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FAST LANE - July 2001


STATE
Cities Looking at Growing Taxes on Growing Businesses

Among the proposals in the city of Henderson’s 2001-2002 budget is a 15-percent rise in the cost of a business license. According to The Gleaner, the cost of the licenses hasn’t been changed in more than a dozen years. The measure is being taken in part to make up for shortfalls caused by last year’s abolition of the wheel tax.

A hike in business fees is also being considered in Prospect, where the price would quadruple. In addition, the city wants to impose a $25 fee on any company that does business in the city – even if it doesn’t have a building or office there.

And in Wilder, the fastest-growing municipality in Northern Kentucky, the recent downsizing of NS Group’s Newport Steel is the latest motivation behind city officials’ exploration of new business-related tax bases that extend beyond payroll taxes, which currently make up 54 percent of the city’s budget. Among measures being considered is a gross receipts tax.

SOMERSET
PRIDE Hands Out Awards to Schools and Businesses

U.S. Congressman Hal Rogers, Kentucky Natural Resources Environmental Protection Secretary James Bickford, and EPA Administrator Christine Todd Whitman were all present at this year’s Envi awards, sponsored by PRIDE – Personal Responsibility in a Desirable Environment – now a four-year-old cleanup program serving 40 counties in southern and eastern Kentucky. Besides the awards given to various schools for their awareness and activity programs, Carolyn Ingram, the solid waste coordinator for Menifee County, was named Volunteer of the Year, and the Winchester-based East Kentucky Power Cooperative received the Rogers-Bickford Environmental Leadership Award for its work in establishing PRIDE and its own environmental protection and education programs.

“Without the help of EKPC, we would not have been able to establish PRIDE as a leader in environmental issues,” said Rogers. “Plus, East Kentucky Power works hard to be an environmentally friendly utility.”

LOUISVILLE
Norton Keeps High Profile with Appointment, Ad Honors

Norton Healthcare’s president and CEO Stephen A. Williams, a native of Livingston County in western Kentucky, was named chairman of the Region 3 policy board for the American Hospital Association and is slated to serve a three-year term. In that position he will represent members from seven states on the group’s board of trustees.

Norton and advertising partner Creative Alliance raked in honors for their marketing efforts, garnering two gold awards and one silver award from the Healthcare Marketing Report for their magazine ad branding campaign, radio advertising and imprinted materials.







PIPPA PASSES
Cased Decided by Supreme Court Blow to Nursing

In a 5-4 ruling delivered on May 29, the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Kentucky River Community Care and against the National Labor Relations Board in declaring that registered nurses in nursing homes are supervisors. According to the National Labor Relations Act, that precludes RNs from participating in collective bargaining.

Federation of Nursing and Health Professionals president Sandra Feldman issued a statement saying the court “profoundly misunderstands” the working environment that nurses and others face. The case arose from union organizing efforts at the company’s residential psychiatric hospital in Pippa Passes. The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati declared the RNs supervisors in 1999. The Supreme Court’s upholding of that decision means nurses with even a small measure of “supervisory discretion” or “independent judgment” outside of their direct professional obligation to patients may be ineligible to join nurses’ unions.

In a survey of 700 RNs commissioned by the FNHP in March, 84 percent of respondents believe there is a shortage of nurses, with 45 percent calling that shortage “severe” in their area. At the same time, because of unsatisfactory working conditions among other factors, the study concludes that 21 percent of current nurses are at significant risk of leaving the profession within the next five years. A parallel survey of 207 former nurses revealed that nearly two-thirds currently work in some other profession, with 52 percent in professional or managerial positions.

HAZARD
Plastics Firm DJ/NYPRO Locates Contract Manufacturing Operation

DJ Inc./NYPRO Joint Ventures has opened a plastic injection molding plant that will eventually employ 75 people. DJ had already located a 77-employee facility in Hazard in 1997, as well as operating a plant in Louisville that employs 400. The firm merged with Nypro in 1997. The initial Hazard operation has enjoyed 42 percent growth in sales and 21 percent growth in employment over the past three years, and continues to maintain a steady pace in the market despite recently cutting its work week from seven to five days a week.

“Once again, DJ/NYPRO has decided to locate one of its production operations in our Commonwealth, because they know from experience that Kentuckians are an exceptional workforce,” said Gov. Paul Patton at the grand opening ceremony. “This is also an excellent example of the diverse types of business and industry that Eastern Kentucky and the rest of our state must continue to attract if we are to remain competitive in the global economy.”

PADUCAH
Financial Data Processing Firm Reaches Record Income Level

Computer Services Inc. (CSI) reported record revenues and net income for its fourth quarter and for the fiscal year ended in late February. The company’s fourth quarter revenues rose 29.5 percent to $19 million, and fiscal year consolidated revenues were up 20.7 percent to $64 million. Company president and CEO Stephen A. Powless credited strong sales of EFT and check imaging services, and the contribution of newly acquired CSI West, formerly First Commerce Technologies. “We plan to add check imaging capabilities in Louisiana and Kansas City in the coming year and to expand our Kansas City service center to support the growth in new business in the Missouri and Kansas markets,” he said.

STATE
As Other Plants Close, Donnelley’s Kentucky Facilities Going Strong

R.R. Donnelley & Sons recently received state funds of $65,833 for upgrading the skills of 46 trainees, as well as final approval for adding 99,000-s.f. to its 550,000-s.f. facility, a move that will add around 100 employees and cost $10.5 million. The global commercial printing concern, with plants in Glasgow and Danville, has cut 250 more jobs overall, bringing the total to 1,700 so far this year. Three plants – in Houston, St. Petersburg and South Daytona – have already shut down. A fourth, in Des Moines, will close in 2002. The company, which says the job cuts will save it around $10 million, reported 2000 revenue of $5.76 billion, but projects a weak profit margin for the upcoming year.

STATE
KCTCS Ready to Work Program Receives Quality of Life Award

The Kentucky Cabinet for Families and Children gave Quality of Life Awards to four organizations that Secretary Viola Miller called key partners in its efforts to fully identify and serve families’ needs. The Cabinet’s first Secretary’s Quality of Life Awards went to the Children’s Review Program, the Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS), Maryhurst and the University of Kentucky Institute on Women and Substance Abuse.

The Children’s Review Program was honored for multiple services to the Cabinet, KCTCS for its Ready to Work program, Louisville adolescent treatment facility Maryhurst for a quality care initiative and the UK Institute for its statewide targeted assessment project.

Funded by $2 million from CFC and $150,000 from KCTCS, Ready to Work helps welfare recipients at community and technical colleges master the skills needed to succeed in school and on the job. Now in its third year, the program serves students at 26 of the 28 KCTCS colleges. From fall 1999 to fall 2000, those schools increased their enrollment of welfare recipients by 37 percent. Ready to Work recently won a Model Program Award from the American Association of Women in Community Colleges.

“We know that we cannot do this work by ourselves,” Miller said.

STATE
Bluegrass State Skills Corporation Issues New Round of Training Funds

Among the latest worker training grants from the Bluegrass State Skills Corporation were $104,658.75 for training 172 people at Cintas Corporation in Grayson, $100,000 to upgrade skills of five employees at Logan Aluminum, more than $73,000 for skills upgrade and train-the-trainer travel at Autoliv North America in Madisonville; more than $50,000 for 216 trainees at Clopay Plastic Products in Augusta and more than $44,000 to train 77 people at Illuminations.com in Shepherdsville. Five companies in Henderson – Alcan Ingot, Atlantis Plastics Injection Molding, Gamco Products, Scott Foam Technologies and Scott Lumber – received training funds totaling more than $81,000.

A full 25 of the over 1,000 companies to expand in the state in 2000 were located in and around Henderson, including Pittsburg Tank & Tower Co., Tyson Foods and a significant number of firms in the plastics field.

ASHLAND
AK Steel Enduring Tough Market, as Well as Tough State Inspectors

The Kentucky Labor Cabinet has continued its safety inspection of AK Steel’s coke plant despite the company’s lawsuit claiming that the issues the Cabinet is exploring have already been addressed. The investigation focuses on the byproducts and exhauster areas of the facility, where employee complaints have mentioned shoddy repairs, leaks and lack of proper fire alarms and protection. A similar inspection five years ago found several serious violations, many of which were characterized by the Cabinet as “willful-serious,” but the eventual fines were reduced from $316,000 to $62,250.

In March, AK Steel reached an agreement extending through October 2004 with the Paper, Allied Industrial, Chemical and Energy Workers International Union Local 5-0523, representing around 300 plant workers. Elsewhere however – notably in the company’s hometown of Middletown, Ohio – AK Steel has run into accusations of blackmail, as it has threatened to shut down the Middletown operation entirely if environmental lawsuits against the company are not resolved in its favor. In April, the company posted its first quarterly net loss in seven years, a distinct turnaround from first-quarter net income of $26.5 million one year ago.

STATE
Surrounding States Still Looking to Add More Revenue from Gambling

In a move that rivals neighboring states’ forays into gambling, West Virginia’s legislature and governor have signed into law a bill to regulate and tax video poker machines. While they will now be legal for gambling, the machines will not be allowed in convenience or grocery stores.

Meanwhile, on the Commonwealth’s western front, Indiana lawmakers and lobbyists reapplied the pressure this spring to pass legislation that, like laws in neighboring Illinois, will allow gaming boats to conduct gambling activity while dockside as well as while “cruising” unmoored in the Ohio River. Such a move would increase the flow of tax money from the state’s nine casinos, which would help Indiana meet an expected revenue shortage of $934 million by 2003.

One of those casinos, the Argosy boat just south of Cincinnati in Lawrenceburg, has helped its parent company become a stock market darling of late. The company reported 25-percent growth in earnings-per-share for 2000, and the Ohio River boat – which Argosy controls since buying out another investor for $105 million in January – has delivered better profits than the company’s other four casinos combined.

While not exclusive to Kentucky, a new media agreement will affect many Kentucky bettors as well. Internet wagering firm Youbet.com and horse racing channel TVG have formed a partnership that gives TVG access to Youbet’s technology and gives Youbet access to 26 new tracks. TVG will receive a share of wagering revenues and will have the right to buy up to 51 percent of Youbet’s stock, valued at just over $41 million.

MARION
Arkansas-based Tyson Foods Not Chicken About Going to Court

B&G Poultry and Tyson Foods Inc. continue to be sued for public nuisance violations, but Crittenden District Judge RenČ Williams has ruled that the daily fine for violations shall be $500 per violation, not the millions of dollars per day that a city amendment the judge found unconstitutional would have required, based on a “per-bird, per day” tally. At issue in the continuing lawsuit is the notion that odor constitutes a public nuisance, and whether its occurrence is a repeating offense or one offense of long duration. B&G operates 16 broiler houses in Henderson County that serve the Tyson facility exclusively.

Springdale, Ark.-based Tyson, the nation’s largest poultry producer, tried to back out of a deal to purchase meatpacking concern IBP. But a Delaware judge has ruled against the company in this instance, ordering Tyson to complete the $3.2-billion acquisition.

Tyson had attempted to back out in March based on what it called lack of disclosure of questionable accounting practices at IBP subsidiary DFG. IBP said it was nothing more than buyer’s remorse. Judge Leo Strine Jr. ruled in favor of IBP June 15. While some say the merger is only the biggest of many to come in the meat processing industry, some federal elected officials are crying foul, and calling for new legislation to more closely monitor such consolidations.

Meanwhile, the lawsuits aren’t over yet. A group of Tyson shareholders has sued Tyson for its attempted pull-out, citing that action’s deleterious effect on IBP stock prices between March and June.

HENDERSON
Aluminum Remelt Operation to Make Ingots in Henderson County

Hydro Aluminum Metal Products North America, a division of Norsk Hydro of Norway, opened its innovative new $33-million remelt plant here in early May. Company leaders said the location was optimum because of both rail and river transport options for the facility’s product, which they characterize as primary-quality aluminum made using 95 percent less power than an ordinary smelting operation. The plant employs 49 people.

Other corporate divisions include Hydro Aluminum Wells, Inc., a Baltimore-based operation that reorganized its six-plant network in April into two regional extrusion groups and a components and assemblies group. Company locations include Kalamazoo, Mich., Belton, S.C., Monett, Mo. and North Liberty, Ind. Many of those will be supplied with ingots from the Henderson site. Hydro Aluminum Extrusion is the world’s second largest extrusion manufacturer.

LOUISVILLE
Owning a Business Means Different Things to Different Official Counters

The following four members of the Louisville Chapter of the National Association of Women Business Owners were nominated for national NAWBO Leadership Awards: Katherine Autin, president of The Jewelry Search; Judy Martin, president of Judy Martin’s Training by Design; Polly Moter, president of ProMoter Inc.; and Sharon Scheer, president of Sharon M. Scheer, CPA.

According to a new release from the U.S. Census Bureau based on 1997 data, there are 5.4 million women-owned businesses in the nation, with annual sales of $819 billion. But the National Foundation of Women Business Owners said last year there were 9.1 million such businesses, so their officials dispute the official U.S. figure. The difference? The Census requires 51-percent ownership by women, while the NFWBO not only counts 50-50 partnerships, but also companies managed by women that have gone public or sold equity to investors.

“The dispute is far from academic,” noted Business Week in May. “The federal government, for example, uses the stricter 51 percent standard when handing out affirmative-action status – one reason, advocacy groups say, that women’s businesses received just 2.5 percent of federal contracts in 1999.”

In Kentucky, 65,965 businesses were owned by women in 1997, 23.4 percent of the 281,551 total firms in the state.

LOUISVILLE
LifeSpring and eRoute Partner on Technology Employee Benefit Plan

Through a payroll deduction system similar to benefits like a 401k or health insurance, Louisville-based eRoute Inc. is offering its “Technology Benefit” product to the more than 275 employees of LifeSpring Mental Health Services at 20 locations throughout southern Indiana. More than 60 percent of employees have already signed up for the service, which provides each participant with a home computer, Internet access, help desk support, online training and a branded company portal for around $22 per month.

“For about $240 per employee, per year, we’re creating a tech-savvy workforce,” says Dr. Terry Stawar, LifeSpring’s CEO. “Our portal is part bulletin board and part online communication center. From this portal our employees can electronically view company news, calendars, HR information and even take online training classes.”

“Computers and Internet access are no longer a luxury. They are required to effectively navigate through life,” adds eRoute CEO Greg Evans. “Dr. Stawar recognized that we’re at the forefront of the knowledge revolution, and that employees and their families deserve every advantage the digital age has to offer.”

Other eRoute clients include Oxmoor Country Club and Centre College in Danville.

Business Briefs

ADAIRVILLE

  • Peoples State Bank of Hodgenville has purchased the Adairville banking office of Union Planters Bank. Union Planters will retain its presence in Franklin and elsewhere, while Peoples will now expand southwest from its previous base in Hodgenville and Elizabethtown.

BOWLING GREEN

  • Louisville’s Kerr Greulich Engineers kicked in $98,000 to support the new bachelor’s degree programs in engineering at Western Kentucky University. The gift will be matched by $27,000 from the state’s Regional University Excellence Trust Fund and enable establishment of joint engineering courses of study pursuant to a previously agreed-upon plan laid out by the Council on Postsecondary Education, WKU, UK and U of L. “There is a critical void in Kentucky for engineering schools,” says WKU vice president for development ant alumni relations Tom Hiles. “This void, especially in Western Kentucky, has made a difference in recruiting industries to the area. It is important to have training for engineers available at different geographic areas in the state.”

CARROLLTON

  • The new BPB Celotex gypsum board plant here will see increased orders soon as a result of the parent company’s decision to close down its 94-year-old, 96-employee mine and board manufacturing operation in Port Clinton, Ohio. “We have progressed with our plans to introduce new products, infuse new technology and efficiencies into our manufacturing facilities, and are making improvements in the supply chain, all in an effort to become a preferred supplier,” said BPB Celotex president and CEO Brent R. Thomson. “We regret that the mine and plant closure carries a personal cost for the individuals affected and we will do our best to assist with their transition.”

COVINGTON

  • Ashland Inc. purchased the assets of Alternative Engineering Resources, Inc., a Chandler, Ariz.-based process-maintenance and tool-refurbishment firm that will operate within the Electronic Chemicals Division of Ashland’s Specialty Chemical Company. “Bringing AER into ECD’s Fab Services group enhances our position and growth strategy as a leading global supplier of materials, services and technologies for the microelectronics industry,” said ECD vice president and GM Charles W. Cook Jr.

CYNTHIANA

  • The Harrison County Industrial Training Consortium recently received from the Bluegrass State Skills Corporation more than $74,000 in worker training funds for skills upgrade training of 494 workers at Central Kentucky Technical College. Safety equipment company Bullard Company received more than $28,000 for similar training of 110 employees.

HENDERSON

  • Boynton Merrill and development companies owned by Brentwood, Tenn., developer George B. Tomlin Jr. have filed suit against the city alleging that lack of proper and timely zoning approval by the area planning commission has kept the parties from realizing their expected profit (as well as interest) on a $2.8-million sale of 35 acres for a proposed Wal-Mart Supercenter. The City of Henderson has asked that the suit be dismissed.

JOHNSON COUNTY

  • The non-profit Christian Appalachian Project, which operates service programs in a 13-state area, will move its headquarters from Lancaster in Garrard County to Hager Hill, a site just outside the Floyd County line along Route 321. The organization had wanted to relocate to a site more central to its service area.

LEXINGTON

  • Gray, Inc. acquired I.C.E. Builders, Inc. of Anaheim, Calif., and will operate it as a sister company to Lexington-based design-build firm James N. Gray Company, which also operates an office in Virginia. “Joining I.C.E and Gray makes sense,” says Gray president Howard Gray. “We both share the same values and philosophies and even some of the same customers.” The combined companies employ 475.
  • Blue Grass Airport announced the addition of new non-stop flights by US Airways Express to its international hub in Philadelphia. In August, Continental Express will replace its 19-seat aircraft with new 37-seat regional jets for flights to Cleveland. Since November, the airport has increased its number of daily flights from 76 to 92.
  • Paul Mostert of The Mostert Group has received a $427,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to study and measure equine motion using digital video analysis. The founder of EQUIX Biomechanics, who left the firm in 1997, has found success in promoting his mathematically-based analysis tools among buyers at 2-year-old auctions.
  • Law enforcement and firefighting equipment and uniform distributor Galls has entered into a joint venture with Firehouse.com, a fire- and emergency-service website.
  • DLC Management Corp. of Tarrytown, N.Y., purchased the Fayette Place shopping center, located just south of Fayette Mall on the city’s busy Nicholasville Road. It is the company’s first Kentucky property.
  • Software Information Systems (SIS) opened its TotalStorage Solution Center in Cincinnati, part of an IBM network of 70 Storage Area Networks (SANs) nationwide. An SAN is a dedicated network which allows centralized access to data stored on a range of devices. “Our customers’ needs for massive amounts of storage at a reasonable cost per megabit makes implementing new storage technology a requirement,” says SIS president and CEO Steve Sigg.
  • After months of extensions and efforts to work out a solution that would keep the team in town, the Kentucky Thoroughblades AHL hockey team is no more. Owners Ron DeGregorio, Walter Bush and Jack Norqual sold their majority interest in the team to parent club the San Jose Sharks. San Jose immediately moved the division-winning team to Cleveland, where they will be renamed and play in the city’s Gund Arena.

LONDON

  • A tornado struck this Laurel County city on June 2, destroying 18 homes and 21 businesses, and damaging dozens of others. As residents clambered over debris and began the cleanup, initial estimates of the cost were between $2 million and $3 million.

LOUISVILLE

  • In a marriage of the old and new economies of Louisville, American Commercial Barge Lines has selected Corvus to design a comprehensive e-commerce and web portal strategy for the marine transportation company.
  • The 2000 Annual Report from Greater Louisville Inc. revealed that although the organization’s goal of attracting 6,000 new jobs was not quite met, attraction and expansion efforts overall outpaced expectations. For the year, the community netted 5,263 jobs with an average salary of $37,707, and 69 new business locations totaling $306,842,000 in investment.
  • Atlanta-based United Parcel Service has put the creative share of its $100-million advertising account into the hands of The Martin Agency in Richmond, Va., awarding the firm its creative portion while leaving former creative partner Lowe Lintas & Partners (part of the Interpublic Group of Companies) with the more lucrative media portion of its account. In more local news, the company has decided to terminate its Caribbean charter airline service by year’s end, citing older planes and lack of demand.
  • Norton Hospital’s Leatherman Spine Center welcomed back 38 spine surgeons from as far away as Greece, India, Japan and Denmark to take part in a reunion of Fellows from its Leatherman’s Fellowship Program. Each year, participants in the program assist spine surgeons, prepare publications and perform other work in pursuit of advanced skills in all phases of spine surgery.
  • Lightyear Communications will leave its offices in Hurstbourne Green and move most of its employees to a building at the Triton Business Park in the Eastpoint Business Center near Anchorage when the facility is complete later this year. The move will bring most of the company’s 500-plus Louisville employees closer together, after moving into its new Eastpoint headquarters in 1999. That’s not the only move involving a Fenley Real Estate project. Greater Louisville Inc. will move next year from The Commerce Center on Main Street downtown to a six-story site next door, which will be connected in turn to the next-door neighbor Doe Anderson building.
  • Emazing, the e-mail newsletter provider based in downtown Louisville, will acquire the San Francisco-based TipWorld, owned by Topica Inc., adding around a dozen newsletters to its current list of 140 and about one million subscribers to its current base of 12 million. Emazing founder Joe Pierce launched TipWorld several years and several transactions ago.

MAYFIELD

  • Exchange Bancshares, the parent firm of Exchange Bank of Mayfield, has purchased six Union Planters banking offices in western Kentucky and will operate them as First Kentucky banks.

MOUNT STERLING

  • Clear Channel Communications subsidiary Citicasters Co. received FCC approval to purchase oldies station WMKJ-105.5 FM from Louisvillian Rodney Burbridge for $2.5 million.

OLDHAM COUNTY

  • The plans of Houston-based Dynegy to build a gas-fired power plant here have run into the obstacle of a lawsuit brought by citizens with Community Against Power Plants that claims the state should stop financing such projects with revenue bonds. The company plans to pay Oldham $13 million over 20 years, while receiving $200 million in bonds issued by the county. Dynegy has a similar project in Lawrence County, for which it’s paying $3.6 million. The lawsuit names the company, Kentucky Revenue Secretary Mike Haydon and Oldham County Fiscal Court as defendants.

OWINGSVILLE

  • The Salt Lick Deposit Bank, chartered in 1901, celebrated its 100th birthday by allowing itself to be acquired by Lexington-based Central Bancshares Inc. “We see this affiliation with Central as an excellent way to offer a wider range of convenience and financial services while keeping our focus on our local community,” said Salt Lick Deposit Bank president John D. Hughes.

PADUCAH

  • According to the Paducah Sun, the city is now home to eight regional carriers and eight more that combine regional and longer-haul routes, among them Yellow Freight, Con-Way Central and R&L Transfer. They’re part of a national boom in trucking, an industry which increased its revenues by eight percent between 1998 and 1999 to $187 billion, according to a March report from the U.S. Census Bureau. Warehousing and storage grew by four percent to a $12.6-billion industry. In that year’s time, for-hire trucking miles increased by seven percent to 85 billion miles. General freight accounted for the bulk of the business, but the area of largest growth (14 percent) was in shipments of electronics, motorized vehicles and precision instruments, which grew to a $9-billion segment.

PIKEVILLE

  • In another display of the state’s new wave of tourism initiatives, the Hatfield-McCoy Reunion Festival drew thousands in early June. Money is being raised to establish feud site markers around Pike County, and some officials have raised the specter of a theme park devoted to the prototypical feud, sited along the planned I-66 route.

SHELBYVILLE

  • According to the Sentinel-News of Shelbyville, Shelby Motor Company, under the ownership of Ray and Claudia Stivers since 1965, will be sold to Donnie Ethington of Ethington Oldsmobile, pending approval of the transaction by General Motors.

VERSAILLES

  • The Woodford County Planning Commission approved rezoning of 47 acres on the city’s western border for a mixed-use development that would feature 161 lots for houses and townhouses.

WINCHESTER

  • The 134 former employees of the Winchester Clothing Company will receive Trade Adjustment Assistance and NAFTA-TAA, allowing them access to extensive training as well as 52 weeks of unemployment insurance, thanks to a push from 6th District Congressman Ernie Fletcher. “I am pleased that the Department of Labor recognized the severe economic impact that the closing of the Winchester Clothing Plant had on Clark County,” said Rep. Fletcher. The program – an amended part of the Trade Act of 1974 – allows for aid to workers whose hours and wages are cut or eliminated as a result of increased imports.

STATE

  • State tourism officials announced an economic impact of $8.8 billion by the tourism industry in 2000, with direct spending increased by $624 million, up 7.6 percent from 1999. That included more than a billion dollars spent in the Bluegrass region – the first time that milestone has been reached – and $619 million in Fayette County.
  • From a high point of 1,250 stores in 1999, Richmond, Va.-based furniture retailer Heilig-Meyers will now attain the lowest point possible, as it reaches the final stage of its bankruptcy proceedings by closing its last 375 stores. As recently as last year, the company operated 20 stores in Kentucky cities like Owensboro, Bowling Green, Glasgow, Pikeville and Ashland. Most of the remaining stores will be shut down by the end of the summer, with some in other parts of the country being converted to RoomStores, which sell rooms full of furniture in special package deals.
  • In an area not often studied by state agriculture statisticians, the Kentucky flower and foliage growers’ 2000 equivalent wholesale value of sales totaled $28.8 million, ranking 30th among 36 states that conducted the survey. According to the Kentucky Agricultural Statistics Service, the number of floriculture growers in Kentucky with sales of $10,000 or more totaled 184, a tiny fraction of the 10,873 nationwide. The nation’s total floriculture crop value at wholesale was estimated at $4.57 billion, up 12 percent from $4.1 billion in 1999. After traditional state leaders California and Florida (which accounted for 36 percent of the nation’s total value), the next three were Michigan, Texas and Ohio. Bedding and garden plants recorded the biggest sector increase in wholesale value, at nine percent.
  • In another Department of Agriculture development, the 2001 Kentucky Aquaculture Directory, with nearly 200 listings, has been released. “Kentucky is only beginning to tap into its potential in aquaculture,” says Agriculture Commissioner Billy Ray Smith. Nationally, aquaculture production increased nearly 85 percent between 1985 and 1996, yet 60 percent of the U.S. seafood supply is still imported.
  • Between 1978 and 1996, U.S. coal companies were paying an improperly levied tax on coal they were exporting, according to a Supreme Court decision in ’96. Later, as the coal companies sought to recover the money paid out, the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that the companies didn’t have to limit their claim to an IRS-mandated three-year period, but could sue for as much as six years’ worth of payouts. Now, an appeal of that decision by the U.S. Justice Department has been turned down by the Supreme Court, leaving the companies free to pursue their remedy.
  • Kentucky ranked 19th in annual percent change in real gross state product between 1992 and 1999, according to figures released by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. As with so many other indicators, Kentucky’s four-percent growth rate exactly matched the nation’s. Leading the pack was Arizona (at 7.3 percent), followed by Nevada, Oregon, Colorado and Idaho.
  • As a result of President Bush’s tax relief bill, taxpaying Kentuckians should begin receiving rebate checks soon. “This year Kentuckians will receive over $500 million in rebates from the federal government, “ says 6th District Rep. Ernie Fletcher. But meanwhile, at the state level, economists and cabinet officials continue to grapple with what may be a $300-million shortfall during the fiscal year just begun July 1. Many are concerned that education – traditionally immune from budget cuts, and a high priority for Gov. Patton – might suffer some cutbacks if no other remedy is devised.


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