official identification issued by the Consulate of Mexico
to open a bank account or cash checks drawn on a Firstar account.
The bank is also accepting the Individual Taxpayer Identification
Number, which makes it easier for individuals with non-resident status
to open accounts.
- CEMEX, a Mexican
cement company, has sold its aggregate operations in Kentucky to Florida-based
Rinker Materials Corporation. CEMEX, which ranks as one of the largest
cement companies in the world, operates four quarries in Kentucky:
two in Bowling Green and one each in Hartford and Bardstown. A quarry
in Columbia, Missouri was also part of the $42 million deal. Although
the Kentucky and Missouri quarries are well run and profitable, they
have relatively limited strategic value for CEMEX, said Gilberto
Perez, President of CEMEXs U.S. Operations. The Kentucky and
Missouri quarries were acquired by CEMEX in November 2000 as part
of its acquisition of Southdown.
BOONE COUNTY
- Ted Bushelman
and Richard Davis are sharing the honor of receiving the Boone County
Businessman Associations Businessman of the Year award. Bushelman
is the director of communications for the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky
International Airport. Davis is a local farmer and has also owned
a number of area service stations over the past 27 years.
BOWLING GREEN
- Deeds have
been recorded in the initial land acquisition for the Kentucky TriModal
Transpark, a proposed business and industrial park centered around
interstate, rail and air transportation facilities. The purchase totaled
approximately 121 acres along US 31-W in north Warren County with
a price tag of about $1.5 million. The first phase of the project
will include the purchase of 2,000 acres and development of 240 acres.
COVINGTON
- Regent Communications,
Inc. (NASDAQ RGCI) has entered into definitive purchase agreements
to sell approximately 900,000 shares of newly-issued common stock
to both new and existing shareholders at a price of $5.75 per share.
The private placement is expected to raise net proceeds of approximately
$5. Regent focuses on acquiring, developing and operating radio stations
in middle- and small-sized markets.
DAVIESS COUNTY
- A Daviess
county businessman has announced plans to open an equine center near
Ben Hawes State Park that would include indoor and outdoor arenas
for horse shows and rodeos. Steve Young, owner of Cowboys Tack
and Trailer Sales in Owensboro, hopes to secure the appropriate use
permit for approximately 20 acres and begin development for a spring
opening.
ERLANGER
- Paul Hemmer
Companies has announced plans to develop a 24-acre site just off the
Mineola exit in Erlanger, near the Greater Cincinnati Northern Kentucky
International Airport. The site will be used for a multi-story office
complex or research facility.
FORT MITCHELL
- Columbia Sussex
Corporation, which owns and operates hotels throughout the U.S., Canada
and the Caribbean, has signed a contract to acquire six Adams
Mark hotels. The hotels are located in Memphis; Houston; Philadelphia;
Columbia, SC; Clearwater, FL; and Colorado Springs. The sale price
has not been disclosed.
FRANKFORT
- The Kentucky
Military History Museum has opened a new Civil War exhibit, highlighting
Kentuckys pivotal role in the conflict. The exhibit replaces
an earlier Civil War exhibit and will feature four theme areas, including
life as a Civil War soldier, Kentucky battlefields, a section highlighting
the role of African American soldiers, and changes in weaponry and
tactics.
GARRARD COUNTY
- A recently-released
feasibility study done by the state suggests that a proposed state
resort park developed around Lake Herrington would attract some 271,000
visitors annually, pumping $5.7 million per year into the local economy.
The estimated cost of a 43-room lodge, 83-site campground and an on-site
wastewater treatment plant would run approximately $14.5 million.
The development of such a park would create around 150 new jobs.
LEXINGTON
- The Greater
Lexington Chamber of Commerce has announced plans to travel to Raleigh,
North Carolina to study the areas approach to economic, education
and cultural issues. Raleigh, rated as the Best Place to Work
by FORTUNE magazine in 2000, is home to the nations first state-supported
art museum and symphony orchestra and offers a wide variety of professional
and collegiate sports teams. Its school system has been ranked as
one of the 100 Best Public School Systems in the country
by Money magazine.
- Neogen Corporation
has entered into an agreement to become the primary supplier of veterinary
instruments and supplies for Tractor Supply Company, one of the nations
largest farm and ranch retailers. Tractor Supply will carry Neogens
Ideal Instruments line of instruments and supplies.
- Bluegrass
Regional Mental Health-Mental Retardation Board Inc. has been selected
by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Service Administration to
conduct a three-year research project involving fetal alcohol syndrome.
The project, which is one of only four awarded nationally, is aimed
at reducing the prevalence of fetal alcohol syndrome and its effects
in rural areas.
- Lexington-based
A&W Restaurants, a division of Yorkshire Global Restaurants, has
awarded broadcast media planning and buying responsibilities to Right
Place Media (RPM), also headquartered in Lexington. Other RPM clients
include Fazolis, Three Chimneys Farm, and the University of
Kentucky Medical Center.
- Ardent Health
Services of Nashville, Tennessee has announced plans to purchase Lexingtons
Samaritan Hospital. The hospital, which now has 336 beds, is a Lexington
institution, having opened its doors in 1888.
- Atlantic Coast
Airlines, which operates as a United Express carrier, is now offering
regional jet service between Lexington and Chicagos OHare
International Airport. The schedule features three daily round-trip
flights, replacing service previously offered by United Express partner
Air Wisconsin.
LOUISVILLE
- Powergen plc,
the British parent company of LG& Energy, has announced plans
to sell two power plants in Georgia, leaving LG&E Energy Corp.
as the companys only U.S. holding. LG&E owns Kentucky Utilities
and Louisville Gas & Electric Co., which serve 1.13 million customers
in Kentucky and Virginia.
- Genscape,
Inc., a young company that provides energy companies across the U.S.
with information regarding power plant operating status, has received
$3.55 million in venture capital funding. The investment group is
comprised of Chrysalis Ventures, Prosperitas Investment Partners,
LP, Anchorage Angels, Vectren Enterprises, Inc. Genscape uses wireless
monitoring devices to collect data from high voltage electric transmission
lines at various points on the electric grids. The company then provides
its energy customers with estimates of power plant operating status,
allowing them to determine areas of excess or deficient supply.
- ResCare (NASDAQ-NM:
RSCR), a leading provider of services to people with developmental
disabilities and special needs, has restructured its debt through
the issuance of $150 million of 10.625% Senior Unsecured Notes, due
November 15, 2008. A portion of the proceeds from the offering have
been used to repay borrowings, with another portion used to repurchase
some $16 million in face value of its 6% convertible subordinated
notes. The remainder of the proceeds will be used for general corporate
purposes. An important focus for us now will be implementing
an internal growth strategy to expand our existing operations,
said Ronald Geary, the companys chairman, president and CEO.
We may be able to add as many as 150 new community homes in
our Division for Persons with Disabilities during 2002 without a significant
increase in supporting overhead costs.
- Progress Rail
Services has selected Technology Park of Greater Louisville for the
site of its wheel and axle division office and axle manufacturing
and reconditioning operation. The two operations are expected to bring
27-30 new jobs to the area.
- For the fourth
year in a row, The Oakroom at Louisvilles Seelbach Hilton Hotel
has earned the prestigious Five-Diamond Award from AAA. The honor
puts the restaurant in the same company as culinary notables such
as The Mansion at Turtle Creek, Le Cirque 2000 and The Inn at Little
Washington.
- Louisville
will play host to the National Houseboat Expo 2002 on March 1-3. The
event, which will take place at the Kentucky Fair & Exposition
Center (south wing-B), will feature some 150 exhibitors and will have
more than 30 houseboats on display. Educational seminars on topics
such as financing, insurance, and safety are also slated.
- Its faultless
service and ornate design have earned Louisvilles Brown
Hotel a place on Conde Nast Travelers coveted Gold List.
The list reflects the opinions of Conde Nast readers and includes
hotels, restaurants and sites throughout the world. The Brown Hotel
was the only Kentucky hotel recognized in the issue.
- Kindred Healthcare,
Inc., a national provider of long-term healthcare services, has announced
that the underwriters for its recent equity offering have exercised
their over-allotment option for 327,035 shares of its common stock
priced at $46.00 per share. Net proceeds received by the company from
the exercise of the over-allotment option will be used to repay outstanding
borrowings under the companys senior secured notes due 2008.
METCALFE COUNTY
- The Young
Oil Corporation, a privately-owned oil and gas exploration and production
firm based in Knob Lick, Kentucky, has drilled in a second flowing
well in Metcalfe County. We believe we have defined the limits
of the field now and believe there is room for at least 30 more wells,
said company CEO Anthony Young, who added that he expects to continue
development of the field throughout the winter. Young currently holds
the record in Tennessee for the best producing well to dry holes ratio
for all operators in the state. We are using the same process
that made us so successful in Tennessee and now applying it to Kentucky
oil exploration as well, added Young.
MIDDLESBORO
- Commercial
Bancgroup Inc., which operates nine banking offices in eastern Tennessee,
has received approval from the Federal Reserve to buy Cumberland Mountain
Bancshares. Cumberland Mountain Bancshares is the parent company of
Middlesboro Federal Bank, which operates in Middlesboro, Pineville
and Cumberland, Kentucky, as well as in Fountain City, Tennessee.
No lay-offs are planned as a result of the acquisition, said Commercial
Bank President Terry Lee.
OWENSBORO
- Woodward Marketing
L.L.C, a unit of Atmos Energy Holdings, has acquired the gas marketing
assets of Innovative Gas Services Inc. (IGS) and the common stock
of Southern Resources, Inc. for approximately $3 million in cash.
IGS and Southern Resources, gas marketers based in Owensboro, Kentucky,
provide natural gas services primarily to industrial and commercial
manufacturing customers served by Williams Texas Gas pipeline
system. Since 1988, Woodward Marketings natural gas sales to
customers in Kentucky have grown nearly eightfold, from 18.5 thousand
cubic feet (Mcf) per day to 140 Mcfd.† The acquired gas marketing
companies will add approximately 50,000 Mcfd of new customer sales.
PADUCAH
- Computer Services,
Inc. (CSVI) has implemented a two-for-one stock split in the form
of a stock dividend, payable to shareholders of records as of December
3, 2001. The companys board of directors has also increased
the cash dividend from $.19 per share to $.21 per share. In addition
to its core banking products, CSI provides a complete line of imaging
and EFT services.
PRESTONSBURG
- Construction
has officially begun on the new East Kentucky Science Center in Prestonsburg.
Located on the campus of Prestonsburg Community College, the 11,000-square-foot
center will feature a state-of-the-art domed planetarium, demonstration
lab, and classroom as well as a 3,000-square-foot science exhibit
hall. The new center, designed by Nolan & Nolan, Inc. Architects
and Engineers, is expected to be completed by Summer 2003.
- An internal
investigation launched by Highlands Regional Medical Center has uncovered
substantial evidence of employee theft, drug misuse and
other misconduct by employees on hospital property. According to a
press release issued by the hospital, the investigation revealed multiple
incidents involving many employees. The release went on to say
that had the situation continued, it could have reached the point
of jeopardizing patient care. Hospital officials said that employees
involved in the misconduct have been dealt with in accordance
with internal policies, the laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky and
other regulatory bodies.
SHELBYVILLE
- In an effort
to service the areas growing Hispanic/Latino population, Republic
Bank in Shelbyville has introduced a new product designed to help
those clients better manage their finances. UltraCash® accounts
allow local Hispanic/Latino residents to make deposits into an account
that can be accessed through ATMs and other point-of-sale terminals
where PIN-based debit cards are accepted. Secondary cards will be
offered for family members, even if they do not reside in the U.S.
The bank has also hired bilingual client service employees and modified
its ATM and Infoline to provide information in Spanish and English.
- Borders Unlimited
Inc. has applied for $300,000 in state tax incentives in hopes of
expanding its Shelbyville wallcovering manufacturing facility. The
company's expansion plans involve adding 12,000 square feet to the
company's existing facility, as well as the addition of at least 15
jobs. The new jobs will range in salary from $21,000 for production
workers to upwards of $140,000 for an upper management position. Borders
supplies wallpaper to retailers such as J.C. Penney, Sears, and Target.
SOMERSET
- The Southern
Kentucky Economic Development Corporation has been awarded $600,000
in funding from the state to continue its mission of job creation
and community development in the region. SKEDCs new 20,000-square-foot
information technology center, which will be built in Pulaski Countys
Valley Oak Business & Technology Park, has been designated as
one of the Cabinets three New Economy projects,
which are those determined to best meet the overall economic goals
of the state.
SOUTHEASTERN
- Sumitomo Electric
Wiring Systems has announced that it will close its plants in Morgantown
and Edmonton, resulting in the loss of 900 jobs. The company, which
manufactures wiring harnesses for the automobile industry, is moving
the jobs to Mexico to cut labor costs.
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