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FAST LANE - April
2002
STATE
KSEFA Awards Researchers $2.1M
in Engineering Grants
More
than $2.1 million dollars has been awarded to 32 Kentucky researchers
through the Kentucky Science and Engineering Foundation Awards, a program
designed to aid researchers in developing products and attracting high-tech
companies to the Commonwealth.
This years
recipients represent Morehead State University, the University of Kentucky,
the University of Louisville, Western Kentucky University, and Immpheron,
Inc., an entrepreneurial Kentucky firm.
The funds will be
matched from cash and in-kind sources from the applicants.
Projects funded
by the grants represent research in areas designated by the state as
being top priorities: biosciences, environmental and energy technologies,
human health and development, information technology and communications,
and materials science and advanced manufacturing. Areas of study include
the development of pharmaceuticals from tobacco plants, diagnostic techniques
for viruses as a result of bio-terrorism, and residential/ commercial
use of solar energy.
These awards
will help forge the necessary link that must exist between postsecondary
education, R & D, and economic development if Kentucky is going
to be a major player in the New Economy, said Governor Paul Patton
These funds will enable the recipients and their teams to move
their research a major step forward in developing products that will
benefit not only Kentuckians but citizens elsewhere.
STATE
Ky. Tourism Campaign Promotes Bluegrass
Hospitality
Kentuckys
newest tourism campaign takes a different twist its aimed
at educating its own residents about the charms of their home state.
The Kentucky Department
of Travel has created 500,000 Kentucky. Its That Friendly
host kits that are being distributed at Kroger grocery stores throughout
the state. The kit includes a listing of annual celebrations, festivals
and special events happening throughout Kentucky, a coupon book and
important travel information to make it easier for Kentuckians to plan
family members and friends visits to the Bluegrass State.
What we are
trying to do is motivate Kentuckians to become better hosts for visiting
family members and friends and get them into tourism attractions,
explained Ann Latta, secretary of tourism development.
The kits, which
are free to Kroger customers who purchase $40 worth of groceries, also
include a 24-page Kroger Plus Card Travel Values Book that features
money-saving coupons and offers at more that 100 Kentucky hotels, museums,
events and tourism sites.
State officials
point out that while they will continue to market Kentucky in surrounding
states, the in-state promotion has the potential to create maximum impact
at a minimal cost.
ELIZABETHTOWN
Three Companies Close in Hardin;
400 Jobs Lost
THE first quarter
of the year has been a rough one for Elizabethtown, where three companies
have announced plans to close.
Superior Essex is
in the final stages of closing down the Elizabethtown production plant
where it has been in operation for 27 years. The plant produced copper
telephone cable for the companys communications group. Company
officials say the plant closing is the result of decreased demand for
the product.
The plants
main production processes came to a halt on March 8; a complete phase-out
is expected to be complete by May 4. The shutdown leaves 230 employees
without jobs.
Collis Inc.s
Elizabethtown factory, which produces wire shelving for refrigerators,
is slated to close this month, leaving the facilitys remaining
70 workers without jobs.
The company has
been a part of the Elizabethtown business community for 30 years and
as recently as six years ago had some 300 employees. However, the economic
slump resulted in the loss of 100 jobs early last year, with another
70 cut by the end of 2001.
VAC Magnetics, which
manufactures permanent magnet products, is also slated to cease operation
this month, leaving another 80 people jobless. Only two years ago, the
employee roster numbered nearly 500.
VACs British
parent company, Morgan Crucible, is vacating the hard ferrite permanent
magnet market, saying it is no longer profitable.
STATE
Tricon Global Reels in Long John
Silver's and A & W Restaurants
The
worlds largest restaurant company has become even bigger. Tricon
Global Restaurants, Inc., the parent company of KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco
Bell brands, has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Long John
Silvers and A&W All American Food Restaurants for $320 million
in cash. Long John Silvers and A&W are owned by Lexington-based
Yorkshire Global Restaurants.
One of the primary
motivators behind the acquisition was the opportunity expand Tricons
multi-branding options, said David Novak, chairman and CEO of Tricon.
Multi-branding
offering two brands under one roof has proven highly successful
for Tricon. The company currently operates 1,500 restaurants, which
have generated $1.5 billion in annual system sales from KFC, Taco Bell
and Pizza Hut combinations. In 2000, Louisville-based Tricon and Lexington-based
Yorkshire entered into a license agreement to test multi-branding options
and have since opened 83 KFC/A&Ws, six KFC/Long John Silvers
and three Taco Bell/Long John Silvers. According to Tricon officials,
all have exhibited highly positive returns.
Customers
simply love the choice and convenience these combination restaurants
offer, explained Novak. Our acquisition was based on proven
test results that drove significant increases in average unit volumes
and profits. We are confident multibranding is a key enabler for accelerating
the renewal of our existing asset base and adding new units with excellent
returns for our shareholders.
For Yorkshire, the
acquisition provides the opportunity to expand much more rapidly
than if it had remained a stand-alone company, said Sid Feltenstein,
chairman of Yorkshire Global, who will continue to serve as the chief
executive of the A&W and Long John Silvers brands.
We will be
able to capitalize on Tricons strengths that we do not have now,
and as a practical matter, could not dream of having for years to come,
including human resource programs, purchasing power and far greater
marketing and product development resources, added Feltenstein.
This is a perfect win-win partnership for our systems.
Tricon currently
operates more than 30,000 restaurants in over 100 countries and territories,
with total system sales of more than $22 billion in 2001.
Yorkshire Global
is a privately-held company created in 1999 following the merger of
Long John Silvers and A&W. The company ended 2001 with nearly
$1.1 billion in system sales from 1,225 Long John Silvers (1,200
U.S./25 international) and 970 A&W (780 U.S./190 international)
restaurants, including 121 multi-branded Long John Silvers/A&W
restaurants.
Tricon also announced
that concurrent with the acquisition, it will change its corporate name
to Yum! Brands to better reflect its expanding portfolio of brands.
STATE
Kentucky Ranks 11th in nation for
State Support of E-Commerce Use
Kentucky has been
ranked among the top 15 states in the nation considered to be e-consumer
friendly. A recent study released by the Washington-based Progressive
Policy Institute, a non-profit research organization, takes a look at
how state laws, regulations and administration actions support or hinder
Internet use by Americans.
The Best States
for E-Commerce report used four indicators to rank the 50 states
and the District of Columbia. Those included the extent to which states
impose industry-specific protectionist laws, tax Internet access, enable
Internet users to transact electronically with state government, and
recognize the legal validity of digital signatures.
Kentucky was ranked
11th, with a score of 12. The top-ranking state was Oregon, with a score
of 16, while South Carolina pulled the bottom ranking with a score of
3.1.
The complete report
can be seen at www.ppionline.org.
LOUISVILLE
$70M Renovation to Bring a New
Look, Name to Louisville Galleria
If
David Cordishs vision comes to fruition, The Louisville Galleria
will eventually resemble New Orleans Bourbon Street or Memphis
legendary Beale Street.
Cordish is the founder
of Cordish Co., the Baltimore firm that has been signed on by the city
of Louisville to redevelop the 20-year-old Galleria.
The first order
of business has already been taken care of: renaming the center Fourth
Street Live, Louisville. The next step will be renovating the
space and getting the kind of tenants lined up that will draw people
back downtown. The agreement between Cordish and the city specifies
that the developer sign on at least six of the following 10 tenants:
Barnes & Noble Booksellers; ESPN Zone; the Hard Rock Café;
Ruths Chris Steak House; the Improv comedy nightclub; Howl at
the Moon, a nightclub featuring dueling pianos and sing-alongs; Aerial
Theater, a live-performance venue; Harlans Bayou Blues, a blues
nightclub; Bill Batemans Restaurant, patterned after the restaurant/bar
on the 80s television comedy show, Cheers; and McFaddens,
an Irish pub.
A key component
of the $70 million project will involve reopening Fourth Street to two-way
traffic, an element Cordish considers vital to Fourth Street Lives
success.
Cordish has established
a joint venture with a Louisville development firm, The Hogan Company,
to assist in managing the project. The project architects are Beyer
Blinder Belle of New York City and the Bravura Corp. of Louisville.
The major portion
of construction on the project is expected to be finished by the end
of 2003. Cordish is currently in negotiations with prospective tenants
and hopes to announce the first group of signed leases by this summer.
SOMERSET
Hayes Lemmerz Shuts Down Wheel
Production Plan in Pulaski County
In
an effort to contain costs, automotive supplier Hayes Lemmerz has shut
down its Somerset plant. The 300,000-square-foot facility produced cast
aluminum wheels for the Michigan-based company.
Rumors regarding
the shutdown have been circulating since December 5, when the company
filed for reorganization under Chapter 11. At that time, nearly half
of the Somerset plants 165 employees were terminated.
Prior to the filing,
Hayes Lemmerz announced plans to close its Bowling Green plant, which
produced steel wheels. The Bowling Green facility employed approximately
235 people.
Our decision
to close the plant in Somerset was based on a strategy to reduce our
fixed-cost structure, said Curtis Clawson, chairman and CEO of
Hayes Lemmerz. While this rationalization is difficult for the
affected location, it is necessary in order to improve the competitiveness
and viability of the entire business.
Hayes Lemmerz operates
43 plants and has 14,000 employees worldwide.
STATE
Health Kentucky Broadens Access
to Healthcare to Uninsured Citizens
Eli
Lilly and Company has joined the network of volunteer healthcare providers
at Health Kentucky, a private non-profit organization that arranges
access to healthcare for uninsured Kentuckians.
The pharmaceutical
company will offer its entire line of retail medications free of charge
to Kentuckians who qualify for services through Health Kentucky. Among
the medications being made available are Evista (for osteoporosis),
Humalog and Humulin (diabetes), Prozac (depression), and Zyprexa (psychosis).
Eli Lillys
involvement means that Health Kentucky patients have access to several
innovative medications that were unavailable to them before, said
J. Scott Judy, executive vice president for Health Kentucky. The
companys generosity will have a tremendous impact on thousands
of people who often have to choose between buying groceries or buying
medications.
Health Kentuckys
network of volunteer healthcare providers consists of five other pharmaceutical
companies, more than 3,000 physicians, 140 dentists, and 530 pharmacies,
in addition to all acute-care hospitals, home health agencies and hospice
facilities, statewide.
LAUREL COUNTY
Proposed Concrete Plant Comes up
Against Opposition from Residents
Approximately 100
area residents have come out in opposition to the construction of a
new concrete plant in southern Laurel County.
Central Kentucky
Mixed Concrete wants to build a new facility in Lily because it provides
a central location from which to serve Barbourville, London and Corbin.
However, the proposed site lies within 1,500 feet of 50 homes, whose
owners are concerned about the resulting air and noise pollution, heavy
truck traffic along an already-congested stretch of road, and property
values, should the plant be built there.
Laurel County does
not currently have any zoning regulations that prohibit industries or
businesses from locating in the area, but company officials have assured
the county that their existing plants in Richmond and Berea operate
at Environmental Protection Agency standards, utilizing baghouses
to collect concrete dust emissions.
Residents have presented
their concerns to the EPA, which must approve Central Kentucky Concretes
permit before construction can begin.
EASTERN KENTUCKY
State Considers Building Country
Music Shrine in Eastern Kentucky
State
Representative Tanya Pullin, D-Greenup County, says Kentucky could add
another dimension to its tourism efforts by building a shrine dedicated
to the states country music heritage and its artists.
Pullin has proposed
a bill that would give Kentucky tourism and transportation cabinets
the go-head to study building a shrine on state-owned property near
South Portsmouth, Kentucky. At press time, the bill had passed the House
of Representatives and was being taken up in the State Senate.
The proposal takes
one step further the tourism cabinets plan to sponsor a Country
Music Trail tour, which will take country music fans to a number of
sites throughout the region, including Berea, Renfro Valley, and Jenny
Wiley State Park. This years eight-week tour will run between
June and August, featuring popular artists such as Ricky Skaggs, Boots
Randolph, Billy Ray Cyrus, Crystal Gayle, Patty Loveless, and Loretta
Lynn.
Area businesses
have already begun meeting to plan how to best accommodate visitors
and capitalize on the summer-long event.
A shrine along U.S.
23 designated as Country Music Highway due to the fact that so
many country music stars have lived in the surrounding areas
would add another element to the tourism promotion.
FRANKFORT
Farmers Capital Names Busseni to
Succeed Boyd as President
G.
Anthony Busseni has been named to succeed Charles S. Boyd as president
and chief executive officer of Farmers Capital Bank Corporation, a financial
holding company based in Frankfort.
Boyd, who had been
president and CEO of the Frankfort financial holding company since 1992,
died last month following a brief illness.
Boyd joined the
company in 1964, working his way up from the bookkeeping department
and becoming chief financial officer in 1989 before being named president.
Busseni, 53, has
been with Farmers Capital Bank Corp. for 15 years and has served as
president and CEO of the companys flagship bank, Farmers Bank
& Capital Trust Co., since 1999. He plans to handle both positions
until a successor is found to head the bank.
Farmers Capital
has $1.1 billion in assets and operates 23 banking locations in 13 communities
throughout Central Kentucky. It is the depository for the Kentucky state
government and also operates a leasing company, a data processing company
and an insurance company.
ASHLAND
Eastern Kentucky Businesses Join
in Support of West Virginia Airport
A variety of Eastern
Kentucky businesses, associations and labor unions have joined forces
in support of a proposed regional airport in nearby West Virginia.
Led by the Ashland
Alliance, an a regional development organization, the coalition has
placed advertisements in Kentucky and West Virginia newspapers advocating
the construction of a new regional airport to be built just south of
Interstate 64 in Lincoln County, West Virginia. The proposed site lies
approximately 40 miles from Ashland.
The coalition consists
of a diverse group of businesses and organizations that have come together
in support of a common cause. Among those supporting the airport are
CSX Transportation, the Affiliated Construction Trades Council, the
Tri-State Building and Construction Trades Council, the West Virginia
AFL-CIO, American Electric Power, Applied Card Systems, Special Metals,
and Ashland, Inc.
The advertisements
highlight the importance of air service in attracting more economic
development in the area. The lack of air service was one of the reasons
Ashland Inc. made the decision several years ago to move its headquarter
operations from Russell to Covington.
The proposed airport
has been endorsed by both the West Virginia governor and the West Virginia
Public Port Authority, but has received opposition from officials at
Yeager Airport in Charleston, West Virginia, who maintain that the same
benefits of a regional airport could be had by simply making improvements
at Yeager.
LOUISVILLE
Nextel Selects Louisville to be
Site of First U.S. Retail Operation
Wireless
communications company Nextel Partners, Inc. has selected the Louisville
area as the site of its first U.S. retail store.
The new store, located
in the Middletown section of Jefferson County, is almost completely
wireless, with computers operating off a wireless local area network.
While there, customers can participate in live, interactive demonstrations
of Nextels wireless Web services by getting stock quotes and responding
to e-mail. They can also compare the companys diverse line of
phones and check out some of the new enhancements available, such as
the exclusive digital two-way radio features a regional reach.
Louisville was selected
as the site of the first retail store based on strong customer demand
for Nextels products and the companys established presence
in the community. Louisville serves as regional headquarters for the
company.
Nextel plans to
open its next retail store in Honolulu in the coming months and is also
considering other locations in Kentucky.
Company officials
emphasize that Nextel will continue to maintain its relationship with
its authorized dealers in Kentucky who currently offer their product
and will still provide the option to purchase Nextel products by phone
and via the Internet.
CAMPBELL COUNTY
Hemmer Plan Links High-Tech Businesses
with NKU Campus
Paul Hemmer Companies
is hoping to break ground this spring on a new office complex that would
be the first in what Campbell County hopes will become a high-tech corridor
around Northern Kentucky University.
The company is currently
in the process of securing lease commitments for the 41,000-square-foot
complex, which will feature connections to a high-speed, fiber-optic
network.
NKU would like to
see the complex become a resource for students to learn about business
through hands-on programs and internships. In return, businesses located
in the complex would have access to NKUs faculty and a ready workforce.
NKU is utilizing a $500,000 state grant to upgrade its technology infrastructure
in order to better partner with the high-tech companies it is trying
to lure to the development.
The land involved
in the proposed high-tech triangle is owned by the NKU Foundation and
is bordered by AA Highway, U.S. 27 and Interstate 275 in Highland Heights,
Wilder and Cold Spring. In addition to offering easy accessibility to
two interstates and the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport,
the property also lies within a state-designated enterprise zone,
which allows extra tax breaks to companies located there.
LEXINGTON
Lexmark Becomes First in Industry to Market 4800 dpi
Inkjet Printer

CENTRAL CITY
Environmental Concerns Delay Peabody Energy's Power
Plant
For residents in
and around Muhlenberg County, Peabody Energys proposal to build
a 1,500-megawatt, coal-fired power plant means jobs - as many as 450
permanent positions paying an average of $65,000 in wages and benefits.
However, the St.
Louis companys plans are drawing concern and criticism from a
number of organizations outside Kentucky who say the plant could have
an adverse affect on the air quality around Mammoth Cave, a national
park. In addition to officials at nearby Mammoth Cave, others whove
voiced concern include the Natural Resources Defense Council, the National
Parks Conservation Association and the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
In fact, the U.S.
EPA has written to the Kentucky EPA, charging that the states
draft permit issued to Peabody was based on incomplete information and
failed to address the impact emissions would have on the areas
ozone pollution.
Peabody officials
dispute that allegation and claim that the plant would be an industry
leader in environmental controls.
Though Peabody has
added more control features to help remove fine pollution particles,
opponents claim that more studies need to be done to assess the potential
negative effects before any plans move forward.
If the plant, which
Peabody is calling the Thoroughbred, is approved, construction could
begin this year and begin producing power by 2006.
The facility would
burn some six million tons of coal annually, generating enough electricity
to power 1.5 million homes. The Thoroughbred would operate as a merchant
plant, whereby it could sell electricity either to out-of-state or Kentucky
utilities.
Business Briefs
ASHLAND
- Birmingham-based
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. has purchased The Daily Independent
newspaper in Ashland from Ottaway Newspapers. The agreement, which
also included newspapers in Minnesota, Missouri and Pennsylvania,
was finalized at $182 million in cash. Ottaway is a wholly-owned subsidiary
of Dow Jones and Co. Inc., the publisher of The Wall Street Journal.
- Though no
longer headquartered in the Ashland area, Speedway SuperAmerica and
Ashland Inc. have donated more than $100,000 to 49 area non-profit
organizations. The company moved its headquarters to Covington in
1998, but retains an office and staff in Russell, Kentucky
- Matriks Energy,
which specializes in the acquisition and operation of oil and gas
properties, has completed the acquisition of Inland North Assets from
Columbia Natural Resources, which supplies gas to Columbia Gas of
Kentucky. The acquisition involved more than 40 gas wells, 62 residential
customers and more than 6,000 acres.
BOWLING GREEN
- Four local
businessmen have purchased the former Holley carburetor plant in downtown
Bowling Green with plans to develop an ethnic-oriented mall.
Plans for the 100,000-square-foot building, which was purchased for
$160,000, are being modeled after a similar facility in San Jose,
California. The redevelopment is expected to take place in three phases,
with enough space for up to 550 retailers when complete. Plans for
the final phase involve a wholesale auction during the week and a
flea market that will be open on weekends.
CAMPBELLSVILLE
- Neuman Enterprises
of Lexington has acquired the McMahan Furniture Co., a longtime producer
of cherry furniture. Neuman plans to keep the companys manufacturing
operations in Campbellsville and will maintain the McMahan name, while
expanding the markets it serves. The acquisition was handled by Sunbelt
Mergers & Acquisitions of Lexington.
- Campbellsville
will serve as the pilot market for a Kentucky League of Cities
project designed to bring high-speed Internet service to rural communities.
KLC selected Campbellsville based on the communitys expression
of interest and the fact that Campbellsville University has a new
technology center. SaTera Wireless LLC will offer 384K-bandwidth service,
increasing Internet-access time by more than 10 times. Access costs
for businesses will range between $99-150 per month, with monthly
residential fees starting at $49.
CATLETTSBURG
- Calgon Carbon
Corporation has reached an agreement on a three-year labor contract
with the hourly workers at its Big Sandy plant in Catlettsburg, the
companys largest activated carbon manufacturing and reactivation
facility. The contract for the 186 workers, who are represented by
the United Steelworkers of America, includes a performance-based compensation
provision.
CENTRAL KENTUCKY
- Cutter Homes,
a central Kentucky homebuilder, is now part of Beazer Homes USA as
the result of a merger between Beazer and Crossman Communities, Cutters
parent company. The merger will create the nations sixth-largest
homebuilding company based on home closings.
COVINGTON
- Two Northern
Kentucky developers have teamed to fund a market feasibility study
for Covingtons Riverfront West area, a section of town the city
has long wanted to see developed. The city government, which approved
the partnership of Riverfront West Associates and developer Jerry
Carroll by a 4-1 margin, would like to see the area include offices,
homes and a public-use space. By funding the study, the Riverfront
West/Carroll team will be granted a six-month period in which other
companies cannot develop the area.
DANVILLE
- Ephraim McDowell
Regional Medical Center has announced plans for a new addition to
the hospital that will add acute care beds, increase the number of
intensive care/critical care beds, and expand outpatient surgery and
diagnostic-imaging departments. The project would also involve remodeling
semi-private rooms into private rooms. When complete, the expansion
would add approximately 150 more beds and bring some 500 new jobs.
- R.R. Donnelley
and Sons has cut 60 positions at its Danville printing plant. The
cutbacks are primarily being attributed to the weak economy, which
has resulted in a drop-off in demand for the magazines and catalogs
Donnelley produces. Company officials say that while economic forecasts
are beginning to be more encouraging, the printing and publishing
sector typically lags around six to nine months behind the rest of
the economy. Some of the job cuts are also due to a transition from
traditional pre-press equipment to electronic and digital automated
machines, which requires fewer employees.
ELIZABETHTOWN
- Petitions
have been mailed to voters in Elizabethtown, where a push is on to
get a wet-dry vote on the May ballot. Unlike other alcohol sales votes
in 1995 and 1998, this proposal would only permit by-the-drink alcohol
sales in restaurants that seat a minimum of 100 people and draw at
least 70 percent of their profits from food sales. A total of 2,330
signatures will be needed on the petition in order to place the issue
to vote on May 28.
FLORENCE
- KeyMRO America,
a newly-created company that specializes in purchasing via the Internet,
has announced that it will locate its primary facility in Florence.
Created as a joint company by Rhodia, Schneider Electric, Thomson
Multimedia and Usinor, KeyMRO will initially support these four global
companies in purchasing industrial goods and services. Company officials
cited Northern Kentuckys pro-business climate and access to
an international airport as reasons for selecting Florence. KeyMRO
anticipates creating up to 50 new positions involved in information
technology and purchasing functions.
FORT THOMAS
- Fort Thomas
city council has unanimously approved raising the citys payroll
tax from 1 percent to 1.25 percent. The increase, which will go into
effect January 1, 2003, will be used to fund improvements to the citys
downtown business district.
GLASGOW
- Edmonton State
Bank and the People Bank of Tompkinsville have merged, making Edmonton
State Bank one of the largest community banks in the area, with assets
of approximately $250 million. The newly-merged entity now has 11
offices across Metcalf, Barren and Monroe counties.
GLASGOW
- The Glasgow/Barren
County Industrial and Economic Authority has announced plans to develop
a new industrial park on 300 acres off of U.S. 68/80. The site, which
will be divided into approximately 12 parcels, was selected due to
its proximity to the CSX Railroad, U.S. 68/80 and the Glasgow Airport.
Initial work on the site is expected to begin soon, with one of the
first projects being a spec building offering approximately 85,000
square feet, with room for expansion.
HARRODSBURG
- Hitachi Automotive
Products has put forth an offer for early separation or retirement
to approximately 125 employees in an effort to reduce the staffing
numbers at its Harrodsburg plant. The company currently employs nearly
900 people at the Harrodsburg facility, which produces electronic
and electrical automotive products. Hitachi has made a similar offer
to employees at its Detroit and Los Angeles plants.
JENKINS
- Plans are
moving forward for a 40,000-square-foot building to be constructed
at Jenkins Gateway Business Park, adjacent to the Raven Rock
Golf Course. The Appalachian Industrial Authority (AIA) is developing
the site in an effort to attract more industry and jobs to the area
and is also seeking more property in Pike and Floyd counties for similar
projects. The Jenkins project is expected to cost around $800,000,
of which $640,000 has been funded through a grant from the Economic
Development Administration.
LEXINGTON
- The Lexington
Tennis Club has been bought by a seven-member group of local investors
for $2 million. LTC Investors LCC purchased the 20-court complex from
Cincinnati-based Original Partners Limited Partnership, which built
the club 26 years ago. The new owners are now investigating the feasibility
of making additions and/or changes to the facility.
- WTVQ-TV 36
has become the first Lexington television station to broadcast using
a digital television signal, offering customers with newer television
sets a sharper image quality and better sound. The station is currently
broadcasting standard definition digital programming but will soon
offer the full range of high-definition television (HDTV) programming
available on the ABC network. WTVQ is owned and operated by Media
General Broadcast Group.
- AFLAC, one
of the leading workplace insurance providers, has adopted Lexington-based
Exstream Softwares Dialogue to produce the majority
of their worldwide business communications. AFLAC officials said that
Dialogues component library, which allows users to store commonly
used objects like tables, text boxes, business rules and images
for reuse in multiple applications was instrumental in their
decision.
LONDON
- A new retail
center is planned for 35 acres at the intersection of I-75 and West
KY 80 in London. Shiloh Landing will offer 20 units totaling approximately
32,000 square feet of space. The first phase of development is expected
to be completed by August.
LOUISVILLE
- Bisig Communications
has been named as the agency of record for the Louisville Fire arena
football franchise. Bisig will coordinate all aspects of the teams
advertising campaigns.
- ResCare has
been awarded a five-year contract to operate the Southwest Indiana
Regional Youth Village, a 180-bed residential youth treatment facility
in Vincennes, Indiana. The contract is expected to generate $6 million
in annual revenue for ResCare, one of the nations leading providers
of services to special-needs youths and disabled persons.
- As part of
a nationwide consolidation designed to reduce real estate costs, Bank
One will move 200 loan-servicing jobs out of Louisville. Half of those
jobs will be moved to Lexington, with the other 100 going to the companys
Forth Worth, Texas center. The moves are expected to take place by
the end of May. Company officials say they expect to have approximately
100 job openings available in other areas of the Louisville market
and are encouraging employees to apply for those positions if they
choose not to move to Lexington or Fort Worth.
- John Shumaker,
president of the University of Louisville, has resigned from his post
to become the new president at the University of Tennessee. Shumaker
has been at the University of Louisville since 1995.
- Grindmaster
Crathco Systems, Inc., which manufactures coffee grinders, brewers
and dispensers, is expanding with a new facility in Monterrey, Mexico,
in order to provide better access to the companys growing Latin
America market. The Louisville-based company opened a new manufacturing
center in Thailand in 2000 to service its Asian market. Grindmaster,
which is the exclusive provider of brewers for the Starbucks
coffee chain, currently employs approximately 125 people in Louisville
and could see that number increase on the engineering and purchasing
end once the Mexican plant is operational.
- Brown-Forman
and Miller Brewing Company have announced plans for a new Jack Daniels
flavored malt beverage. The new product will be produced and distributed
by Miller and available to consumers this summer.
- The National
Farm Machinery Show and Championship Tractor Pull, held February 13-16
at the Kentucky Fair & Exposition Center in Louisville, drew 298,003
people this year, an increase of more than 11,000 from the previous
year. This years show featured nearly 800 exhibitors, filling
more than a million square feet. The NFMS typically results in an
economic impact in excess of $19 million for Louisville and the surrounding
area.
- AccuProfile,
which specializes in Internet-based applicant screening and tracking,
is one of the most recent additions at the Information Technology
Resource Center, a high-tech startup business incubator located on
the University of Louisvilles Shelby Campus. Company officials
say that Louisville was selected because its central location offered
the ideal market from which to expand the business. AccuProfile is
a subsidiary of Kansas City-based AccuHire.
- Bellarmine
University has broken ground for the new $6 million Norton Health
Science Center, which will feature a 28,500 square feet of new laboratories
and classrooms. The university is hoping to draw more healthcare students
by expanding its science program and boosting teaching and research
abilities.
- Sypris Solutions
Inc. has announced plans to sell three million shares of stock in
an effort to raise $40 million, which will be used to pay off about
50 percent of the companys debt. A large percentage of the work
handled by the electronics company is for defense contractors like
Boeing or government agencies such as the National Security Agency
and the FBI. With an increase in national defense spending, Sypris
is anticipating an increase in business as well.
- The James
Graham Brown Foundation has committed $15 million to the University
of Louisville to support the James Graham Brown Cancer Center at the
Louisville Medical Center. The center is also slated to receive another
$5 million from the Kentucky Research Challenge Trust Fund (also known
as the Bucks for Brains program).
- The Vogt Invention
and Innovation Fund, named for the late Louisville philanthropist
Henry Vogt Heuser, has awarded $150,000 to Viropharm, a pharmaceutical
company that has developed a coating for medical clothing to prevent
the transmission of AIDS and other infectious agents. A $50,000 award
went to Two-Dimensional Instruments, which has developed devices to
record, track and display thermal data. Such information is important
to industries such as food service, which have to maintain foods at
specified temperatures.
MARTIN
- Our Lady of
the Way Hospital will eliminate its transitional care unit and home
health agency in order to refocus on acute healthcare services. The
hospitals emergency room, radiology areas and in-patient rooms
are slated to undergo renovation as part of the change. The elimination
of the TCU and home health agency will result in the loss of 17 jobs.
MAYSVILLE
- Carlson Software,
a Maysville company that specializes in engineering software for civil
and mining applications, has acquired the assets of Minnesota-based
Simplicity Systems. Simplicity, which provides coordinate geometry,
CAD, data transfer and utility software to the land surveying industry,
will operate as a division of Carlson and will be based in Carlsons
headquarters in Maysville. Carlson also has offices in Massachusetts,
Georgia and California.
NEWPORT
- The board
of directors for NS Group Inc., a leading producer of seamless and
welded tubular products for the energy industry, has authorized a
common stock repurchase plan. The plan allows for the purchase of
up to two million shares of the companys common stock through
March 31, 2003.
- Billed as
a high-tech entertainment, restaurant and bar experience,
GameWorks is the newest addition to the Newport on the Levee complex
along the Ohio River. The 25,000-square-foot venue features more than
100 games, grouped into themed zones such as auto racing, golf, football
and fishing, as well as full-service dining with an exhibition kitchen,
two bars and a group room that can accommodate up to 1000 people.
The complex will employ more than 100 people.
NICHOLASVILLE
- Donaldson
Co. Inc., which manufactures filtration and exhaust systems and parts,
has laid off 32 employees from its Nicholasville plant, where it employs
approximately 340 people. Officials for the Minnesota-based company
have attributed the cutbacks to a drop in sales and the fact that
one of the Nicholasville production lines will be moved to Mexico.
Officials also warned that additional lay-offs may be necessary if
sales numbers do not improve. Donaldson ranks as Nicholasvilles
largest manufacturing employer.
NORTHERN KENTUCKY
- Shire U.S.,
an arm of Britains Shire Pharmaceuticals Group, is moving its
administrative offices from Florence to Newport, taking over space
in One Riverfront Place once occupied by Heinzs Star-Kist and
pet food divisions. Approximately 150 employees will be involved in
the move. The company will still have 15-20 employees at its warehouse
and distribution facility in Florence.
OWENSBORO
- The International
Bluegrass Music Museum is scheduled to reopen on April 11, displaying
some $3 million in renovations and kicking off a three-day indoor
bluegrass festival at the Executive Inn Rivermont. The museum originally
opened its doors in 1992 but has been closed since February 2000 for
renovation.
- Owensboro
Manufacturing and Faith Tool and Die, both of which are owned by the
Hines Group, are consolidating their operations. Faith will move its
100 employees to Owensboro Manufacturings facility at the MidAmerica
Airpark, providing a combined workforce of 125-150 by the end of the
year. Faith manufactures medium-sized stampings for the electronics
and computer industries, while Owensboro Manufacturing produces larger
stampings and motor shafts.
- General Electric
has announced plans to cut 95 jobs at its Owensboro Motors Business
plant by the end of the year. Company employees have been told that
many of the motors produced at the Owensboro plant will be made in
Mexico in the future.
- Beginning
this fall, Western Kentucky Gas will be known as Atmos Energy. The
name change comes as a decision by WKGs parent company, Dallas-based
Atmos Energy, to have all of its units operate under the Atmos name.
PADUCAH
- Uranium enrichment
company USEC Inc. is moving its transfer and shipping operations from
Piketon, Ohio to its enrichment plant in Paducah. The operations will
bring 30-50 jobs to the Kentucky plant but will mean the loss of 440
jobs for the southern Ohio plant.
PIKEVILLE
- Employees
at Pikeville Methodist Hospital have voted 295-197 against union representation
by the United Steelworkers of America. In September 2000, hospital
employees voted to remove the union as their bargaining agent when
the union was unable to negotiate an employee contract after more
than a year of negotiations.
PRESTONSBURG
- The Big Sandy
News has opened its fourth regional bureau, in Prestonsburg. The Big
Sandy News has the distinction of being the oldest newspaper in the
region and claims to be the most widely circulated non-daily paper
in the state.
RUSSELL COUNTY
- The Bruss
Company, a German manufacturer of gaskets and sealants for the automotive
industry, has made its first shipment from the companys new
Russell County plant. The plant currently employs a staff of 20 and
is expected to expand to 50 within the next year as additional equipment
is received and put into service.
SOMERSET
- The U.S. Department
of Commerce Economic Development Administration has awarded $1.4 million
to the Southern Kentucky Economic Development Corporation for the
construction of a high-tech industrial facility at Valley Oak Business
and Technology Park. In addition, the Kentucky Cabinet for Economic
Development is putting up $400,000 in matching funds, while the Kentucky
Office of the New Economy has dedicated another $200,000. The project
involves a 20,000-square-foot office building that will feature a
high-speed telecommunications network with extensive broadband connectivity.
Plans call for the complex to be complete by Summer 2003.
UNION COUNTY
- Union County
has opened a new technology center that will house a number of programs,
including an ITV video conference center, computer labs, the Union
County Adult Education program, a family literacy program, and a childcare
program. The center is open to both high school classes and the general
public.
- Seventy-five
miners are now working in Peabody Energy Corp.s new Highland
Mine in Union County, in spite of construction delays at the entrance
of the mine. As the result of a new three-year contract with Louisville
Gas & Electric, miners are going in to access coal from what is
known as coal seam No. 11, temporarily using the entrance of the now-closed
Peabody Coal Camp No. 1. (Peabody closed the 310-employee camp in
2000, saying it was no longer feasible to operate.) When the Highland
Mine is fully open which is expected to be this summer
it will produce coal from coal seam No. 9 for the Tennessee Valley
Authority, utilizing 250 miners laid off from the Camp No. 1 mine.
Peabody anticipates the new mine to be operational for at least 20
years.
WEBSTER COUNTY
- The Webster
County Fiscal Court has approved a $75,000 loan to W-D Hydraulics
to help build a 5,000-square-foot structure that will be used to manufacture
and repair hydraulic components. The county funds are specifically
earmarked to provide low-interest loans to businesses within Webster
County. The companys products will be marketed to coal, steel
and manufacturing companies.
WINCHESTER
- Clark Regional
Medical Center is studying the feasibility of building a new facility
to replace its existing 35-year-old structure. The hospital purchased
just over 30 acres of land near the Winchester Bypass in 1997 for
$1.8 million. A site analysis, equipment review, design and cost analysis
are now underway to determine if the hospital will build a new facility
or renovate its present building. If a new hospital is built, it would
be approximately the same size as the current 120,000-square-foot,
100-bed facility but would provide better patient flow, private rooms,
larger waiting areas and additional parking. A final decision is expected
by this fall.
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