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FAST LANE - June 2002


STATE
Fazoli's, Dippin' Dots Form Partnership with McDonald's

Two Kentucky companies are seeing heightened exposure of their products as the result of recent agreements with McDonald’s Corporation.

Lexington-based Fazoli’s, a fast-casual Italian restaurant chain, has formed a joint venture with McDonald’s to develop 20 to 30 Fazoli’s restaurants in three U.S. markets.

For McDonald’s, the partnership allows the company to add the Italian food segment of the market to its portfolio, an area not previously represented, said Russ Smyth, president of partner brands for McDonald’s. McDonald’s currently owns and operates more than 650 Boston Market locations, some 200 Donato’s Pizzeria restaurants, and has a majority interest in Chipotle, with nearly 200 U.S. restaurants. It also has a minority interest in Pret A Manger sandwich shops.

For Fazoli’s, the partnership offers access to McDonald’s recognized experience in site development, supply chain and other business systems, allowing the company to expand at a more rapid pace. As part of the agreement, McDonald’s will have an option to purchase the entire company at a later date.

Paducah-based Dippin’ Dots, which produces the tiny super-frozen ice cream pellets that are particularly popular among the 8-18 age market, has also piqued the interest of McDonald’s. The company is now offering the unique dessert in some 250 of its San Francisco restaurants and has spent more than $1.2 million in advertising to promote the new item. Dependent upon customer response, McDonald’s plans to expand into other western U.S. markets.

Since its inception in 1988, Dippin’ Dots has become highly popular in the marketplace and was recently ranked by Entrepreneur magazine as 69th among the top 100 fastest-growing franchises.

STATE
Eight Communities Awarded Revitalization Funds

Eight Kentucky communities have been selected to receive a total of more than $300,000 as part of the state’s Renaissance Kentucky program, created in 1997 to assist communities in revitalizing their downtown districts.

The communities receiving funding include: Bellevue ($30,500), Bloomfield ($30,500), Liberty ($30,500), Madisonville ($45,750), Marion ($30,500), Bowling Green ($50,000), Dawson Springs ($50,000) and Maysville ($50,000).

The goal of Renaissance Kentucky is to recognize and honor communities that have maintained or restored their central downtown areas as safe, efficient and functional urban cores. In addition, the program provides support and technical assistance in developing strategies to improve downtown districts.

The program is administered by an alliance of agencies including the Kentucky Heritage Council, Kentucky Housing Corporation, Kentucky League of Cities, Kentucky Department for Local Government, Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati and Fannie Mae.

“Renaissance Kentucky is aimed at helping our communities with developing businesses, housing and rental opportunities in their downtown areas,” said Governor Paul Patton. “All Kentucky communities should have downtown centers thriving with activity to pass on local traditions and treasures to future generations.”

STATE
State Economic Group Ranked Among Top 10

Kentucky’s Cabinet for Economic Development has been named as one of the Top 10 Economic Groups in the country by Site Selection magazine. Each year, the magazine chooses its Top 10 economic development groups, based on their achievements in attracting large-scale corporate expansion projects.

The selection is based on: capital investment in the service area, new jobs created in the service area, capital investment per capita, and new jobs created per 100,000 population. In 2001, Kentucky recruited businesses equaling $3.2 billion and 12,437 new jobs.

In addition, Citicorp Credit Service’s $44 million expansion in Florence, Kentucky was listed as one of the Top 10 Deals of 2001.

STATE
R & D Investment Puts UK in the Top 50 American Universities

The University of Kentucky continues to make progress in its endeavor to become a top research institution.

The university ranks 47th in the nation in the latest report from the Southern Regional Education Board, which lists universities based on their expenditures in research and development. In 1985, UK ranked 67th in the listing.

The author of the report remarked that UK’s standing is particularly notable because more than 42 percent of its R&D expenditures come from the university itself; money that could have been funneled elsewhere. That, said author Joe Marks, is indicative of the importance the school is placing on research and development.

UK’s standing in this report puts it in the company of well-regarded schools such as Emory University (46th) and Virginia Tech (51st), both of which saw most of their R&D funding come from federal sources.

The SREB report comes on the heels of a report announced by the National Science Foundation, in which UK was also ranked 47th in research spending.

STATE
Rising Healthcare Costs Addressed by Kentucky's Chamber Coalition

The Kentucky Chamber of Commerce has formed a coalition of employers to review the issue of rising healthcare costs and come up with solutions to counter the problem.

In recent years, Kentucky employers have seen double-digit increases in health insurance premiums, even in the face of more tightly controlled managed care plans for workers.

The Kentucky Employers Health Benefits Coalition will work to identify the factors involved in driving healthcare costs up and ways in which to control them.

The group hopes to have proposals ready in time to present to the 2003 General Assembly.

The Chamber recently earned a place on the 2002 Associations Advance America Honor Roll for its professional development/continuing education programs.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY
International Flight Service Expands at Delta Air Lines' Cincinnati Hub

Delta Air Lines is expanding its international service from Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport with the addition of a daily nonstop flight to Rome.

The new service will begin July 1 and will operate during the summer season through September. Delta’s SkyTeam partner, Alitalia, will provide the service, using the 268-seat MD-11 aircraft.

Delta has also partnered with Aero Mexico to add a new Saturday-only, nonstop flight to Cancun. The new service began earlier this month, using Boeing 737-800 aircraft that carry up to 154 passengers.

In May, Air France – also a Delta partner – resumed its daily nonstop flight between Cincinnati and Paris. Delta also offers a daily nonstop route to Paris.

LEXINGTON
Companies Help Small Travel Firms Better Compete with Online Giants

Two Lexington-based companies have partnered to provide a solution for small travel agencies across the nation, which have been struggling not only to compete with larger online travel companies but stay afloat in an industry that has been particularly hard hit by the events of September 11.

Encite Commerce and the Association of Retail Travel Agents (ARTA) have joined to create and customize online travel booking engines for ARTA members, giving them the ability to offer their customers pricing that is competitive with other online booking services such as Travelocity and Expedia. Services offered through the customized engines include air, car rentals, hotels, cruises and a variety of travel packages.

“Travel agents will now be armed with comparable technology to the online travel companies who have been capturing large chunks or market share,” explained Stepfan Jefferies, CEO of Encite Commerce. “And…organizations such as banks and corporations will be able to provide convenient and competitively priced travel services to their members and employees.”

ARTA is the largest nonprofit trade association in North America that exclusively represents travel agents. Encite specializes in the creation and management of flexible e-commerce distribution venues and has more than 285 clients throughout the nation, including Village Voice Media and Clear Channel Radio.

BOWLING GREEN
Entrepreneurial Scholarships Keep Young Business Owners in State

A successful online business launched by two Bowling Green high school students will continue its growth in Kentucky thanks to the state’s New Economy initiative and entrepreneurial scholarships from Western Kentucky University.

Clinton and Chris Mills are co-owners of Hitcents.com, an online advertising and marketing firm now in its third year of business. In 2001, the twins were honored by the U.S. Small Business Administration as Kentucky’s Young Entrepreneurs of the Year. Although the two considered attending institutions such as Stanford, Texas, Vanderbilt and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), they say that an attractive location for their company coupled with Kentucky’s support of high-tech business persuaded them to remain in-state at Western Kentucky University.

Chris Mills will be the first recipient of Western’s Don and Suzanne Vitale Entrepreneurial Scholarship. Clinton Mills will be the first to receive the school’s Presidential Young Entrepreneurs Scholarship. The full scholarships include tuition, books, room meals and an international study experience.

WKU President Gary Ransdell lauded the Mills’ company as a premier example of an “innovative, high-tech business that will promote economic development in south-central Kentucky. “

The success of Hitcents, which will be moving into Western’s Center for Research and Development, could also attract similar companies to the Center.

“Getting the business in the new center with a larger facility alongside other high-tech businesses can only benefit both sides,” said Ed Mills, the students’ father. “The business can then expand into hiring more people [and] will probably employ fellow Western students so they too can enjoy the entrepreneurial atmosphere.”

LOUISVILLE
New Chrysalis Fund to Provide $143 Million in Venture Capital

Chrysalis Ventures, the state’s largest venture capital firm, recently concluded fundraising for its fourth, and largest, venture capital fund. The $143 million fund attracted a variety of new institutional investors from the pension, endowment, foundation, insurance, fund of funds and banking sectors. Chrysalis’ new fund will make private equity investments in emerging high-growth companies in the Southeast and Midwest. The firm plans to invest in approximately 25 companies over the next four years, providing money for both early-stage companies and later-stage companies seeking follow-on venture financing. The initial investments will typically range from $1.5 to $2.5 million per company.

Since its inception in 1993, Chrysalis has invested in more than 30 companies, including TechRepublic, Regent Communications, Premier Parks, Appriss, Aperture Credentialing and Genscape.

EASTERN KENTUCKY
New Grant Program Will Help Companies Improve Tech Skills

The Center for Rural Development has announced a new grant program to help companies improve the technology skills of their staff.

The C-TRAIN grant program is available to businesses within the 40-county region served by the Center for Rural Development. The grants range from $500 to $25,000. Applicants can choose from six options to find one that best suits their needs. Options include salary incentive grants, grants for specialized training, tuition reimbursement for technology courses and certifications, and grants to pay salary costs while workers are involved in training courses.

Employers can increase the size of their grant by training more employees.

Addressing the significance of the new program, Greg Jones, executive director of the Southern Kentucky Economic Development Corporation points out that “manufacturing today makes up only 17 percent of the workforce; service and technology comprise 45 percent. Highly skilled workers are imperative to keeping industry and the accompanying jobs in the region.”

Funds for the C-TRAIN Grant Program have been authorized by the Small Business Administration and will be available for the next four years. Applications from businesses are currently being accepted.

For more information, contact the Center for Rural Development at (606) 677-6000 or visit www.centertech.com/c-train.

WINCHESTER
Changes at EDS Result in Loss of 460 Jobs at Winchester Facility

Electronic Data Systems is cutting approximately 460 jobs at its Winchester facility as a result of the company’s plans to transfer a portion of the center’s operations to Canada.

The layoff – which will affect 280 of EDS’ regular employees as well as 180 temporary workers – represents approximately two-thirds of the facility’s workforce. However, EDS officials in Dallas maintain that the company has no plans to close the Winchester facility.

An EDS spokeswoman said the decision to move work to Canada was the result of a request from its client, Hewlett-Packard, for which EDS manufactures printers, computers and other equipment.

EDS workers at the Winchester customer interaction center served Hewlett-Packard customers by handling questions about HP equipment.

EDS says it is pursuing plans to bring other business to the Winchester center.

The layoff process is planned to begin this month and is expected to run through December.

EDS has been operating in Winchester since late 2000, when it acquired the facility from MCI.

ERLANGER
Toyota Spins Off supplier Support Center as an Independent Company

An arm of Toyota created to share knowledge of its famed Toyota Production System (TPS) with other manufacturers has been spun off by Toyota Motor Manufacturing North America to form an independent company.

The arm of the company known as the Toyota Supplier Support Center (TSSC) will now be TSSC, Inc., headed by Hajime Ohba as president. Ohba previously served as vice president and general manager of TSSC.

Created in 1992, the center has worked with more than 100 companies to help them develop their own version of TPS.

Ohba said the new company will primarily support companies and industries that are not part of Toyota. Profits from the business will be used to support TPS implementation with society-based organizations. For instance, Ohba pointed out, in the past Toyota has worked with hospitals and organizations such as the American Printing House for the Blind to help them become more efficient.

“TSSC, Inc.’s core philosophies will remain the same,” said Ohba. “We are committed to using TPS to contribute to North American society by using the principles of eliminating waste, raising quality and shortening lead times.”

MADISONVILLE
Gift Wrap Manufacturer to Locate in Long-Vacant Madisonville Plant

After sitting empty for more than a decade, the former York manufacturing facility in Madisonville will now have a new occupant.

Glitterwrap, Inc., which specializes in metallic (mylar), iridescent, and prismatic gift wrap products, has purchased the 345,000-square-foot plant after learning of its availability on the Madisonville-Hopkins County Economic Development Corp.’s Web site. The plant has been vacant since 1991, making it the community’s No. 1 economic development priority, said county officials.

The New Jersey-based company purchased the plant and 79 acres from York for approximately $2.5 million. The plant’s location near the geographic center of the U.S. population was a key factor in its decision to locate in Madisonville.

Glitterwrap plans to be in operation by July and will initially employ 82 workers with an average wage of approximately $11 per hour. The number of employees is expected to grow to 300 within the next 10 years.

ELIZABETHTOWN
Local Business Owner's Trademark Case Headed to US Supreme Court

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case involving Elizabethtown business owner Victor Moseley and national retailer Victoria’s Secret.

Victoria’s Secret, well known for its lingerie catalogs and stores, sued Moseley in 1998 in regard to his lingerie and adult novelty store, which he had named Victor’s Secret. (The name was later changed to Victor’s Little Secret and has since been changed to Cathy’s Little Secret, using Moseley’s wife’s name.)

Victoria’s Secret won its case in U.S. District Court in Louisville and again in the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals, which cited the Federal Trademark Dilution Act of 1995 in protecting the national entity.

The Supreme Court’s decision to accept the case has drawn national attention.

Moseley’s attorneys with the Louisville firm of Middleton Reutlinger say the Supreme Court ruling will set a precedent in terms of how other trademark issues will be decided.

OWENSBORO
Tourism Gets a Boost with August Opening of Motorsports Museum

An August opening is planned for the Owensboro Area Museum of Science and History’s new SpeedZeum wing, which will highlight motorsports ranging from soap box derbies to NASCAR.

Though the new wing is not completely finished, project officials decided to go ahead and display what exhibits they already have and will continue to add to the wing as funding and new displays come in.

When complete, the $1.5 million SpeedZeum will cover 8,000 square feet and include an interactive pit stop area, trivia games, and racing simulators. The master plan also calls for an exhibit featuring NASCAR driver Darrell Waltrip that will include a commentary on pre-race strategy. Other NASCAR drivers will be included as well, along with motorcycle, hydroplane and drag racers.

The new museum is expected to eventually draw as many as 35,000 paying visitors each year.

LOUISVILLE
Louisville Center to House New Biomedical Research Companies

If the events of recent months are any indication, Louisville may become a hub for biomedical research. The Louisville Medical Center Development Corporation is in the process of developing a new center in downtown Louisville to nurture young biomedical companies. The organization’s goal is to eventually develop a life sciences research and business park around the center that will be home to both new and mature medical-related companies.

The new center is scheduled to open in November. However, the development corporation found that a number of area start-ups were in need of space much sooner than that. In an effort to meet that need, the corporation has leased 23,000-square-feet of space in downtown Louisville, spending some $400,000 to renovate it and equip it with wet labs and other research equipment.

‘’The fact that we already have six companies enrolled in the incubator even though the new building is not yet complete demonstrates the quality of research and technology that is being developed in this community,’’ Louisville Mayor Dave Armstrong, who also serves as chairman of the development corporation, said.

The companies already signed on include:

  • Aptamera, which is developing cancer drugs and testing an early-detection device for cancer
  • ApoImmune, which is researching methods of using the human immune system to counter cancer and other illnesses
  • CorNovus, which is working on ways to treat heart disease in a minimally-invasive way
  • Nexgenics Bioscience, which is researching ways in which to use automated cell micro-culturing systems for in-vitro fertilization
  • PathoGenomics Laboratories, which is working on methods of detecting and identifying infectious agents like anthrax
  • Sheltowee Pharmaceuticals, which is involved in the research and development of drugs that primarily use products from nature.

HENDERSON
Sights Denim Plant to Close as a Result of Clients' Move to Mexico

Sights Denim Systems Inc. is shutting down its finishing operation facility in Henderson and will move production to its plant in Mexico, which is being expanded. The closing will eliminate approximately 245 production jobs.

The Henderson plant, which began operations in the mid-‘80s, had processed clothing, primarily jeans, to impart a softer, well-worn feel.

Sight’s officials say that the restructuring is a result of decisions being made by many of its clients – which include Levi Strauss and Calvin Klein among others – to close their U.S. manufacturing facilities and move to Mexico.

Sights will retain approximately 150 employees at its Henderson office on South Main Street who will focus on “expanded product development…and specialty finishing.”

Business Briefs

ASHLAND

  • Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital has purchased the River Valley Health System in nearby Ironton, Ohio for $5 million. OLBH plans to turn the former hospital, which closed in 2001, into an urgent treatment center with expanded diagnostics such as x-ray and lab services. The new center is expected to open within the next five months, employing 25 people.

BOWLING GREEN

  • The Inter-Modal Transportation Authority has selected the Lexington consulting firm of Mayes, Sudderth & Etheredge, Inc. to handle the design, engineering and construction management of the initial phase of the Kentucky TriModal Transpark, which is being developed to include both air and rail facilities.
  • Western Kentucky University’s “Investing in the Spirit” campaign, a five-year program designed to strengthen the university’s “people, places and programs,” is showing signs of achieving that goal. As of March 30, WKU had received $10.3 million in gifts, a record number that represents a 34 percent increase over the amount raised for the same period in the previous year. According to WKU President Gary Ransdell, the largest portion of the funds – much of which have been accumulated in the form of donations under $1,000 – is being used for scholarships and endowments for faculty.

CHRISTIAN COUNTY

  • Plans are moving forward for the construction of a new convention center in Christian County, in spite of a $2 million shortfall in funding. Convention center officials say that based on the current bid in hand, to delay construction would ultimately cost more than to proceed. Though money from the General Assembly is not likely, as was originally hoped for, the Hopkinsville–Christian County Conference Center Corp. plans to pursue other state and federal sources. In the meantime, the design of the center will allow for the facility to be built with optional features that can be added at a later point. The new center is expected to be complete by next June.
  • Philip Mullins Warehouses is planning to build a 320,000-square-foot complex on 20 acres in the Commerce Park industrial park near Pembroke. The project is expected to be completed by August.

COALTON

  • Phase three of the Northeastern Kentucky Industrial Parkway, from Culp Creek to Ky. 207, is more than 75 percent complete and is expected to open in August, according to the state transportation cabinet. The new roadway, which is planned to be completely finished by late fall 2003, will pass through the 2,000-acre EastPark industrial site and will open up thousands of acres for potential economic development.

CORBIN

  • Kentucky legislators have approved a $422,000 grant that will allow for the extension of water and sewer lines to Eastern Kentucky University’s new Corbin campus. The grant clears the way for construction to begin on the EKU project, which will be located just west of the new Southeast Kentucky Regional Industrial Park.

CORBIN

  • Construction is set to soon begin on Corbin’s new Center for Technology, Training and Community Affairs, which will house classrooms, state-of-the-art computer rooms, and an information technology room along with a large multi-purpose room. A 6,000-seat auditorium will be added in the final phase of the $10 million project. The center will also feature tele-linking with colleges and universities in addition to offering a local site for specialized training, which is now having to take place in locations as far away as Lexington.

ELIZABETHTOWN

  • After losing 80 jobs earlier this year due to company restructuring, VAC Magnetics is now gaining 20 new positions. The news comes as the result of a decision by VAC’s parent company, Morgan Crucible, to close its Oklahoma City facility and move its administrative staff to E-town. Accordingly, all of VAC’s key administrators will now be located in Elizabethtown. Company officials say the new positions will be manufacturing jobs and will likely be filled by employees who had to be released earlier in the year.
  • Fort Knox National Company has been ranked as the sixth fastest-growing company on the National Automated Clearing House Association’s Top 50 list, which ranks institutions based on their volume of debit and credit activity for the year. Last year, FKNC, which was the third largest non-bank processor to make the list, processed 11.4 million payments worth over $10 billion for its 750 clients.

FLORENCE

  • ADVO, Inc., one of the nation’s largest targeted direct mail marketing services companies, is building a new 137,000-square-foot facility at the Union Business Center in Florence. The new facility will be nearly 40 percent larger than ADVO’s existing plant in Florence (located in the Northern Kentucky Industrial Park) and will also provide up to 38,000 square feet for future expansion.

FRANKLIN

  • Franklin’s two Tyco plants are not expected to be affected by the company’s recent announcement that it would shut down 24 factories, eliminating more than 7,000 jobs. The cuts are being seen mainly in the company’s electronics and telecommunications divisions. Though one of Franklin’s plants handles electronics, the 300-employee facility primarily deals with automotive electronics, a sector that has remained strong. Tyco Adhesives, with a roster of over 900, is the largest tape producer in the industry and remains robust as well, according to company officials.

HOPKINSVILLE

  • HopFed Bancorp, Inc., the holding company for Hopkinsville Federal Bank, has changed its name to Heritage Bank in order to better reflect its planned growth as a regional bank. The holding company currently has bank locations in Hopkinsville, Murray, Cadiz, Elkton and Benton and a pending acquisition of locations in Fulton, Kentucky and South Fulton, Tennessee.

JESSAMINE COUNTY

  • Over objections from area residents, the Jessamine County-City of Wilmore Joint Planning Commission has voted in favor of recommending a zone change that would allow a new retail/office development on the north end of the county near the Fayette County line. If approved by the Jessamine Fiscal Court, Bellerive Development Co.’s proposed development would include 534,000 square feet of retail space and 260,000 square feet of office space and could eventually bring up to 1,700 jobs.

LEXINGTON

  • American Airlines has dropped its flight service between Lexington and St. Louis, citing a lack of profit on the route. No other air carriers offer a direct flight between the two cities.
  • Lexington’s Urban County Planning Commission has granted approval for a 500,000-square-foot office park to be built on 45 acres near I-75, between the Hamburg Pavilion retail center and Winchester Road. When completed the park will be surrounded by homes and a golf course.
  • Low-fare carrier American Trans Air, Inc. (ATA) has announced plans to offer daily, nonstop service between Lexington and Chicago’s Midway Airport. The new service will begin August 28 with four daily flights. Introductory fares will priced beginning at $69 each way.

LEWIS COUNTY

  • The Lewis County Industrial Authority is developing a marketing plan to attract business to its available facilities, beginning with a direct mail campaign to some 400 businesses in the southern Ohio area. Among the available facilities in the county are a spec building in the Black Oak Industrial Park and the former Nine West shoe factory.

LONDON

  • Ott’s Grocery Store in London is one of five small businesses highlighted in the June issue of Fortune Small Business magazine. The family-owned business is featured in the magazine’s article entitled “The Century Club,” which looks at family businesses that have lasted more than 100 years.

LOUISVILLE

  • The Louisville audit and tax practices of Arthur Andersen LLP have been acquired by Ernst and Young LLP. The transaction involved three partners as well as approximately 45 Anderson employees. The combined offices now carry the Ernst & Young name and employ a staff of 126. Both Ernst & Young and Andersen provide audit, tax and advisory business services to a broad range of clients, from privately held businesses to large, multinational companies, in industries such as manufacturing, health care and financial services.
  • A new high-end washing machine developed at GE’s Appliance Park in Louisville is now on the market. The new GE Profile washer, which offers features such a reduced wear on clothes, a variable-speed motor and electronic controls, will also be made at Appliance Park. The company has invested approximately $15 million in the development of the new washer, which retails for around $600.
  • Louisville Ladder is shutting down its Louisville manufacturing facility and will move the plant’s ladder-making operations to its factory in Monterey, Mexico, which is a much larger facility. The closing will mean the loss of approximately 120 hourly jobs and some 20 salaried positions. The company’s headquarters and distribution center will remain in Louisville. In addition to its Louisville and Monterey locations, Louisville Ladder also has a manufacturing plant in Smyrna, Tennessee.
  • Goldberg & Simpson, P.S.C. and Yussman and Associates, PLLC have merged with plans to expand the two firms’ real estate practices. The merged entity will use the Goldberg & Simpson name, with Marc Yussman as a member of the firm.
  • After a 200 percent growth rate in 2001, Xodiax Internet Data Centers has more than tripled the capacity of its Internet connections, adding two national fiber optic backbone carriers – Qwest and AT&T – to accommodate its customers’ growth and network capacity demands. The expansion includes dual all-optical OC-3 (155 Mbps each) connections, the equivalent to more than 200 individual T-1 business lines. Xodiax acts as an Internet utility company by providing “bandwidth on demand” for its colocation, Web hosting, disaster recovery and Internet access clients.
  • As part of a plan to grow its simulcast operations both in the U.S. and globally, Churchill Downs has formed a separate business unit that will be known as Churchill Downs Simulcast Network (CDSN). Robert Decker, executive vice president and chief financial officer for Churchill Downs, will take on the additional role as president of the new unit. Karl Schmitt Jr. will serve as chief operating officer.
  • Computer technology company Vobix Corp. has ceased operations after selling its last software-hosting contracts to New Hampshire-based ManagedOps.com Inc. for an undisclosed price. The two-year-old company was a subsidiary of Virginia-based ManTech International Corp., which decided to eliminate some of its divisions and subsidiaries as part of a strategy to focus more on its IT services to the federal government. At its peak, Vobix had more than 80 employees. ManagedOps is not retaining any Vobix staff.
  • Pizza giant Papa John’s is test-marketing several new products, including a new deep-dish pizza that has proven to be a winner among focus groups. The pan pizza is currently being offered in Wichita, Kansas, which – perhaps not coincidentally – is the home of Pizza Hut founder Frank Carney, now a major Papa John’s franchiser. Papa John’s has also been offering two new vegetarian pizzas on its traditional crust and is in the process of testing two kinds of chicken wings.
  • Louisville’s transit authority will soon be one of the few in the nation to utilize hybrid-electric buses on its streets. The Transit Authority of River City (TARC) plans to buy nine of the vehicles, which are powered by a combination of a diesel turbine and an electric motor. The next-generation buses, which are priced at approximately $270,000 each, can travel more than twice as far on a gallon of fuel than traditional vehicles and produce far less smog-producing emissions. The purchase is being funded by a $3.7 million grant along with $750,000 in TARC money. TARC hopes to have the buses operating by next spring.
  • Confluent Technologies, Inc., a Louisville-based provider of knowledge management and business intelligence services, has received $2 million in its first round of institutional funding. Chrysalis Ventures, Kentucky’s largest venture capital firm, led the investment. Confluent Technologies provides services that aggregate, manipulate and visualize data from multiple sources, across all platforms. Current Confluent customers include National Processing Corporation, Bell Technologies, Job News USA, QCI, and Texas Roadhouse Restaurants as well as a number of school districts around the country.
  • Musselman Hotels LLC has begun construction on a new Hilton Garden Inn and Conference Center on the grounds of the Kentucky Fair and Exposition Center. The hotel will feature 15,000 square feet of meeting space and will offer catering and food service.
  • Commonwealth Printing Company has purchased three new Heidelberg printing presses, making the company one of the first area printers to offer large-format, direct-to-press technology. Direct imaging eliminates intermediate steps such as camerawork, film development and assembly and provides the means of handling rush jobs with tight deadlines.
  • New red, white and blue U.S. Bank signs are beginning to replace the green Firstar Bank signs at branches and ATMs throughout Kentucky as the result of the finalized merger of Firstar Corporation and US Bancorp. The transformation of all Firstar Bank locations to the new U.S. Bank name will be completed by the end of summer 2002.
  • Raytheon’s Louisville facility has been awarded a $47.8 million contract from the U.S. Navy to upgrade and convert its Phalanx gun systems. The project is expected to be completed by June 2004.
  • The Oakroom at Louisville’s Seelbach Hilton Hotel has been named as one of the nation’s top 50 hotel restaurants by Food & Wine magazine. The imaginative use of local ingredients such as pawpaw, sorghum and bourbon by Chef Jim Gerhardt – a nominee for the 2002 James Beard Foundation Awards – was instrumental in placing The Oakroom on the prestigious list.

MARION

  • Production at Safetran’s new Marion facility is up and running, with 30 employees handling the assembly of relays for the transit and railroad industry. All 30 employees were formerly employed by Tyco, which closed its Marion electro-mechanical manufacturing facility in 2000.

MUHLENBERG COUNTY

  • Kentucky Congressmen Ron Lewis, Ernie Fletcher and Ed Whitfield have requested the support of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regarding a proposed power plant in Muhlenberg County. In a letter to Christine Todd-Whitman, head of the EPA, the congressmen expressed concern about the way in which the EPA has thus far handled Peabody Energy’s proposed Thoroughbred plant. The EPA and other environmental groups have said the proposed plant will produce harmful emissions. Peabody maintains that their pollution controls will make the 1,500 megawatt power plant one of the cleanest in the region. Whitfield and Fletcher are on the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, one of several congressional committees overseeing the EPA.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY

  • Two years into a campaign to raise funds for scholarships and endowments, Northern Kentucky University already has more than half of its $40 million goal, in spite of a sluggish economy. In addition to endowments for scholarships, professorships and chairs, funds are also earmarked for items such as $1 million in software for the new university planetarium and a proposed regional events center.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY

  • Lawsuits against the Erpenbeck Co., a Northern Kentucky homebuilding company, have officially begun with Provident Bank’s lawsuit seeking more than $2.5 million in unpaid construction loans. Kenton County officials say that hundreds of liens have been filed against Erpenbeck-built properties in recent months and Bill Erpenbeck is being investigated by the FBI on charges that he took checks written to banks and deposited them in Erpenbeck accounts.

OWENSBORO

  • The Diamond Lake Resort has been sold for $950,000 through an eBay internet auction. The new owners, Charles and Allen Andrichyn, of Pennsylvania, bought the 158-acre resort from Craig Schwab, a California accountant who had also purchased it on eBay (for $1.2 million). The new owners plan to bring the 1960s-era resort back to its original condition and reopen the restaurant and 835-seat theater. The resort includes a 270-site campground (which is already open), 10 motel rooms, 10 apartments, go-cart tracks, a fishing lake and a swim park with beach volleyball.

RICHMOND

  • Eastern Kentucky University has received a $100,000 grant from AT&T to develop an online program that will allow Kentucky teachers to become certified in technology. Teachers will be able to attain certification at three levels of technology through the new program, which will allow them to move through the classes at an individual pace.

SHELBY COUNTY

  • Shelby County Trust Bank has completed its merger with Commonwealth Bank & Trust Company of Jefferson County. The newly-merged entity has approximately $500 million in assets and some $700 million in trust assets.
  • In order to accommodate future expansion, Kentucky-Indiana Lumber has moved from its Louisville facility and is combining its truss and panel manufacturing facility with a retail lumber and home-building supply outlet at the company’s Shelbyville location.

SPARTA

  • The Kroger Co. and the Nabisco Biscuit division of Kraft Foods have signed on as sponsors of the Kentucky Speedway’s June 15 NASCAR Busch Series. The Speedway’s 2001 inaugural race attracted a standing-room-only crowd of 70,338, a figure that track officials expect to duplicate this year.

UNION COUNTY

  • Jim David Meats is planning to build a 17,000-square-foot ham processing facility on a five-acre parcel near its existing location near KY 160. The company expects the new addition to result in the hiring of 20-30 workers, boosting the total workforce to 40. Company officials also emphasized that they plan to purchase all of their ham products from Kentucky farms.

WARREN COUNTY

  • Recently released Census figures show a 475 percent increase in Warren County’s Hispanic population between 1990 and 2000. The official number of Hispanics in the county was 2,466 in 2000, up from 429 in 1990. However, state data experts estimate that the actual number of Hispanic immigrants may be two to three times greater than the official figures.

WOODFORD COUNTY

  • Woodford County resident Gretchen Nalley has parlayed her experience as a new mother into a book that is being billed as the “world’s first directory of baby-related Web sites.” The Baby Web includes the Web addresses and customer service numbers of nearly 1,000 companies that offer baby-related items and information. The book is being sold at Amazon.com as well as traditional outlets such as Hawley-Cooke Booksellers in Louisville and Joseph-Beth Booksellers in Lexington.

STATE

  • Kentucky Congressman Ernie Fletcher has been named to the Speaker’s Prescription Drug Action Team in Washington. Fletcher, a physician, will be working with the various House committees to develop a Medicare plan to provide prescription drug coverage for seniors.
  • Cingular Wireless plans to invest some $110 million in Kentucky to expand its existing service. The company plans to add 42 cell sites and overlay its entire network with next-generation technology, enabling Cingular to offer high-speed data services such as audio-visual transmissions and faster Internet connections.
  • The Kentucky Agricultural and Commercial Trade Office in Guadalajara, Mexico has been selected as the recipient of the 2002 World Trade Success Award for international trade service providers. The office is a joint venture between the Cabinet for Economic Development and the Department of Agriculture and was established five years ago to help Kentucky’s business community pursue opportunities for increased sales in the Mexican market. Since then, the trade office has worked with more than 300 small- to medium-size Kentucky companies in their international marketing efforts with Mexico. In 2001, Kentucky companies exported more than $430 million in products to Mexico, which now ranks as the state’s #4 trade partner.
  • CSX Transportation Inc. has announced that it is planning to spend more than $80 million this year to maintain and upgrade its rail networks in Kentucky and Indiana. CSX owns more than 1,800 miles of tracks in Kentucky and has key facilities in Louisville, Corbin and Lexington.
  • The Kentucky Society of Professional Engineers has selected Randal S. Wil-liamson as this year’s recipient of its Young Engineer of the Year Award. Williamson is a graduate of UK’s College of Mechanical Engineering and is a lead mechanical engineer in the consumer products division of Lexmark International.
  • Three Kentucky universities have been selected to receive $13.5 million in federal and state funds to support interdisciplinary research and biochemical and environmental sciences. Under this project, the University of Kentucky will receive $7.2 million, the University of Louisville will receive $4.8, and Murray State University has been granted $1.5 million.


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