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FAST LANE - May
2002
STATE
Think Tank: Kentucky Business Not
Making the Grade
Kentuckys
efforts to improve its stance in the business world particularly
the high-tech arena are commendable but theyve not yet
brought the state to a competitive level, according to a recent review
of states business and industrial growth.
Kentucky received
an overall grade of D in the annual review conducted by
the Corporation for Enterprise Development, a non-profit independent
think tank that looks at states overall business performance,
business vitality and development capacity.
The 2001 review
ranked Kentucky as follows:
Performance Index
D. Kentuckys performance remained a D, after declining
since earning a B in 1998. Equity dropped from a C to a D, led by a
decline in income distribution (36th to 45th) and a change in income
distribution (8th to 26th), indicating a tendency for inequitable wealth
accumulation. Employment remained steady, with long-term employment
growth average ranking 24th and mass layoffs at 15th. Quality of Life
and Resource Efficiency indicators remain steady overall, with an improvement
in the amount of renewable energy consumed in the state (from 36th to
19th).
Business Vitality
C. The disturbing news here is that despite a steady though
only average performance, existing companies are becoming less
competitive. The traded sector strength dropped from 30th to 34th and
investment in manufacturing capital declined from 11th to 24th. On the
up side, however, the review notes that the state is becoming more structurally
diverse, which will provide a broader economic base better equipped
to weather future economic downturns.
Development Capacity
D. For the sixth straight year, Kentucky has earned a D in this
category, with a below-average high school graduation rate and low (44th)
college attainment. Innovation assets remain poor, limiting the
potential of developing long-term growth in the technology sectors,
even though the state ranked 11 in university spinouts. Still,
Kentuckys one shining star is in this category, with low energy
costs and low urban housing costs earning the state an A in Amenity
Resources and Natural Capital.
In the states
favor, however, is the recognition of what needs to be done, as evidenced
by the creation in 2000 of the Cabinet of the New Economy, charged with
stimulating high-tech job growth in the state.
STATE
Tobacco Growers Favor Use of Government
Graders
A
vast majority of Kentucky burley tobacco growers would prefer using
government graders to set prices rather than the tobacco companies,
according to information from the Burley Tobacco Growers Co-op in Lexington.
Results of a referendum
by the U.S. Department of Agriculture showed that on a national level,
75 percent of burley growers supported the grading system. In Kentucky,
85 percent of burley tobacco growers favored grading.
All burley tobacco
is graded by USDA graders at auction, but that sold under contract directly
to cigarette companies has no USDA grade and does not qualify for price
supports.
The legislation
for the referendum would require all tobacco to be graded at the point
of sale. The actual grading procedure will be decided by the Agricultural
Marketing Service.
STATE
Feds Extend Employer Tax Credit
Programs
Two federal programs
that provide substantial tax credits to employers have been extended
according to the Kentucky Department for Employment Services, which
administers the programs in Kentucky.
The Work Opportunity
Tax Credit (WOTC) and Welfare-to-Work (WtW) tax credit programs have
been extended through December 31, 2003 for employers who hire members
of qualified groups of people.
WOTC provides employers
with up to a $2,400 tax credit per eligible hire for individuals who
meet a designated criteria such as: recipients of welfare, food stamp
and supplemental security income; youth who live in areas designated
as federal empowerment zones and enterprise communities; ex-felons;
and people with disabilities.
The WtW program
provides employers with up to $8,500 tax credit per eligible hire for
individuals who are long-term welfare recipients.
To qualify for the
tax credits, the employer must submit a form to the Department for Employment
Services requesting certification within 21 days of the eligible workers
first day of employment and receive from DES a form certifying that
the individual was eligible when hired. Employers may not claim the
tax credits for hiring former employees or relatives.
The actual amounts
of the tax credits for both programs are based upon wages paid and length
of time the worker is employed.
For more information
about the programs, contact state coordinator Barbara Gilley or other
program staff at (502) 564-7456.
STATE
Distillers Join to Create Largest
Portfolio of Bourbons and Ryes
Buffalo
Trace Distillery and J. P. Van Winkle and Son have joined together to
form a new limited liability company that will bring the largest portfolio
of acclaimed bourbons and ryes under one roof.
The new company
will operate under the name of Old Rip Van Winkle Distillery.
Under the new arrangement,
Buffalo Trace will distill, age, bottle and sell the Van Winkle family
of whiskies, with Julian Van Winkle in charge of marketing and promoting
the brand. Buffalo Trace Distillery will continue all of its normal
operations, including distilling, aging, bottling and selling its current
family of whiskies.
The Old Rip Van
Winkle Distillery LLC reunites the Van Winkles with the W.L. Weller
bourbon brand. In June 1972, Pappy Van Winkle sold the Stitzel-Weller
Distillery in Louisville, which produced W.L. Weller at the time. After
changing hands a number of times, Buffalo Trace purchased the Weller
brand in 1999 and moved the remaining production of the bourbons to
its distillery in Franklin County. The distillery had been producing
bourbon for the Weller brand for several years prior to the 1999 acquisition.
NORTHERN KENTUCKY
FAA Approves New Runway at Cincinnati/Northern
Kentucky Airport
The Federal Aviation
Administration has approved $100 million in funding for a third north-south
runway at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport.
The
newly-pledged funds will be added to $32 million the airport was already
slated to receive. The remainder required for the $246 million project
will come through an increase in passenger ticket fees; the Kentucky
County Airport Board plans to raise that fee from $3 to $4.50 per ticket
this June.
Airport officials
hope that the new 8,000-foot runway which has been in the planning for
eight years will relieve some of the traffic issues the airport has
experienced in recent years. In 2000, the airport ranked 17th in the
nation in terms of delays.
Business and local
government officials are lauding the plan, pointing to the tremendous
economic impact the airport has on the area. The airport and related
businesses and industries support nearly 70,000 jobs and pump $3.9 million
each year into the regional economy.
STATE
Addition of Kindred Gives Kentucky
Five Companies on Fortune 500 List
Louisville-based
Kindred Healthcare is the latest Kentucky company to break into the
Fortune 500 listing. Kindred, one of the nations largest operators
of long-term acute care hospitals, came in at 496 on the list, with
a 2001 revenue of $3.081 billion.
Formerly known as
Vencor prior to a bankruptcy reorganization, the company operates 53
long-term acute-care facilities and four general acute-care hospitals
in 23 states. Kindreds nursing home and rehabilitation division
operates 305 nursing homes in 32 states. The company just recently purchased
Specialty Healthcare Services for $45 million in cash, which gives Kindred
additional facilities in Southern California, Cleveland, Philadelphia,
and Charleston, South Carolina.
The four other Kentucky
companies included on the 2001 Fortune 500 list Humana, Ashland,
Tricon Global Restaurants (now known as YUM! Brands), and Lexmark
have been featured in previous years. They ranked as followed (listed
with rank, name, headquarters, last years ranking and 2001 revenue
in billions of dollars):
187. Humana, Louisville,
Ky., 179, $10.194
225. Ashland,
Covington, Ky., 234, $8.547
267. Tricon Global
Restaurants, Louisville, 263, $6.9530
390. Lexmark International,
Lexington, Ky., 437, $4.142
SIMPSONVILLE
New Pharmaceutical Distribution
Facility May Create up to 250 Jobs
Walsh
Dohmen Southeast LLC, a Birmingham pharmaceutical distributor, has announced
plans to open a new distribution center in Simpsonvilles Kingbrook
Commerce Center this summer.
The pharmaceutical
wholesaler plans to move into a recently completed building in the business
park in early July with a staff of 75. Company officials say they hope
to add another 100,000 square feet to the buildings existing 122,000
square feet and increase the number of employees to 250 within three
years.
The center will service independent drugstores in Kentucky, West Virginia
and parts of Indiana and Ohio. The company is projecting first year
sales of $225 million, increasing to $750 million within four years.
Tom Smith, general
manager of Walsh Dohmen, said the business parks proximity to
Interstate 64 and the areas work force were determining factors
in selecting the Simpsonville site.
OWENSBORO
California Firm Creates Cancer
Vaccine Using Hybrid Tobacco Plant
Large Scale Biology,
a California-based company that operates its bioprocessing division
in Owensboro, has obtained a patent for Nicotiana excelsiana, a new
plant species that looks like tobacco but is actually a hybrid the company
is using as a bioreactor to create proteins for the production
of biopharmaceuticals.
According to company
officials, the new hybrid plant offers enhanced properties for
protein production.
Such proteins are
being used by the company, previously known as Biosource Technologies,
in an effort to formulate a vaccine for non-Hodgkins lymphoma,
a cancer that strikes some 55,000 Americans each year. The company is
also working on vaccines to fight smallpox and other diseases that might
be used by bioterrorists.
Last year, the company
contracted for 50 acres of Nicotiana excelsiana to be grown in Owensboro.
Though it has not yet been determined how much will be grown in Owensboro
this year, the company hopes to eventually need more than 50,000 acres
of tobacco, corn and other plants that have been genetically altered
for biopharmaceutical purposes.
PERRYVILLE
Perryville Civic Groups Work to
Preserve Area's Historic Sites
The
Perryville Battlefield Preservation Association has purchased more than
50 acres of private property near the Perryville Battlefield State Historic
Site, bringing the amount of protected battlefield land to more than
550 acres. The $200,000 purchase was funded with a state Department
of Parks bond.
The property will
eventually serve as the site of a new orientation center for battlefield
visitors. Perryville is scheduled to host a national Civil War re-enactment
in October that is expected to draw as many as 10,000 participants.
Preservation efforts
are also escalating in the communitys Merchant Row district. The
Perryville Enhancement Project has purchased the towns former
Opera House with plans to include the historic building in its renovation
of Merchants Row, thought to be the only intact 19th-century business
district in the nation.
The Opera House,
one of 10 buildings in the district slated to undergo renovation, has
served as a photographers studio, post office, and apartments
at various times over the years.
LOUISVILLE
Louisville Hospitals Expand to
Accommodate East End Growth
Several Jefferson
County hospitals are in the process of expanding their facilities in
an effort to respond to the needs of a growing population on the countys
east side.
Baptist
East Hospitals new five-story structure adds approximately 150,000
square feet of space, housing a new maternity ward, an endoscopy unit,
and physical therapy facilities as well as leasable space for physicians
offices.
Only a few blocks
away is Norton Suburban Hospital, which is adding more than 196,000
square feet as well as an attached 580-space parking garage. Like its
neighbor, Norton is adding more maternity, endoscopy and physical therapy
space.
At Jewish Hospital,
a new out-patient center is under construction, expected to open early
next year.
In addition to responding
to a growing population, hospital administrators say the expansions
also highlight the way in which healthcare is changing. For instance,
aging baby boomers reluctant to give up their active lifestyles
are increasingly requiring physical therapy services. A combination
of better technology, an aging population and increased coverage by
insurance companies is leading to more widespread use of endoscopy,
which is used to screen for colon cancer as well as other diseases.
And while Jefferson
Countys overall birth rate hasnt experience a huge surge,
a shift in the countys population has been making increasing demands
on medical services on the east end of the county. Plus, many patients
come to the hospitals from outlying counties. For instance, between
1997 and 2001, Suburbans in-patient admissions went up 44 percent,
with emergency room visits increasing by 30 percent. The maternity ward
saw an 87 percent increase during that period.
MURRAY
State Grants $200,000 for New Distribution
Facility in Murray
Rudolphs Inc.,
a wholesale tire distribution company, has been approved for a state
grant of $200,000 to build a 90,000-square-foot warehouse and distribution
facility in Murray. Another $100,000 has been committed by the Murray-Calloway
County Economic Development Authority. The remaining $1.6 million needed
for construction will be financed through a bank loan.
News of the $1.9
million project comes as welcome news in Murray, which is losing hundreds
of jobs due to the shutdown of the Mattel distribution facility.
Rudolphs currently
employs 35 people at its existing Murray facility, with an annual payroll
of $2 million and $45 million annual sales. The new project calls for
the work force to reach 55 in five years, boosting the annual payroll
to $2.8 million.
LEXINGTON
Webasto Roof Systems Adds 200 New
Jobs in Lexington
Webasto
Roof Systems, Inc. has announced plans to build a new 200,000-square-foot
facility in Lexington, where it will produce complex, automotive roof
systems.
The new facility
will be located directly across the street from Webastos existing
assembly plant, which opened in 1998.
Approximately 200
new jobs are expected to be created as a result of the expansion, bringing
Webastos total Kentucky employment to around 425.
The company is investing
an initial $28 million on the plant, which will include two roof system
assembly lines. However, based on projected growth in the automotive
roof system industry, Webasto is building enough space to support seven
to eight lines.
Mark Wallace, general
manager of Webastos Kentucky operations, cited an overall good
experience in dealing with the Kentucky business community as pivotal
in the companys decision to further expand here. In addition,
he said, the area is centrally located among its automotive customers,
which include Ford, General Motors, Toyota, Daimler Chrysler and Mazda.
GEORGETOWN
Johnson Controls Will Close One
of its Three Georgetown Facilities
The city of Georgetown
is reeling from the news that Johnson Controls Inc. will shut down one
of its three Georgetown automotive supply plants, leaving 500 workers
without jobs. The plant produces metal frames for automobile seating
systems.
Johnson ranks as
one of the nations largest automotive seating and battery suppliers.
The company employs approximately 3,000 people at its seven Kentucky
facilities.
The first segment
of layoffs will come in mid-July, with production ending in December.
The plant will officially shut down by February 2003.
Johnson plans to
shift the plants production lines to its facilities in Cadiz,
Kentucky and Tennessee. According to company officials, Johnson simply
does not have the business to support three Georgetown plants. Hyundais
recent decision to locate its first American manufacturing plant in
Alabama rather than Kentucky was not a factor in the decision to close
the Georgetown plant, they added.
Jack Conner, Scott
Countys economic development director, has said he plans to help
Johnson sell or lease the 250,000-square-foot building, although a facility
of that size may be hard to fill.
Scott County is
currently in the process of developing a new business park expressly
to attract new business and diminish the countys reliance on the
automotive industry.
LOUISVILLE
Sypris Solutions Lands $75 Million
Deal With Major Defense Contractor
Sypris Solutions
has landed a $75 million contract to produce circuit boards for BAE
Systems PLC, a major defense contractor.
The circuitry will
be used in handheld chemical-detection devices and produced by Sypris
Electronics, the companys Tampa-based subsidiary.
According to industry
analysts, the contract is a big win for the Sypris: BAE represents the
last of the big five defense contractors to develop a business
relationship with the company, which already has contracts through Raytheon,
Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and Honeywell International.
The announcement
also boosted Sypris stock, raising it $1.85 to a 52-week high of $17.85
on volume of 739,400 on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
Noting the companys
recent success in landing fairly large contracts, Needham & Co.
analyst Jim Ricchiuti has rated the stock a buy and projected
earnings of 80 cents per share for 2002 and $1.12 for 2003.
LOUISVILLE
FFA Stuns Louisville with Plans to Move Convention
to Indianapolis
Just three years
after luring the National FFA (Future Farmers of America) Convention
to Louisville from Kansas City where it had been held for nearly
70 years the organization has announced plans to move the convention
to Indianapolis.
The
pronouncement comes as a huge disappointment to civic leaders in Louisville,
where the annual event pumped some $20 million into the local economy,
making it Louisvilles largest convention last year in terms of
economic impact.
Louisvilles
contract with FFA runs through 2005, but the city had hoped to win another
seven years when the contract came up for renewal last year. According
to FFA officials, Louisvilles lack of enough hotel rooms was a
major factor in the organizations decision to move to Indianapolis.
Also, the technical capabilities at Freedom Hall were not as extensive
as those available at Indys new Conseco Fieldhouse. Plus, Indianapolis
has recently expanded its convention center and opened a new 600-room
Marriott hotel next to the center.
A new $111 million
Marriott is planned for downtown Louisville, but is only in the land
acquisition stage. The Kentucky Fair & Exposition Centers
proposal for a $102 million expansion and renovation has not yet received
funding.
The greatest impact,
however, may be in the lost opportunity to showcase the city to 50,000
young people each year. Mike Bosc, a spokesman for Greater Louisville,
Inc., said, Its the type of audience that we are trying
to attract future young professionals.
BOWLING GREEN
Environmental Study of Proposed Transpark Fails to
Sway Critics
Preliminary findings
of a site evaluation for the proposed Kentucky TriModal Transpark near
Bowling Green indicate that the project would not produce any damage
to Mammoth Cave National Park, according to a report released by the
Inter-Modal Transportation Authority, Inc. (ITA).
The proposed Transpark,
which would feature air and rail facilities to meet transportation needs
of area industries, has become a highly controversial issue of late,
with a number of groups citing concerns about potential environmental
effects if the project comes to fruition.
The ITAs assessment
was based on existing groundwater and ecological studies performed over
the past 22 years and compiled by Dr. Nick Crawford, director of the
Center for Cave and Karst Studies at Western Kentucky University. According
to the ITA, the study shows all groundwater in the area of the proposed
Transpark flows toward the Barren River, directly away from the Mammoth
Cave area.
However, members
of Karst Environmental Education and Protection, a group opposed to
the transpark, claim that Crawfords conclusions inaccurate. The
group points to other potential problems as well, such as a recent collapse
of a sinkhole in Bowling Green that engulfed an area the size of a football
field. Although the sinkhole was 10 miles from the proposed transpark
site, the group maintains that the geography is the same.
The report is being
forwarded to leading karst scientists around the world to obtain their
opinions regarding the issue.
LEXINGTON
Landowners Sign Over Development Rights to Help Preserve
Farmland
Fayette
County is making progress in its endeavor to maintain the natural landscape
surrounding it.
The county has signed
its first contracts to purchase conservation easements from landowners,
in essence preventing development on more than 1,500 acres of land.
Funding through the countys Purchase of Development Rights (PDR)
program compensates farm owners who voluntarily give up the right to
develop their land.
A total of 37 landowners
applied for the program, which requires that farms meet certain qualifications.
(For example, the farms must be at least 20 acres in size and must be
located in Fayette County.) Twelve contracts were signed for a total
purchase price of just under $4.5 million. A second round of applications
is now is progress.
As a legal agreement
between the landowner and the Rural Land Management Board (a volunteer
group that manages the countys Purchase of Development Rights
program) the easement stays with the land, thus ensuring that future
owners will be bound by its terms.
Business Briefs
DRY RIDGE
- The Eastlake
Landing shopping center has been acquired by Isaac-Dry Ridge LLC of
Lexington. Tenants at the 31,700-square-foot center include Food Lion
and American General Finance. NAI ISAAC will manage and lease the
center, which still has land available for future development.
ERLANGER
- Corporex is
in the process of renovating a former industrial building at CirclePort
International Business Park into a Class A office building. When complete
later this year, the 20-year-old building will offer 230,000 square
feet of office space on two floors, with state-of-the-art features
such as fiber optic cabling. CirclePort is a 650-acre mixed-use business
park just off I-275 that includes office, industrial, hotel and retail
space.
FLORENCE
- AP Technoglass,
a Florence-based manufacturer of automotive glass, has been selected
to supply glazing assemblies for Nissans new assembly facility
in Canton, Mississippi. The company will be an occupant in the new
Canton Customer Service Logistics Center, located next to the Nissan
plant to provide just-in-time delivery for the automaker. AP Technoglass
is an affiliate of Asahi Glass America.
- Turfway Park
officials are blaming declining attendance and betting numbers on
competition from Indianas riverboat casinos, which lie less
than 30 minutes away from the Florence horse track. Betting for the
tracks winter-spring thoroughbred season, which ended April
4, was off four percent, with track attendance down 13 percent. Track
officials say their numbers are also down for sites where they are
simulcasting, such as Churchill Downs and Ellis Park.
GEORGETOWN
- Plans are
proceeding for Georgetowns smart park, a proposed
business park aimed at attracting new companies to decrease the communitys
dependence on Toyota. (Toyota payroll taxes currently provide some
70 percent of Georgetowns operating budget.) The 390-acre park
will be developed in phases, with the first step consisting of small
clusters in the two- to six-acre range. The parks second phase
will feature research labs and offices. According to city officials,
the new park has produced a high level of interest, particularly from
companies interested in the smaller two- to three-acre site.
HANCOCK COUNTY
- McElroy Metal,
the nations second-largest producer of metal roofing and siding,
is expanding its Hancock County facility. The company has begun the
first phase of a $2.4 million expansion that will triple the plants
production (from 300,000 pounds of material to nearly one million)
and increase the work force as well. McElroy currently employs 17
people; when the first phase of expansion is complete this summer,
the company plans to hire 30 additional workers.
HAWESVILLE
- Western Kentucky
Energy, a subsidiary of LG&E Energy, is investing more than $70
million in sulfur dioxide emission control technology at its Coleman
Generating Station. The investment will finance the construction of
a flue gas desulfurization system, commonly known as a scrubber, which
should result in a significant improvement in the regions air
quality when the system is complete in 2004. WKE plans to convert
the scrubber waste into a synthetic gypsum product for use by the
wallboard manufacturing industry.
HENDERSON
- The United
Auto Workers International Union and its Local 2036 have ended their
20-year association with hourly employees at Hendersons Accuride
Corporation plant. The move brings to an official end a strike that
began in 1998 when 400 union members walked off the job. In the time
since, union employees have repeatedly turned down contracts offered
by Accuride, which has kept the truck wheel plant operational by increasing
responsibilities among remaining employees, implementing more automation,
and paying contractors to handle maintenance responsibilities. The
relationship between the local union and UAW International has been
strained since the fall of 1999, when the UAW canceled strike pay,
apparently in an effort to coerce union members into ratifying a contract.
Strike benefits were later reinstated, but many members resented what
they considered to be a betrayal by the UAW.
- Henderson
Municipal Power & Light is preparing to install new pollution
control equipment at its power plant near Sebree. The selective catalytic
reduction equipment will remove most of the smog-producing nitrogen
oxide emissions, as required by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency. The cost of the equipment, which could reach as much as $40
million, will likely mean an increase in city electric rates, according
to company officials.
- Sonoco Products
Co. has been approved for a $18,800 state training grant to help prepare
employees for a $9 million company expansion project that will add
26 new jobs at its Henderson plant, where it produces aluminum and
steel ends for various types of packaging, such as infant formula
cans. The grant is being made available through the Kentucky Workforce
Investment Network System (KY WINS) program, which brings local communities
together with state agencies and educational institutions to provide
training assistance for workers. Sonocos grant will cover programmable
logic controls and electronic theory as well as training in welding,
machine shop and other technical skills, provided by a joint effort
between Henderson Community College and the Henderson County Technology
Center.
HOPKINS COUNTY
- Ahlstrom Engine
Filtration, LLC has announced plans to expand its operations in Hopkins
County. Ahlstrom, a leading supplier of filter media for automotive
applications, will construct a 28,000-square-foot facility in Madisonville
that will eventually employ approximately 60 people with an average
hourly wage of $23.21.
LAWRENCE COUNTY
- The Lawrence
County Fiscal Court has approved the development of a 20-acre industrial
site along U.S. 23. The countys plan is to erect a spec building
in hopes of attracting new companies and jobs to the area. The land
was donated for the project by R&J Development of Inez, saving
the county of hundreds of thousands of dollars.
LEXINGTON
- Drywall &
Building Supply has been sold to Cincinnati-based Hoge Warren Zimmermann
Co. for $9 million. Hoge Warren Zimmermann operates 13 construction
material distribution centers in the Midwest and has contracting divisions
in Atlanta, Cincinnati, Jacksonville, Miami, Nashville, Orlando, and
Tampa.
- Non-stop flight
service between Lexington and New York City, suspended after the events
of September 11, has been reinstated. Continental Express will begin
service from Blue Grass Airport to Newark International on June 14,
using the 37-passenger Embraer ERJ-135.
- Lexington
developer Rob McGoodwin has begun renovating a former tobacco-processing
plant near the University of Kentucky with plans to transform the
space into 86 loft apartments. The units will range in size from 500
and 1,000 square feet, with rental rates ranging from $480 to $950
per month. In addition to providing additional housing options for
UKs 30,000 students, the project is bringing praises from city
officials, who have recently begun working with university leaders
to establish more of a connection between university and downtown.
- The McConnell
Technology & Training Center has teamed with Central Kentucky
Technical College to provide Spanish-language technology training
to the areas growing Hispanic community. The Centers PC
Essentials course is designed to introduce inexperienced computer
users to the Internet, e-mail and other basic computer literacy skills.
The course is also taught in English at CKTC.
- Despite 40
signs and an eye-catching water tower proclaiming otherwise, Lexington
can no longer call itself Horse Capital of the World.
That phrase is now the official property of the Florida Thoroughbred
Breeders, which has applied for and received a trademark on the phrase
for exclusive use by Ocala and Marion County, Florida. A spokesman
for the Florida organization said the group pursued the matter after
hearing that Lexington was considering applying for the trademark.
Lexingtons attorney says the city will prosecute the case. Whether
it is successful will depend in part on how long each community has
been using the slogan.
LOUISVILLE
- Humana has
selected Aperture Credentialing to verify the credentials of more
than 320,000 of its enrolled physicians. The three-year agreement
involves Humanas ChoiceCare Network, which encompasses around
one million members in 44 states and the District of Columbia. Aperture,
which began as a spin-off of Humana five years ago, currently employs
a staff of 300 and anticipates adding another 200 employees by the
end of the year.
- South Carolina-based
Span-America Medical Systems Inc. has renewed an exclusive marketing
and distribution agreement with Louisville Bedding. Under the five-year
agreement, Louisville Bedding will handle Span-Americas consumer
foam bedding products, which accounts for approximately $8.4 million
of its annual sales.
- In a quest
to make the citys downtown district a fun, safe and energetic
environment, Louisville Mayor Dave Armstrong has announced a
plan to offer forgivable business loans of up to $50,000 to companies
locating along Fourth Street. Potential projects include a microbrewery,
nightclubs and studio lofts. Armstrong has set aside $500,000 of the
citys budget and is working to get private lenders to match
that amount.
- Ford Motor
Co. has opened a new 24-hour childcare center near its Louisville
Assembly Plant. The 32,000-square-foot Family Service and Learning
Center will serve more than 14,000 hourly and salaried Ford employees
in the Louisville area and employs approximately 70 workers. The company
also plans to open a similar center for day care and kindergarten
in August. The services are being provided as part of a joint effort
between Ford and The United Auto Workers.
- Brown-Forman
has formed a marketing alliance with Bacardi, the worlds No.
3 spirits company. The two companies, which have little direct competition
with one another, have teamed in hopes of competing more effectively
with larger companies such as Diageo, the worlds top spirits
seller that recently purchased Seagrams drinks business. Both
Brown-Forman and Bacardi have emphasized that while they will work
closely in the U.S. market under the new Gemini Alliance, they will
remain independent companies. Brown-Forman produces Jack Daniels,
Finlandia Vodka, Bolla wines and Korbel champagne. In addition to
its top-selling rum, Bacardi sells Dewars Scotch and Bombay
Sapphire gin along with other brands.
- LG&E Energy
Corp. has the distinction of being the nations premier company
in terms of customer satisfaction among mid-size business customers,
according the latest survey from J.D. Power and Associates. Last year,
LG&E led the Midwest division and was rated second overall. Business
customers ranked power quality and reliability, overall company image,
and price and value as the most important factors in determining their
satisfaction.
- Ventas Inc.
has announced plans to offer $400 million in senior notes to raise
funds that will be used to repay outstanding debt and cover costs
related to the partial termination of an associated interest rate
swap agreement. The healthcare real estate investment trust company
owns 44 hospitals, 215 nursing facilities and eight personal care
facilities in 36 states.
- Electric City
Corp. and its Louisville-based distributor, M&A Railroad and Electric
Supply, have been awarded a $1.3 million contract to install EnergySaver
systems at the Toyota Motor Manufacturing plant in Georgetown. The
EnergySaver system reduces electricity consumption of lighting systems
by 20-50 percent.
- UPS is discontinuing
its online courier service, saying the market for electronic document
deliveries did not evolve as initially forecasted. The
company introduced the service in 1998, following business forecasts
that predicted high demand for increased security as more companies
became reliant on the Web to conduct business. The service compressed
large digital files and also provided additional virus protection.
- General Electric
is eliminating the second shift on its refrigerator production line
in an effort to cut costs. The decision will affect some 360 jobs,
although company officials say they hope to transfer some employees
to other jobs within Appliance Park and will offer early retirement
to eligible employees. The change is slated to take effect in June
or July.
MAYFIELD
- The Jackson
Purchase Medical Center has broken ground for an addition that will
include 3,500 square feet of space for a proposed radiological service
unit. The expansion will also include space for additional mammography
suites.
MAYSVILLE
- The Maysville
Ledger Independent is now part of Lee Enterprises Inc. as part of
Howard Publications sale of 16 daily newspapers. As a result
of the acquisition, Iowa-based Lee has 45 newspapers and a daily circulation
of more than 1.1 million.
MORGANTOWN
- First Kentucky
Bank will close its Morgantown branch at the end of this month. The
bank will continue to operate branches in Mayfield, Central City,
Greenville, Hartford, Beaver Dam and Livermore.
NORTHERN KENTUCKY
- Citing the
Cincinnati/ Northern Kentucky region as a good representation of a
mid-size market, online recruiter Monster.com has selected the area
to launch its new Web service designed to match up employers with
job-seekers looking for hourly work. The TriState JobMatch site (www.jobmatch.com),
the first of several such Web sites the company has planned, targets
industries such as retail, food service, healthcare, construction
and customer service.
- After ceasing
its flights between Paris and the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky
International Airport last summer due to the Comair strike, Air France
has resumed its daily service. Officials with Air France, the only
foreign airline to operate out of the Cincinnati airport, cited a
lack of passengers during the strike period as its reason for discontinuing
flights last year.
- Delta Air
Lines is installing additional self-service check-in kiosks at the
Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, allowing
all customers with an electronic ticket to check in, check baggage,
print boarding cards, select or change seats, request to stand by
for upgrades, or change flights. The process takes between 30-60 seconds
for passengers with only carry-ons and approximately two minutes or
less for those checking luggage. In the past, Deltas self-serve
kiosks have been available only to frequent fliers.
OWENSBORO
- Owensboro
Grain Co. is constructing a pipeline that will enable the company
to move soybean oil from its processing facility to its edible-oil
refinery without having to load it on barges, as is currently done.
As part of the project, the company is working with the Regional Water
Resource Agency to also install a sewer line that will improve storm
and waste water drainage. Company and city officials say the project
is a win-win situation for all involved. Without the sewer line, Owensboro
Grain would have to build its own sewage treatment plant to handle
water that becomes mixed with grain dust and must be treated before
it can released into the Ohio River. Owensboro Grain is footing the
bill for the $2.5 million project.
- Local business
owners are speaking out in opposition to the news that the Owensboro
Riverport Authority has attained a purchase option for the former
Green River Steel property with plans to open a second riverport and
warehouse complex. Business owners and city officials alike have concerns
about local businesses having to competing against a government-owned
entity. There are also concerns about an overabundance of port and
warehouse facilities, diluting the market. Riverport Authority officials
say they are simply working to increase trade and commerce in the
region and are planning for future economic development by preparing
an intermodal facility.
PIKEVILLE
- Pizza Inn
Inc. has signed a three-store agreement with Food Court Solutions
of Pikeville to open Pizza Inn Express restaurants in West Liberty,
Salyersville and Stanton.
- Approximately
135,000 gallons of coal waste spilled into Eastern Kentucky streams
in early April after a pipe ruptured at Sidney Coal Co.s Pike
County coal processing plant. The spill caused cities along the Tug
Fork of the Big Sandy River to close water intakes and is being blamed
for a large fish kill on Long Ford and Big Creek. Fortunately, the
situation was not as dire as an October 2000 spill from Martin County
Coal that involved more than 300 million gallons of coal sludge.
RICHMOND
- Ajax Magnethermic
has closed down its Richmond plant, leaving more than 100 workers
out a job. Citing a slowdown in demand for its products, the company,
which is a major supplier of equipment for the steel industry, is
consolidating the Richmond operations with those of its plant in Warren,
Ohio.
SOMERSET
- NorthStar
Technology has had to temporarily lay off 16 full-time employees at
its corporate headquarters in Somerset due to a delay in receiving
a $23.6 million loan from the U.S. Department of Agricultures
Rural Utilities Services. As a result of the delay, the telecommunications
services company has been unable to meet its timetable for network
construction. NorthStar is one of the areas newest companies,
having located to the Valley Oak Business and Technology Park last
summer.
SPARTA
- Kentucky Speedway
has been selected to be part of the inaugural Indy Racing Infiniti
Pro Series schedule, a new series designed to develop young drivers.
Slated for August 11 is a 100-mile race, followed by the Belterra
Casino Indy 300. Many existing Indy Racing teams, including
2000 Indy Racing League champion Hemelgarn Racing and Sinden Racing
Service, are expected to field an entry in the series, along with
a number of new teams.
STATE
- The recent
Kentucky National Dairy Shows and Sales broke all previous sales records
this year, with 248 head of dairy cattle selling for more than $700,000.
Two Holstein cows were sold for more than $40,000 each. The average
prices per head for the five dairy breeds were also new records. This
show gives Kentuckys dairy industry a tremendous boost,
said Agricultural Commissioner Billy Ray Smith. The sales figures
and the fact that the $40,000 cows both went to out-of-state buyers
show that dairy farmers all over the country recognize the quality
of Kentucky dairy cattle.
- The Kentucky
Vineyard Society has received $65,000 from the Kentucky Agricultural
Development Board to conduct a market feasibility study that will
explore the states potential for wine grape production as an
alternative to tobacco. The study will include an overview of the
grape and wine industry in the U.S. and develop an industry outlook
in order to determine areas within the state that are viable for expansion
and would in turn reduce Kentuckys dependency on tobacco crops.
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