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FAST LANE - November 2005


HEBRON
Delta Woes Force Comair to Cut Jobs, Salaries

Comair, a regional subsidiary of Delta Air Lines, has said it plans to reduce costs by up to $70 million annually as the company makes changes to its business necessitated by Delta’s recent declaration of bankruptcy.

The plan features changes to Comair’s fleet, network and employment costs that are designed to align the company’s cost structure with the reduced revenues that will be realized in a restructured environment.

“Delta’s efforts to achieve an additional $3 billion in annual financial benefits by 2007 include amending Comair’s Delta Connection agreement to reduce the amount of compensation provided for regional airline feed,” said Comair President Fred Buttrell. “As a result, Comair must adjust its costs to match the cost pressures of a restructured airline industry and to create a commercial solution that will ensure Comair emerges from the restructuring process ready to compete and thrive for the long term.”

Comair will use benefits available through the Chapter 11 process to eliminate non-competitive aircraft leases and mortgages to reduce ownership costs and allow the airline to have a more competitive platform. As part of this, Delta plans to remove up to 30 aircraft from Comair’s schedule, with 11 aircraft leaving the schedule by December.

As a result of a smaller operation and fleet, Comair will eliminate up to 1,000 positions throughout the company and will reduce pay for officers, directors and non-union employees.

STATE
KMAC Among Nation's Best at Improving Manufacturing

The Kentucky Manufacturing Assistance Center (KMAC) – the Kentucky-affiliate of the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) Program – has been ranked second among all 60 MEP Centers nationwide based on the percent of clients reporting a positive, measurable impact on their operations as a result of KMAC assistance.

Based on the latest results of an independent survey, 92 percent of KMAC’s clients have reported business improvements such as increased sales, reduced costs or new investments as a result of the services KMAC delivered. 

KMAC’s manufacturing improvement services include lean manufacturing, quality systems, strategic planning, team building, and plant layout.

Based on services delivered in the fiscal year, KMAC clients expect to increase their sales by $29 million and make $31 million in new investments over the next12 months. The sales impacts reported by clients in FY2005 are 64 percent higher than those reported in FY2004 while the new investments reported in FY2005 are more than double the FY2004 figures. Other FY2005 client impact numbers include $46 million in retained sales and $5 million in annual cost savings.

“As a result of KMAC’s work with manufacturers in fiscal ’05, the Kentucky economy will see $10 million in additional worker earnings, $2 million in new state tax revenue, and $3 million in retained state tax revenue,” said KMAC President Lynn Witten.

LOGAN CO.
Stanford Gains Approval for New Hospital

The board of directors for Fort Logan Hospital and its parent company, Ephraim McDowell Health, have announced plans to build a new $16 million hospital in Stanford.

After considering the options available to them, the boards determined that it would be more feasible to construct a new facility rather than attempt to renovate the existing Fort Logan Hospital, particularly since there was little cost difference between the two options.

The new 30-bed hospital will be located next to the Stanford Medical Park and will offer acute care, obstetrics, surgery/recovery suites, an in-house rehabilitation area, and a retail pharmacy. It will also include an expanded emergency room that will be equipped to treat trauma and cardiac cases in addition to general emergency cases, and an expanded imaging department that will offer radiology, mammography, ultrasound and CT rooms.

Construction on the project is slated to begin in the spring, with an estimated completion date of spring 2007.

DANVILLE
Panasonic to Move Operations to Mexico, 370 Jobs Affected

Panasonic Home Appliance Company has announced that it is moving production of its canister vacuum cleaners from Danville to the Panasonic plant in Monterrey, Mexico.

The move will result in the lay-off of 290 regular employees and 80 temporary employees. Company officials say approximately 125 employees will remain in Danville.

The initial lay-offs will begin by the middle of next month and will continue until March.

Like so many other manufacturing companies, Panasonic has found it increasingly difficult to remain competitive in the face of the lower labor costs found overseas.

Though the loss of that many jobs is difficult for most communities, Danville city officials are hopeful that the losses can be offset with the addition of two new companies that are planning to locate in Danville. 3B and Aircraft Braking Systems are expecting to hire a total of 150 people.

PIKEVILLE
New Eastern Kentucky Expositioin Center Celebrates Grand Opening

After being mired in the discussion stage for decades, the Eastern Kentucky Exposition has finally been completed, providing a venue for a wide variety of events ranging from meetings, concerts and conferences to trade shows, sporting events and rodeos.

The 126,000-square-foot facility, located in downtown Pikeville, opened last month with The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra presenting a concert in the 7,000-seat arena.

“Pikeville and Pike County are already the regional center for shopping, education, medical, financial and legal services. The center will solidify our position as the family entertainment center for the tri-state region, and bring new revenue for our restaurants, hotels, motels, and retail centers,” said Donna Damron, executive director for the center.

According to a study performed by a national economic consulting firm and released in 1997, approximately 540,000 people live within 50 miles of Pikeville; more than 1.5 million live with 75 miles.

The facility is expected to produce a $10.1 million economic impact on the regional economy and will generate some $500,000 annually in new tax revenues for the state.

STATE
Financial Seminars Address State's New Tax Modernization Laws

The Kentucky Department of Revenue is offering regional seminars to inform tax professionals of the impacts of the state’s tax modernization (HB 272) changes. The two-day seminars are geared toward CPAs, attorneys, enrolled agents and tax preparers and will explore how the bill affects corporation income, individual income and sales and excise taxes.

The seminars are scheduled for the following dates and locations:

  • November 15 and 16: Louisville International Convention Center

  • November 21 and 22: Lake Barkley State Resort Park, Cadiz

  • November 28 and 29: Jenny Wiley State Resort Park, Prestonsburg

  • December 5 and 6: Lake Cumberland State Resort Park, Jamestown

  • December 19 and 20: General Butler State Resort Park, Carrollton

For more information or to register for these seminars, contact the Kentucky Society of Certified Public Accountants at (502) 266-5272 or (800) 292-1754. Information can also be found by visiting www.kycpa.org or http://revenue.ky.gov.

STATE
KCTCS Joins Initiative to Launch 'Early College' High Schools

The Kentucky Community and Technical College System has joined a national initiative to create several “early college” high schools in Kentucky. The initial funding, which totals $128,000 over four years, will go to the Owensboro Community and Technical College and the Owensboro Public Schools for their Collegiate High School.

The funding is being made available through the Middle College National Consortium, which is supported by funds from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Ford Foundation, Carnegie Corporation of New York, and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation

Early college high schools create a seamless, blended high school and college program that provides students with experiences, support and opportunities to complete the requirements for a high school diploma and an associate degree at no cost to the students, within five or fewer years of starting high school.

Enrollment at Collegiate High is expected to reach about 50 students this school year as Kentucky’s first early college high school. Enrollment is expected to increase to 75 students next year and will peak at 150 students by 2008-09. 

The early college movement is an outgrowth of the middle college model, which originated in 1974 at LaGuardia Community College in New York City. The educational program at Collegiate High School includes a project-centered interdisciplinary approach with emphasis on literacy and mathematics competencies to prepare students for college-level work. The curriculum also includes a career internship and community service component required for high school graduation. 

STATE
Kentucky's Workforce Training Programs Rank 3rd in Nation

Climbing to third in the nation, Kentucky’s workforce training programs have once again received high marks in Expansion Management magazine’s annual survey of industrial site selection consultants. Expansion Management is an international economic development publication distributed to business executives involved in expanding or relocating their business.

For the third consecutive year, Kentucky has ranked in the top ten, placing fifth in 2004 and eighth in 2003.

In the annual survey, consultants were asked to identify states where they found the best workforce training programs while investigating potential sites for their clients. Programs were judged in terms of financial value, ease of usage and applicability.

“The ability to have a workforce that knows how to handle the task at hand from the beginning and not experience the inevitable missteps that come with on-the-job training is more than just a luxury. It is a necessity for companies competing in the global economy,” said Ken Krizner, managing editor of Expansion Management.

“The commonwealth of Kentucky is proving on a continuous basis that it understands this and stands ready to work with companies relocating or expanding into the commonwealth to make sure they have a properly trained workforce from the day they open their new facilities,” Krizner added.

Highlighted in the October issue of Expansion Management is the Bluegrass State Skills Corporation (BSSC), which is the primary agency within the Cabinet for Economic Development. The agency’s mission is to stimulate economic development through programs of skills training to meet the needs of business and industry.

The BSSC, in partnership with the Kentucky Community and Technical College System and the Council on Postsecondary Education’s Kentucky Adult Education, has developed the capability to customize a comprehensive program of skills training services for new, expanding and existing companies.

HIGHLAND HEIGHTS
General Cable to Acquire High Voltage Energy Cable Systems

General Cable Corporation has reached an agreement in principle to acquire the wire and cable manufacturing business of SAFRAN SA, a global high-technology company headquartered in France.

The business to be acquired has historically gone to market under the names Silec and Sagem. Silec is recognized as a global leader in the design, engineering and installation of high-voltage underground links. The company is also among the top three producers of energy and industrial cables for the French market.

General Cable, which is headquartered in Highland Heights, is considered a leader in the development, design, manufacture, marketing and distribution of copper, aluminum and fiber optic wire and cable products for the energy, industrial, specialty and communications markets.

HEBRON
Amazon to Locate New Distribution Facility in Northern Kentucky

Amazon.com has announced plans to open a new 543,000-square-foot distribution center in Boone County to accommodate the company’s continued growth and provide room for additional product line expansion. The new facility will be located in the Park West International Business Park and is expected to open by the end of the year, creating some 70 new jobs.

The company already operates two other facilities in Park West and also has distribution and support centers in Campbellsville, Lexington and Louisville. The addition of the new center in Hebron gives the company more than 900,000 square feet of distribution space in the Northern Kentucky region.

LOUISVILLE
UPS Unveils New Center, Plans for More Expansion

UPS has officially opened a new 500,000-square-foot distribution center that is dedicated to serving the health industry.

The new facility, located next to the main campus of the UPS Supply Chain Solutions Technology and Logistics Center, is the 25th in North America to be devoted to the health care industry and was constructed to comply with the U.S. Federal Prescription Drug Marketing Act and various other federal and state regulatory requirements. It is divided into validated temperature-controlled and ambient sections and is designed to handle sensitive pharmaceuticals.

Thanks to the location near UPS’ Worldport hub in Louisville, shipment orders received as late as 11 p.m. can arrive at their destination the next day, while packages shipped via UPS’ ground network can reach 70 percent of the U.S. in two days or less.

At the facility opening, the company also announced plans to locate a new UPS Supply Chain Solutions facility in Louisville. The $11.7 million project, which consists of an 800,000-square-foot warehouse and distribution center, will create 382 new Kentucky jobs. 

UPS has played a significant role in boosting the state’s economy since it began overnight operations in Louisville more than two decades ago.  According to data from the state, in the last five years approximately 80 companies have either located in Kentucky or expanded their operations here due to the presence of UPS, investing more than $300 million and bringing more than 7,000 new jobs. UPS itself employs more than 20,000 people within the commonwealth of Kentucky.

LOUISVILLE
Furniture Company Moves Division HQs to Louisville

Brown Jordan International, the nation’s largest outdoor furniture manufacturer, has moved its National Accounts and Direct Imports Division’s headquarters to from Pompano Beach, Florida to Louisville’s Eastpoint Business Center.

The move brings Brown Jordan’s sales, product development, procurement, operations, finance and customer service operations to Louisville, resulting in a total payroll of $1,050,000. Fifteen new jobs will be created locally as a result of the move.

The recruitment of Brown Jordan to Louisville is a result of a new aggressive headquarters attraction effort by GLI through an investment by the private sector. Through this initiative, GLI is working with businesses seeking growth by presenting Louisville as a location of choice and a viable, attractive alternative to larger cities such as Chicago, Atlanta or Charlotte.

“By selecting Louisville, Brown Jordan International validates that our headquarters strategy is right on target,” said Joe Reagan, president and CEO of Greater Louisville Inc. “We now know for sure that we are identifying and going after the right types of business targets – companies such as Brown Jordan International that will bring growth and prosperity to our community in new and exciting ways.”

Brown Jordan designs, manufactures and markets retail and contract furnishings under a number of brand names, including Brown Jordan, Pompeii, Winston, Stuart Clark, Casual Living, Loewenstein, Charter, Woodsmiths, Wabash Valley, Texacraft, and Tropic Craft.

LOUISVILLE
CinTel Moves Headquarters To Louisville

Louisville has been selected as the new corporate headquarters location for CinTel Corporation, a Korean company that provides software and hardware solutions for Internet service.

Company officials say they considered a number of locations for the new headquarter site, including several larger markets, but determined that Louisville provided the best fit.

In addition to the central geographic location Louisville provides, President and CEO Sang-Don Kim said the company was also impressed with the other companies it would work along side with, citing UPS Worldwide, General Electric, Ford, and the horseracing community.

The company has already retained the services of several local firms, including the Wira Associates marketing firm, the Baach Creative Group, Web Design Company, TP Film and technology expert Stephen Arnold.

CinTel recently signed a significant cooperative/co-branding agreement with Hyundai HDS Corp, a relationship that Kim described as fulfilling a corporate strategy that will take CinTel in a new direction of affording the ability to bring creative new products and solutions to the North American market.

Though based in North America, CinTel has its main business operations in Korea, providing enterprise technology solutions that deliver faster internal and external network service. The company’s Internet Traffic Management solutions are marketed to customers worldwide.

LOUISVILLE
Economic Development Program Earns National Recognition

Louisville’s High Impact Portfolio program has garnered national recognition, earning the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Economic Development Award for 2005 in the category of “Excellence in Urban Economic Development.”

The High Impact Program is a public/private partnership funded by Louisville Metro Government and administered by Greater Louisville Inc. – The Metro Chamber of Commerce that identifies and serves fast-growth companies, companies with the potential for fast growth and those companies that enable growth in others. The program focuses on companies headquartered in Louisville that have a disproportionately higher impact on the metro area economy.

LOUISVILLE
Kentucky Exposition Center Opens New $52 Million Addition


The Kentucky Exposition Center has officially opened its newest addition, which adds 237,000 square feet of Class “A” exhibit, meeting and public space. The $52 million project maintains the facility’s ranking as the sixth largest exposition facility in the country.

LEXINGTON
Work Begins on $50M Facility at Coldstream Campus

The University of Kentucky has broken ground at its Coldstream Research Campus for the Lexhold International Center for Technological Innovation, a $50 million development designed to address the needs of the high-tech sector.

The 320,000-square-foot development will encompass two, five-story buildings that will provide multi-tenant lab and office space. The facility is expected to be ready for tenant customization by January 2007.

Coldstream is currently home to 30 tenants with 775 employees. Corporate tenants include IBM, Equine Biodiagnostics and Lexel Imaging Systems. UK research centers at Coldstream include the Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center (College of Agriculture), the Southeast Center for Aluminum Technology (College of Engineering), the CPST (College of Pharmacy), and the Interdisciplinary Human Development Institute.

Developer Kale Roscoe, who also owns the IBM building at Coldstream, will be leasing the Lexhold buildings through Kentucky real estate and brokerage firm CB Richard Ellis. The first tenants will be the American Board of Family Medicine, which will move more than 50 employees to Coldstream, and asiGuardian LLC, a company that provides businesses with secured data networks and data recovery solutions.

“Lexhold is part of our overall marketing strategy to populate Coldstream with a mix of academic, government and research-oriented groups, and complementary high-tech sector tenants,” said Executive Director and Associate Vice President for Research and Economic Development John Parks. “We’re already moving in this direction with the opening this spring of a $17 million facility that will house the Center for Pharmaceutical Science and Technology. The presence of the CPST at Coldstream has the potential to attract both research and development and supplier businesses.”

LEXINGTON
UK, ChemPharma Focus on Bioterrorism Treatment

Researchers from the University of Kentucky College of Pharmacy, in partnership with ChemPharma International, a Richmond-based pharmaceutical company, have received $1.2 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to develop treatments to be used in radiation emergencies.

“In addition to protecting the citizens of Kentucky and the U.S. from terrorist attacks, this contract is an important step in UK being recognized as ‘the place’ where new drug molecules for the treatment of nuclear or bioterrorism exposures are developed into pharmaceutical products and undergo clinical testing,” said Michael Jay, Ph.D., principal investigator of the study and director of the UK’s Center for Pharmaceutical Science and Technology (CPST).

Currently, radioactive materials must be removed from the body by administering intravenous drugs. However, researchers from UK and ChemPharma are proposing to develop an orally administered dosage formulation with the ultimate goal of identifying an effective treatment for inclusion in the Strategic National Stockpile, which includes radioprotective drugs and therapeutics. Oral formulations – such as capsules or tablets – would be easier to distribute and administer during a mass exposure situation.

The CPST is an FDA-registered pharmaceutical manufacturing facility that focuses on the formulation and development of pharmaceutical testing methods and the manufacturing of drug products. The CPST will expand in 2006 with the opening of a new 20,000-square-foot facility at the UK Coldstream Research Campus.

ChemPharma International provides worldwide research and development services and custom chemical synthesis focused on drug discovery for the pharmaceutical industry

“This work not only benefits Kentucky, but the country as a whole,” said Wendy Baldwin, executive vice president for research. “Funding from the NIH makes it possible, but also signals the high quality of the work that our researchers are doing.”

LEXINGTON
LBX Breaks Ground on New Corporate HQ

LBX Company, which produces the Link-Belt line of earthmoving, forestry and material handling equipment, has broken ground on the construction of a new world headquarters facility in Lexington.

The two-story, 26,000-square-foot structure will be situated on a nine-acre site. With a dealer sales and service facility also located on the premises, the facility will effectively house all of the functional activities of the company except for field operations. An outdoor area behind the customer service/training building will be used as a demonstration area for Link-Belt equipment.

The construction project is expected to be completed by next September.

Formerly a division of the Link-Belt Construction Equipment Company, LBX Company became a stand-alone company in 1998 representing the Link-Belt excavator, forestry and material handling equipment lines. The company was formed as a joint partnership between Sumitomo Construction Machinery Co. and CNH Global.  

LEXINGTON
Airport Opens Nation's First New York Times Bookstore


Blue Grass Airport has become home to the nation’s first-ever New York Times Bookstore. Located in Concourse B, the new retail store includes unique features such as an online station with access to The New York Times Web site, a plasma screen television running excerpts and programming from the Discovery Times Channel, a children’s section, New York Times gift and specialty items and, of course, books from the famed New York Times’ bestseller list. The store is operated by The Paradies Shops, an airport and hotel retailer.

INDIANA
WellPoint Inc. Signs Merger Agreement with WellChoice

Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc., the country’s leading health benefits company, has signed a definite merger agreement with WellChoice, Inc.

The combined company will now serve more than 33 million medical members as a Blue Cross or Blue Cross Blue Shield licensee in 14 states and through its HealthLink and UniCare subsidiaries.

WellPoint is the parent company of Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kentucky. New York-based WellChoice is the parent company Empire Blue Cross Blue Shield, the largest health insurer in New York. The merger agreement calls for WellChoice to operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of WellPoint.

TENNESSEE
Television Network Moves Operations to Nashville

The Great American Country (GAC) television network has moved its Denver base operations to new offices in Nashville. The network, which is the television home of the Grand Ole Opry, is seen in almost 40 million U.S. households.

The move includes GAC’s corporate offices, studios and post-production operation.

GAC was acquired a year ago by The E.W. Scripps Company and the move to Nashville represents a growing Scripps presence in Tennessee. In addition to Scripps Networks’ headquarters in Knoxville, Scripps also owns and operates the television retailer Shop At Home in Nashville as well as two of the state’s major daily newspapers, The Commercial Appeal in Memphis and The News Sentinel in Knoxville. The company also maintains its IT enterprise group in Tennessee. Scripps employs about 2,500 people in the state.

INDIANA
Colgate Announces Plan to Close Clarksville Plant by 2008

Colgate-Palmolive has announced that it plans to close its 81-year-old Clarksville, Ind., plant, which produces the majority of the Colgate-brand toothpaste purchased in the United States. The plant also makes Ajax cleanser and Colgate shaving cream.

The company plans to shut down the facility’s operations in stages, with the complete closing slated to take effect January 2008. The decision will mean the loss of approximately 475 jobs.

The shutdown is part of the New York-based company’s plans to close approximately one-third of its 78 plants by the end of 2008, in an effort to boost efficiency and make the company more competitive.

 

Business Briefs

ADAIR COUNTY

  • Adair County and the city of Columbia have been awarded a $2 million community development block grant from the state that will used for a regional water treatment plant. The project will serve approximately 6,750 customers.

BOWLING GREEN

  • Kobe Aluminum Automotive Products has submitted a proposal to Warren County’s city-county planning commission that outlines plans to add 135,268 square feet to its Bowling Green facility. The expansion will enable the plant to accommodate a third forging press to shape aluminum and will result in the addition of up to 50 more jobs. Kobe, which produces aluminum materials for car suspensions, currently employs approximately 78 people.

BULLITT COUNTY

  • Publishers Printing Co., one of the area’s largest commercial printing firms, has announced plans to invest $3 million for the expansion of its printing, bindery and mail-distribution operations in Lebanon Junction. The project will add 100,000 square feet to the existing 550,000-square-foot facility. Company officials say no immediate additions to the 825-member Lebanon Junction staff are planned, but there is the possibility it may grow down the road. Publishers Printing employs a total of 1,725 people between its Shepherdsville and Lebanon Junction locations in Bullitt County.
  • Food packaging manufacturer Sabert Corp. is investing $19 million to expand its facility in Hillview. The investment includes construction of a 200,000-square-foot plant, $10.7 million in new equipment and the completion of rail line improvements. The expansion will result in the addition of 96 new jobs with hourly pay in the range of $11.25.

DANVILLE

  • The Ephraim McDowell Health Board of Directors has approved a $35 million expansion and renovation of the Ephraim McDowell Regional Medical Center in Danville. The project will add more than 70,000 square feet of new space, increasing the hospital’s patient bed capacity from 187 to 207. The addition is also expected to result in the hiring of up to 100 new employees.

FLEMING COUNTY

  • Fleming County has been awarded $500,000 in the form of a community development block grant that will be used to renovate an existing industrial building for use by Blue Water Park Models, Inc. Blue Water Park Models will specialize in the manufacture of park model recreation homes. The homes are designed to meet the demands of individuals who are seeking recreational park trailers that can be individually constructed to meet the needs of each buyer. The expansion will create approximately 25 jobs with positions ranging from unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled and managerial.

FLORENCE

  • Florence Mall plans to begin construction in January on a 10,000-square-foot addition to its food court area. The addition will add family-friendly features such as child-size tables, a carousel, restrooms with separate diaper-changing areas, nursing rooms and a family lounge. The addition is expected to be complete by next summer.

FORT MITCHELL

  • Columbia Sussex Corporation, a private hotel owner and operator headquartered in Fort Mitchell, has acquired 14 full-service hotels from Wyndham International, Inc. for $1.4 billion. The hotels that have been acquired are located primarily in large urban markets, including Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Fort Lauderdale, New Orleans, Philadelphia, San Diego, Tampa, Toronto and Washington D.C., and provide Columbia Sussex with an additional 5,800 rooms.

HEBRON

  • Mesaba Aviation has announced that it is closing its maintenance center at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport as part of the company’s reorganization plan. The reorganization was prompted by Mesaba’s role as a regional partner of Northwest Airlines, which recently filed for bankruptcy. “The changes imposed on us by Northwest since its filing in September have left us with insufficient revenues to support our cost structure,” explained John Spanjers, president and chief operating officer of Mesaba. The maintenance facility closing will affect approximately 140 workers.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY

  • Duke Energy and Cinergy have agreed to share with Kentucky ratepayers approximately $7.6 million in savings from the merger of the two companies. The companies have also guaranteed Kentucky ratepayers an additional $1.45 million during the year after the merger through the sharing of Union Light, Heat and Power Company’s off-system sales profits for a total of more than $9 million in ratepayer benefits through the settlement, with approximately $3 million occurring in the first year. The settlement agreement also provides that Kentucky’s share of the savings from the merger can increase to match any higher level of sharing that Duke and Cinergy must provide in any other state. Cinergy is the corporate parent of Union Light, Heat and Power Company, which provides gas and electric service to more than 129,000 customers in six northern Kentucky counties.

STAMPING GROUND

  • The Stamping Ground City Commission has unanimously approved the sale of the city’s water and sewer service to the Georgetown Municipal Water and Sewer Service. Stamping Ground community officials cited the costs associated with the operation of the utility as the primary consideration in the sale. Stamping Ground Mayor Jared Hollon has said that the sale of the water company will free up the community leaders to focus the city’s funding on other areas that are in need. Stamping Ground customers are also expected to benefit, since the Georgetown utility will be able to offer most customers rates of up to $22 less per month.

WARREN COUNTY

  • John’s Custom Meats has been approved for $244,500 in state funding to upgrade its 1,500-square-foot operation to a new 4,000-square-foot USDA inspected slaughter/processing facility with retail operations in Warren County. The forgivable loan is part of more than $2 million in funding for agricultural diversification projects across the Commonwealth.

STATE

  • Statistics released by the Kentucky Department of Tourism show that tourism in the commonwealth increased by 7.3 percent in 2004 and added $8.7 billion to the state’s economy. In addition, tourism generates $3.3 billion in payroll income, with 174,300 people employed by the tourism industry.
  • Kentucky’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate increased to 5.7 percent in September 2005 from the August 2005 rate of 5.4 percent, according to the Office of Employment and Training. September’s rate was above September 2004’s rate of 4.9 percent. The U.S. seasonally adjusted jobless rate rose from 4.9 percent in August 2005 to 5.1 percent in September 2005, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Kentucky was one of 31 states that reported higher unemployment rates in September 2005 as compared to September 2004.
  • The National Brownfield Association has established a Kentucky chapter to promote the responsible redevelopment of brownfields, abandoned or underutilized industrial or commercial properties where redevelopment is hampered due to the real or perceived presence of environmental hazards. Putting these properties back into productive use provides both environmental and economic benefits with the creation of jobs, restoration of local economies and the clean-up of impacted soils and groundwater. The NBA provides a transaction-focused international network where members can meet industry leaders and exchange ideas, information and experiences to better redevelop brownfields. More information is available at www.brownfieldassociation.org.
  • A change in state purchasing regulations is enabling the Kentucky Parks Department to purchase meat and dairy products from local farmers for its resorts and cafes. The Parks Department, which operates three cafes in Frankfort, 17 resort lodges and a café at the Artisan Center in Berea, purchases tens of thousands of pounds of steamship round and ground beef each year at a cost of more than $500,000. “The parks are very important to us — as well as anybody who buys Kentucky products,” said Green River Cattle Company Inc. President Ed Rogers. “There is a demand out there for Kentucky products and once we get the demand, then we can increase the production.”
  • An agreement approved in Franklin Circuit Court has ended over a decade of litigation between the liquidator of Kentucky Central Life Insurance Co. and Lexington developer R. Dudley Webb. The legal claims were related to the failed insurer’s loans to Webb, as well as business transactions with his affiliated development companies. Under the agreement, Webb will pay $1 million to the Kentucky Central estate and both parties will drop all remaining claims. KOI assumed control of Kentucky Central in February 1993. The company entered liquidation in 1994. In July 2005, the estate received $2.85 million in a settlement with Webb’s brother and business partner, Donald W. Webb, and his wife, Julie. As part of the settlement, both parties have agreed not to comment further on the details of the court proceedings.
  • The law firm of Frost Brown Todd LLC has formed a strategic alliance with Wahlert Rechtsanwälte of Germany. The alliance is designed to create seamless legal services for companies with dealings in the Midwest U.S. and Europe. FBT has approximately 360 attorneys in Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, and Tennessee; Wahlert has 11 attorneys in Stuttgart, Germany. Stuttgart is the industrial center of Germany with a strong automotive and manufacturing presence, including the headquarters of Daimler-Chrysler, Porsche, Robert Bosch, the European operations of Whirlpool, the German headquarters of IBM and Hewlett Packard, Reader’s Digest and large branches of Siemens and Agilent. The FBT states are home to German companies such as Bayer, Bosch, ThyssenKrupp, Osram, and Siemens.
  • Kentucky’s farm cash receipts exceeded $4 billion in 2004, an increase of 19 percent over the 2003 total, according to the most recent statistics released by the Kentucky Department of Agriculture. “It is remarkable that [farmers] exceeded the $4 billion milestone at a time when income from tobacco is declining,” said Agriculture Commissioner Richie Farmer. “This suggests that Kentucky’s efforts at diversifying our agriculture industry are working.”

LOUISVILLE

  • The GE Foundation has presented the Jefferson County Pubic Schools with a $25 million grant aimed at improving math and science achievement and increasing the number of students who attend college. The district’s college-going rate in 2004 was 69 percent. Only 38 percent of the students scored at proficient or above in math and 37 percent of the students scored at proficient or above in science. Louisville is one of four pilot sites for GE’s expansion of its “College Bound” program.
  • Temple-Inland Inc. is closing its remaining Louisville plant next month, resulting in the loss of 123 jobs. The company closed its other Louisville facility, which employed 126, in July 2004. Both plants produced corrugated cardboard boxes. Company officials say the decision is a result of the need to consolidate operations to contain costs.
  • ThermoView Industries Inc. has filed to reorganize under Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company has also informed the American Stock Exchange that it will be unable to meet the exchange’s listing standards. Delisting procedures have already begun. ThermoView, which designs, manufactures and markets improvement products, is headquartered in Louisville and employs over 700 people in 17 states. An affiliate of Milestone Capital Management, LLC, has already executed a purchase agreement with the company, subject to the auction bidding process and court approval.
  • Steel Technologies Inc. has signed a formal letter of intent to secure land as part of its plan to construct and operate a new $8.5 million steel processing facility in Juarez, Mexico. The new operation is expected to start up in the latter half of 2006.
  • MetaCyte Business Lab has been awarded $750,000 from the state’s high-tech investment pool to support the company’s activities in creating and launching life science companies in Louisville. The funds will support recruitment of experts in clinical regulatory issues and drug and device development.

LEXINGTON

  • Exstream Software has been named to the Software magazine’s Software 500 list, a revenue-based ranking of the world’s largest software and services suppliers. The Lexington-based company ranked 285 on the list, which includes both private and public companies, and was the 10th fastest-growing company in the $30-$100 million revenue category.
  • The University of Kentucky has unveiled a new B.S./M.D. Accelerated Course of Study for students who know they want to study medicine, providing them the opportunity to apply early to medical school. The program will guide students through their undergraduate career and allow those selected students to enroll in medical school after three years of undergraduate study, completing a bachelor of science degree in biology and a medical degree in seven years.
  • Pleased with the results of installing a Polytrack surface on its practice track, Keeneland plans to install the new surface on its main track next summer. Polytrack is a blend of fibers, recycled rubber and silica sand covered with a wax coating – and is installed atop a carefully designed vertical drainage system, providing a safer surface for the horse and rider. This fall, Turfway Park in Florence became the first racetrack in North America to conduct races on the new surface.

INDIANA

  • Heartland Payment Systems Inc. has announced plans to expand its payment processing service center in Jeffersonville, Indiana and will hire up to 130 people to add to its existing 430-member workforce. The 120,000-square-foot facility is slated to be completed in the first quarter of 2007, with an additional expansion to be announced at a later date. The facility will ultimately house 1,000 employees, including workers for the Heartland Cares Foundation, an employee nonprofit group that contributes to the local homeless shelters, child welfare programs and various heart, diabetes and breast cancer drives.

OHIO

  • Cincinnati-based Federated Department Stores, Inc. is expanding its credit-related support facility in Mason, Ohio as part of a consolidation connected with its recent acquisition of The May Department Stores Company. Beginning this spring, Federated will be phasing out former May credit operations in Lorain and Parma, Ohio and Houston. With the consolidation and reorganization, Federated will operate four credit centers: Mason, Ohio, Clearwater, Fla.,Tempe, Ariz., and the former May Co. Earth City credit center in St. Louis. With the consolidation, the Mason facility could see the addition of up to 300 jobs.

TENNESSEE

  • Memphis-based FedEx Corporation has opened a new FedEx Ground distribution hub in Hagerstown, Md. The Hagerstown hub, which employs approximately 400 people, is one of nine hubs to open as part of a network expansion plan that will include the relocation or expansion of more than 290 pickup and delivery terminals through 2010. The nationwide expansion will boost the company’s current average daily pickup capacity by nearly 70 percent over the next five years. This summer, FedEx Ground also opened hubs in Cincinnati, Ohio, and Dallas, Texas. A fourth new hub, under construction near Memphis, Tenn., will begin operations in 2006.
  • Tennessee-based Regions-Air, Inc. is being acquired by Viva International, Inc., a publicly traded holding entity that specializes in the acquisition and development of undervalued commercial airlines and aviation outsourcing companies. RegionsAir, formerly Corporate Airlines, provides air service to 11 area cities in Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee from hubs in St. Louis and Nashville. The company operates routes in conjunction with an air service restoration program subsidized by the federal government, which provides for financial guarantees and support for certain flights and routes.
  • American Greetings is closing its plant in Lafayette, Tennessee as part of a companywide effort to become more efficient. The closing is being scheduled in phases, possibly beginning next month and being completed by spring. The plant’s 200 employees will be provided with reassignment options at one of the company’s other plants around the U.S.



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