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FAST LANE - March 2001


STATE
UK Picks Alumnus Lee Todd as Next President

Lee Todd – Hopkins County native, UK engineering professor, founder of successful company Databeam, and most recently an executive with Lotus Development Corporation – has been selected as the 11th president of the University of Kentucky, a job he will officially undertake in July. While some academicians reserve doubt about his overweaning entrepreneurial bent, Todd has pledged to keep the institution focused on its land-grant mission, allowing state residents – and their life and career opportunities – to feed off the momentum generated by the university’s pursuit of Top 20 status.

Read an exclusive Ed Lane One-on-one with Lee Todd from Nov. 1997







INEZ
Mop-up Continues at Site, in Court, in Boardroom

Fluor Corporation – former owner of Martin County Coal – announced to shareholders an expected cost of $46.5 million to clean up the remnants of the coal slurry spill near Inez last fall. According to Fluor’s financial statement, cited by the Associated Press, $43.5 million of that total, as well as possible damages from lawsuits, will be covered by the company’s insurance carrier.

Among the attorneys involved in the various lawsuits will be Jan Schlichtmann, whose efforts on behalf of Massachusetts residents victimized by environmental pollution were chronicled in the well-known book and movie A Civil Action.

In the meantime, the state’s Environmental Quality Commission has recommended phasing out all slurry ponds in the state, replacing the method with new technology that dries out the mining waste.

LOUISVILLE
UPS Continues to Deliver Deals and Expansions

United Parcel Service has followed up on the addition of 30 air freighters since 1998 by ordering 60 more, worth $6 billion, from Airbus Industrie. Third quarter 2000 figures revealed a 23 percent climb in the company’s international export business since the same period in 1999. The new order – expected to be filled over a nine-year period – contains an option for 50 more planes.

Atlanta-based Vacation Express, the passenger charter partner with UPS Airlines, has announced weekly service to Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, adding to its menu of weekly round trip flights to Aruba and Cancun from international airports in both Louisville and Northern Kentucky. The company uses Boeing 727-100 aircraft for the charter flights, which UPS converts to passenger use in approximately four hours.

Atlanta-based UPS also announced it will buy Fritz Companies, a freight forwarder and customer broker, for $450 million. And the company will purchase First International Bancorp for $78 million. The bank will become part of subsidiary UPS Capital Corp., a branch of the company’s logistics services division.

LOUISVILLE
Tunnel Murals Latest Defeated Promotional Idea

The pursuit of landmarks and public art symbolic of the city has left Louisville licking its wounds. First came the failure of the fleur-de-lis fountain, which would have been so expensive to repair (over $500,000) that the city chose instead to sell the hulking machinery for its scrap value to Mobile Maintenance and Repair of Borden, Indiana for $15,750.

Next came the short-lived proposal for giant neon alphabet letters spelling out “Louisville,” which many observers dismissed as beneath the city’s dignity. The city will still pay over $110,000 for the work done on that project, whose abandoned materials were also sold for scrap.

But Louisville’s neighborhood murals are one medium that has built momentum over the years – intricate and charming examples adorn walls throughout town. So the latest proposal, from the Kentucky Transporation Cabinet, was to paint murals on the inside of the Cochran Hill tunnels. But after pleas by motorists, Scenic Kentucky, the city's legislative delegation and even the city's mural artists themselves, the Cabinet has agreed to drop that project before another scrap ensued. Objectors cited the danger of distraction to drivers, as well as the difficulty in viewing and maintaining the murals.

However, the state is going ahead with an overall $10 million project most of which is funded by federal dollars, that will pay for repaving of I-64 from the Watterson Expressway to the tunnels.

LEXINGTON
Blue Grass Airport Board Votes to Modify Existing Runway for Now

After surprising much of the community by voting in a new parallel runway proposal that many thought had been tabled long ago, the Urban County Airport Board reconsidered, consultants rechecked the numbers, and that plan was hastily revised. The chosen solution will merely add safety areas to both ends of the current 7,000-ft. runway, as well as lengthen it by 340 feet. The cost for the new parallel runway would have run as high as $80 million, while the current proposal – still subject to FAA approval and property negotiations with one landowner – will cost around $25 million.

Meanwhile, concern lingers about the airport’s need for redundancy in the future, as both a capacity and a service continuity issue. Several board members expressed the need to continue looking for ways to add another runway, even if that means doing so at another location.

LOUISVILLE
LG&E Offers Buyout as Parent PowerGen Looks to be Bought

An early retirement buyout package offered by LG&E Energy is expected to reduce its overall workforce by about 700 people over the coming year. Company leaders hope that the move will negate the need for layoffs, but haven’t ruled them out. Meanwhile, they expect many of the “retired” workers to possible go to work for contractors that work with LG&E on a regular basis.

Kentucky Utilities and Louisville Gas & Electric merged in 1998 to form LG&E Energy, which was purchased by British company PowerGen in a $3.2 billion deal that was finalized in December. Now PowerGen, while still looking to buy further U.S. utility companies, is also looking to be bought, perhaps by Germany’s E.ON AG or RWE, the favorites according to market watchers. Other potential buyers hail from Spain and Italy.

MOREHEAD
Morehead State Eyes International and Heavenly Spheres of Influence

The Morehead State University campus recently played host for two weeks of a six-week sojourn by a delegation of 20 Chinese educators and university administrators. The group experienced firsthand the tenor of campus life at the school, as well as at the University of Arizona and Harvard, among others. Delegates also saw applied distance learning through Morehead’s extended campus in Ashland.

In another development, with the initial help of a $2 million SBA research grant, Morehead State will soon welcome the arrival of a former NASA satellite tracking station, currently in Virginia. The nine-story facility will aid in regional weather forecasting as well as educational and commercial research.

LEXINGTON
Lexington Mayor, Chamber Declare New Beginnings, Give Out Awards

In her state of the merged government address, Lexington Mayor Pam Miller touted the community’s Rural Land Plan (or purchase of development rights program), which to date has received 36 applications from farmers wanting to preserve 6,700 acres. The city’s Rural Land Board will begin making appraisals and offers by mid-March, planning to offer landowners the difference between what the land would be worth developed and undeveloped. So far, the program is supported by $25 million in city bonds and $15 million in money from the state’s portion of the tobacco settlement fund.

As for the 180 acres downtown, Miller pointed to the changing skyline as new circuit and district courthouses are opened, as well as a much-needed parking garage. Building on the $50 million invested in affordable housing since 1993, Miller is hoping to reorganize divisions in her forthcoming budget in order to establish a city housing department.

At the Greater Lexington Chamber of Commerce’s annual gathering, “Vision 20/20,” incoming chairman Bill Thomason of Mill Ridge Farm talked of building consensus, and promised to continue the organization’s efforts in the areas of local education, minority business development, downtown and legislative affairs. The following Year 2000 awards were also presented: Top Producer – Abby Vaughan of Central Bank (27 new members); Ambassador – Shannon Elam of Qualex Manufacturing in Georgetown; Volunteer – George Lillis of Thrifty Car Rental.

LOUISVILLE
Service Net's Reach Grows Through Sale of Controlling Stake to Kemper

Warranty and service management company Service Net Inc. has sold a 51 percent stake in the firm to Illinois-based Kemper Insurance Companies, giving Service Net the new name Service Net Solutions LLC. Both companies expect the deal will enable greater entry into the homeowner insurance market, including warranty coverage for home durable goods, a Service Net niche. The Louisville-based company – which reported revenue of $32 million for 2000 – will relocate into new headquarters in Jeffersonville, Indiana in May. “We are excited to have the backing and support of one of the most respected and trusted insurance brands, “ said Lansdon Robbins, CEO of Service Net, a company that has grown by a cumulative 330 percent since being launched in 1996 and was recently named Louisville’s fourth-fastest-growing company. Kemper Insurance Companies reported 1999 revenue of $3 billion.

STATE
Latest Site Selection Numbers Show Kentucky Rising Steadily

According to the newest figures from Site Selection magazine (www.siteselection.com), Kentucky ranks second in the U.S. in the number of jobs created per one million population between 1998 and 2000. Kentucky finished fourteenth out of the 50 United States in the total number of new and expanded corporate facilities, with a total number of 218. According to the Kentucky Cabinet for Economic Development, 1,017 companies located or expanded in Kentucky in 2000, resulting in 24,351 net new jobs created. Investment was estimated at over $4 billion, an increase of over one and one-half billion in the prior year. Ron Starner, editor of Site Selection stated, “Kentucky followed up an extremely strong 1999 – in which it ranked first in number of new jobs created per one million residents – by taking the No. 2 spot in that category in 2000. As the 14th ranked state for new and expanded corporate facilities in 2000, Kentucky was spurred by the growth of both its large metros and its small towns. In fact, Kentucky placed 10 cities in Site Selection’s annual ranking of the top 100 small towns in America for corporate facility expansion.”

STATE
Highway Contingency Account Hits a Bump in the Road

In a variety of ways, Kentucky has been making news in the transportation field. Fifth District congressman Hal Rogers has helped bring about $23 million in federal spending for transportation projects. In the state capitol, plans for a $115 million, six-story headquarters for the state’s 1,300 Transportation Cabinet employees were recently unveiled, calling for completion by 2003. And transportation interests were the leading contributors to the state Democratic Party last year.

But the latest news to many legislators in Frankfort reveals a discretionary road fund controlled by Transportation Secretary James Codell III that funnels more than $30 million to any road project he deems worthy – and has doled out $200 million since its inception ten years ago. Nineteen percent of the Highway Construction Contingency Account money has gone to Governor Paul Patton’s home territory of Pike County since he took office, and 40 percent of the road work the fund has paid for has been executed by major Patton campaign backer Leonard Lawson’s company, Mountain Enterprises of Lexington. According to the Associated Press, the account has never before been audited. Republican leaders have pledged to police the fund more closely, and to make sure its monies are directed toward the emergency repairs for which it was originally intended.

FLORENCE
Once You're All Shopped Out, How About Some Baseball Y'All?

For those unwilling to make the trek to and pay the money for a baseball outing at Cinergy Field, local leaders are working on a deal to bring in a Frontier League minor league baseball team, provided a small stadium can be built on a feasible budget. Gary Enzweiler of Cincinnati has already procured franchise rights in the league, and now work is underway to arrange sponsorship and financing for a proposed $10 land and stadium deal. According to the Associated Press, Frontier League Commissioner Bill Lee has favorably compared the area to St. Louis, where two Frontier franchises perform well in the shadow of Major League Baseball’s storied Cardinal franchise. The league, based in Zanesville, Ohio, once had teams in Ashland and Pikeville, both of which have since relocated to other cities.

LEXINGTON
Ex-Governor Wilkinson and Two of His Companies File for Bankruptcy

Former Kentucky governor Wallace Wilkinson, whose latest venture has been the online textbook company ecampus.com, has been forced to seek out bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11 after a group of creditors sought Chapter 7 involuntary bankruptcy status in seeking debts totaling over $300 million. U.S. Judge William S. Howard granted Wilkinson Chapter 11 protection after the initial claim, giving him time to try to restructure his debts. The creditors include banker Elmer Whitaker of Lexington, L.D. Gorman of Hazard, James Patterson of Louisville, and The United Co. of Bristol, Virginia.









BOWLING GREEN
Transpark Project Plans to Build Industrial Park First, Airport Later

The Kentucky TriModal Transpark board will seek $16 million from the state and the balance in local bond issues to support the $80 million project, after the Federal Aviation Administration indicated that airport expansion for the transportation and distribution facility and industrial park was not necessary to handle current traffic. Seed funding of $6 million was awarded to the project by the state in 1998. Proponents plan to focus on the industrial park first, which some hope will stoke the need for the additional airline service that will in turn provoke more substantial FAA backing. According to the project’s financial plan, developed by Baird, Kurtz & Dobson, the board of the transpark would issue $43.5 million in “bond anticipation notes” backed by the city and Warren County. The first $25 million of that total will be issued this year.

NATION
Elaine Chao Passes Muster as Nation's New Labor Secretary

LOUISVILLE resident Elaine Chao, wife of U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell, has been named to serve as Secretary of Labor, the first time an Asian-American has served in a presidential cabinet. Her nomination received little opposition during the approval process, unlike the experience of preceding nominee Linda Chavez, who went down after the “nanny question” arose from her past. Since beginning her professional career as a banker, Chao has headed the United Way of America and the Peace Corps, and has held upper level positions with the Federal Maritime Administration and the federal Transporation Department under the “first” President Bush. She and McConnell married in 1993. The most recent Kentuckian member of the Presidential cabinet was Juanita Kreps of Lynch, who served as President Carter’s Secretary of Commerce from 1977 to 1981.

SOMERSET
Houseboat Firms Take Different Tacks on Carbon Monoxide Danger

In the wake of reports and ongoing investigations into carbon monoxide poisonings, Sumerset Custom Houseboats has offered to repair 2,500 of its houseboats free of charge in order to shift dangerous rear exhaust systems to the side of the boat. Although the company’s vessels have had side exhausts since 1996, the offer will cover the boats made by Sumerset and its predecessor from 1953 to 1996. The company has also extended the offer to owners of other brands, for the cost of labor and parts. Stardust Cruisers of Monticello, however, is choosing not to do anything until the U.S. Coast Guard issues recommendations. Plant manager Ted Towner told the Courier-Journal that moving the vents to the side won’t really fix the problem, which can crop up again when the vessels link up in groups.

LOUISVILLE
Outsourcing of Servers Boosts Louisville High-Tech Economy

Both the Jewish Hospital Heart and Lung Institute and LG&E Energy have chosen to outsource their Internet server functions with Xodiax Internet Data Centers, a Louisville-based web hosting company that’s gaining an increasingly prominent national profile as one of 13 IBM-certified “Hosting Advantage” business partners.

Fellow Louisville server farm Lightyear Technology Center announced its first collocation customer, eRoute, Inc., another locally-based company that specializes in employee and customer connectivity programs. Lightyear recently received state incentives of up to $2.16 million to back a planned $2.7 million expansion that will add 82 jobs.

Business Briefs

BEDFORD

  • After Trimble County officials approved the expansion of the Republic Services Inc. landfill to accept another 17.5 million tons of garbage over the next 15 years, and amid consideration of expanding the facility by another 75 acres, four residents have sued the county magistrates and the landfill operator over improper operations, alleging that the facility’s stench, detritus and leachate have devalued and fouled their land and disrupted their lives.

BUCKNER

  • Ralcorp Holdings Inc. of St. Louis will purchase the 250-employee Torbitt & Castleman Co. syrup and sauce facility from Northern Group of Seattle. Besides its holdings in various store-brand food companies, Ralcorp also holds a share in Vail Resorts Inc. in Colorado.

COVINGTON

  • Ashland Inc. earned $59 million (84 cents a share) for the three months ending Dec. 31, up 47 percent from one year ago. The results were bolstered in large part by the robust performance of Marathon Ashland Petroleum, the company’s refining and marketing arm. In related industry news, it was announced in early February that Phillips Petroleum will acquire Tosco Corp. for $7 billion, becoming the country’s second-largest oil refiner.

CYNTHIANA

  • After the floods of 1997, Cynthiana’s eligibility for $1.5 million in federal grant funding, paired with $500,000 in local funds, allowed the Cynthiana-Harrison County Economic Development Authority and the City of Cynthiana to pursue construction of a 200-acre industrial park, now nearing completion, that is located outside the floodplain. In addition to newly installed infrastructure in the park, according to the Bluegrass Area Development District, the community has also benefited from $500,000 – appropriated at the eleventh hour by the previous U.S. Congress – to reconstruct the city’s wastewater treatment plant.

DANVILLE

  • CKF Bancorp, Inc. has acquired First Lancaster Bancshares in a deal estimated at $13.7 million. The merger will bring the federal savings divisions of both institutions under CKF’s roof, and the bank will operate the Lancaster banking office as a branch.

DRY RIDGE

  • SugarOak Corp. has purchased the Dry Ridge Outlet Center from Horizon Group Properties for $2.5 million.

EASTERN KENTUCKY

  • After the Environmental Protection Agency had recommended suspension of a permit for a mountaintop-removal strip mine, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said the project could go ahead. The mine is to be operated by Martin County Coal Corp., whose storage pond leak caused the massive slurry spill near Inez last fall.

FLORENCE

  • Deaconess Long Term Care Inc., a 29-facility operation based in Cincinnati, has signed a database management contract with dbaDIRECT, which will also help with employee training initiatives.
  • Hyster Mideast has successfully acquired BGM Equipment Co. of Lexington, after acquiring Brambles Clarklift of Columbus, Ohio last year.

LAWRENCEBURG

  • Four couples have formed “The Old Post Office Group” in order to refurbish and preserve the city’s vintage post office building, erected in 1913. The project will result in 15 or more luxury office suites, situated in the center of downtown.
  • Boulevard Distillers, owners of the Wild Turkey Distillery, has written a check for $256,000 to the Commonwealth of Kentucky, a little more than half of what the state had asked for to compensate for the fish kill caused by the distillery fire and accompanying bourbon spill last May.

LEXINGTON

  • Greenville, North Carolina-based Jefferson-Pilot Life Insurance Co. will close its downtown office in May, eliminating 96 jobs.
  • A much-debated new 35-acre shopping center, to be located at Newtown Pike and Citation Boulevard near Coldstream Research Park, was given the go-ahead by the Urban County Planning Commission. The entire project, developed by Rosenstein Realty and destined to feature housing build by Frank Minnifield, will include a 43-acre upscale subdivision. A final vote and a zoning change by the Urban County Council have yet to occur.
  • Printer manufacturer Lexmark reported a 12.3 percent decrease in profits from the fourth quarter of 1999, but CEO Paul Curlander called for a 15 to 20 percent increase in profits this year. For the fourth quarter, the company earned $96.3 million, or 64 cents per share. Last fall, the company announced job cuts to take place in 2001, including 600 jobs in Lexington.
  • Frost Brown Todd, in its first acquisition since forming last November, has acquired the estate planning expertise of HargroveBaker PSC, headed by James Hargrove. The agreement brings Hargrove’s full staff, including four attorneys and two accountants, under the FBT umbrella.
  • According to police chief Larry Walsh, reported crimes dropped by 11 percent last year, including 1,100 fewer cases of theft after a special unit was created to deal with a rapid upswing in such crimes in recent years. He credited a new patrol system for helping with the decrease, and that system will be improved soon by the planned installation of online computers in 70 police cruisers. The new five-year project will cost around $8 million, funded in part by a $3 million federal grant.
  • According to the Lexington-Bluegrass Association of Realtors, home sales for December were down 18 percent from a year ago. Total sales for the year, however, were down only one percent, while the average sale price was up by five percent. U.S. Commerce Dept. numbers showed 1.59 million housing starts in 2000, a mellowing of the market from its 15-year high of 1.67 million in 1999.
  • Market leader Meridian Communications has announced the formation of Right Place Media, Inc. as a separate media division, one month after splitting off its public relations, interactive and events accounts under the moniker Prime Meridian. Meridian chairman and CEO Mary Ellen Slone characterized the new offerings as a way to make the company’s capabilities available in either a “department store” or “boutique” format. Right Place Media will be headed by owner and president Joel Rapp.
  • Longtime Ace Weekly editor Rhonda Reeves purchased the alternative city magazine from Village Voice Media, which had just bought the publication from founding publisher Susan Yeary last spring.

LOUISVILLE

  • Humana will eliminate 500 jobs, including 90 at its Louisville headquarters, as well as close up shop at its North Texas HMO operation in August. The company’s HMO membership has declined from 5.9 million to 5.4 million in 15 states. Recent company announcements revealed a 7.8 percent decrease in its Small Group Commercial membership division and a 7.2 decrease in overall commercial membership.
  • Papa John’s, with the aid of $2.7 million in tax credits, has created an online subsidiary to take pizza orders over the Internet for all of its 2,500 U.S. restaurants. The service, which will employ 72 people, had previously been outsourced to California-based food.com.
  • Sud Chemie Inc., an affiliate of a German firm, has been ordered by U.S. District Court to pay a $78 million patent-infringement penalty to Southern Clay Products of Gonzales, Texas. The decision, which involved the illegal use of a patented process to make “organoclay” gelling agents, is being appealed, but the Louisville company must remove the offending machinery in the meantime and suspend production of the organoclays.
  • Following in the footsteps of its giant neighbors, Louisville-based pizza company Bearno’s Inc. will open 40 restaurants in China in the next five years, with subsidiary Bearno’s International planning to open 37 franchises in other locations within that same time frame.
  • According to insider press accounts in the Chicago Tribune and the Vancouver Sun, both the Charlotte Hornets and the Vancouver Grizzlies have expressed interest in moving their NBA franchises to Louisville, one year after expectations of the Houston Rockets imminent transfer here turned out unfulfilled.
  • Replacement window manufacturer ThermoView Industries is in default on $25 million in debts with PNC Bank and GE Capital, its CFO and CFO have resigned, and the company is consulting with experts on how to extricate itself from its financial troubles.
  • Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. will introduce a filtered Pall Mall brand at a discount price a full 30 percent lower than its unfiltered companion brand, which leads its own market niche.
  • According to a poll of IT specialists conducted by Louisville-based TechRepublic, 45 percent of 695 respondents would join a technology workers union if one existed. The sector currently accounts for eight percent of U.S. employment and one-third of the country’s economic growth.
  • Ford Motor Company announced a 32 percent decline in fourth-quarter profits, caused by declining sales that have caused a slowdown in production. Sales then fell 11 percent in January. But there was good news for its 79,000 hourly workers, who received an average profit-sharing payout of $6,700, the second-highest in the company’s history. The company also announced its financial goals for 2001: $5 billion more in revenue, and $1 billion in cost cutting.
  • Loctite, an international manufacturer of sealants and adhesives, has begun to distribute products nationally and internationally from its $11.2 million, 150,000 s.-f. facility in Riverport, employing 50 people. Another speculative distribution facility three times the size of Loctite’s is being developed next door by Keystone Property Trust of Pennsylvania.
  • Kuvin Dennis Public Relations has merged with Miller & White Advertising and with Dittmer Wildey Public Relations (both Indiana firms) to form Rosetta Advertising and Public Relations.
  • After opening new office space and upgrading equipment, steel and plastic barrel reconditioner Allied Drum Service Inc., a subsidiary of Container Recyclers Inc. of Cincinnati, has announced it will construct a 30,000 s.-f. warehouse facility.

MIDWAY

  • Former governor Brereton Jones and his wife Libby have donated 236 acres of their Airdrie Stud horse farm to the Bluegrass Conservancy. The organization, whose goal is to keep land permanently undeveloped, now has been given almost 1,300 acres, and aims for 5,000 acres by 2005. Overall, the state initiative – the Purchase of Agricultural Conservation Easements program – has $10 million at its disposal for counties trying to form their own conservation programs.

MONTICELLO

  • Monticello Banking Company has acquired Mutual Mortgage Company of Russell Springs, a brokerage specializing in residential real estate mortgages.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY

  • The Northern Kentucky Tri-County Economic Development Corporation (Tri-ED) has unveiled a new website that incorporates industrial site selection standards promulgated by the American Economic Development Council and the Industrial Development Research Council. The standards – called Site Selection Data Standards – are on view, along with more general information, at www.NorthernKentuckyUSA.com. “In many instances today,” said Tri-ED president Danny Fore, “a community won’t even make the first cut if its web site does not provide the necessary information in an effective and easily downloadable format.”

OWENSBORO

  • According to the Associated Press, Executive Inn Rivermont owner John Bays will continue to pump $100,000 a month into refurbishing the complex over the next two years. Bays plans to add several suites and an 80-slip boat dock among other amenities, and recent efforts to attract conventions have landed the Kentucky League of Cities and a gumball distributors convention. Bays also plans to expand the musical offerings at the hotel’s Showroom Lounge, hoping that more acts will help him reach his goal of $10 million in sales this year.

PADUCAH

  • U.S. Enrichment Corp. struck a blow against what it sees as unfair trade practices when the International Trade Commission ruled in late January that European competitors have harmed the market leader’s business. USEC, with 36 percent of the current global business in the enriched uranium fuel sector, will next find out if the U.S. Commerce Department and the ITC will choose to level sanctions against those European rivals for what amounts to illegal dumping.
  • After paying $800,000 for the vacant former JCPenney building and two adjacent parking lots in 1999, the city of Paducah then sold the properties without lien to the Duke & Long convenience store chain for $92,000 plus another property valued at $105,000. The chain had promised a $3.5 million investment and 250 jobs by locating its headquarters there, but instead the company was purchased by Devon Convenience Holdings. In November, it declared bankruptcy. According to the Associated Press, city officials would like to buy back the building at a fair market price, but Devon officials were mum on the situation.

VERSAILLES

  • The Osram Sylvania fluorescent-bulb plant will add 75 jobs and a new production line, a project expected to be completed in 2002.
  • Ben Lee, a designer with Bel Air Florist, was selected designer of the year by the Kentucky Florists’ Association at their 44th annual convention in Lexington.

STATE

  • Workers’ comp provider Kentucky Employers’ Mutual Insurance announced the introduction of multi-state coverage for Kentucky-based companies. The program, available in all states but Ohio, West Virginia, Wyoming, Washington and North Dakota, will be administered outside the state by Fireman’s Fund. Generally, businesses with $15,000 total premium will qualify for the program if two-thirds of that coverage applies toward Kentucky exposures. In contrast to national trends, the company also announced a further rate decrease, by an overall average of 2.5 percent, following cuts of 15 percent in 1997 and 10 percent in 1999.
  • The Government Performance Project, executed by Governing magazine and Syracuse University’s Maxwell School, gave Kentucky a B-plus for its information systems and its management of finances, capital, human resources and results.
  • Home furniture company Heilig-Meyers Co. will close retail stores in Paintsville, Jackson and Mayfield as part of companywide cutbacks that will close 116 stores over three months.Four hundred stores will still be in operation for the Virginia-based company, which filed for bankruptcy protection in August.
  • The 2000 Governor’s Awards in the Arts were handed out February 20 to the following recipients: Milner Award – Roy P. Peterson, Ph.D. (awarded posthumously); National Award – painter Sam Gilliam of Louisville; Artist Award – pianist Lee Luvisi of Louisville; Business Award – Peoples Bank of Madison County; Community Award – Saundra Kilijian of Hopkinsville, Master Musicians Festival of Somerset; Education Award – Nancy Carpenter of Lexington; Government Award – Ann Latta, Secretary of Tourism; Media Award – Nick Lawrence of Lexington; Folk Heritage Award – thumbpicker Eddie Pennington of Princeton.
  • At the recent state judge-executive conference, Workforce Development Secretary Allen Rose bemoaned the state’s serious nursing shortage, which other state agencies estimate to be at around 5,000 statewide. A special task force has been formed to look at the problem, which Rose called “severe.” The KY Hospital Association, the Cabinet and several major hospitals have also pulled together a special business consortium to help attract people to the profession.


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