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FAST LANE - August 2002


MOUNT STERLING
Chef America Now Part of Nestle in $2.6 Billion Deal

With a goal of boosting its frozen food sales, Nestle has purchased Chef America for $2.6 billion in cash.

Chef America produces the popular “Hot Pockets” microwavable sandwiches at its plant in Mount Sterling, where the Denver-based company employs 700 workers. The privately-held company is the leading U.S. manufacturer and marketer of frozen hand-held food products, boasting a 50 percent market share in the fast-growing category.

According to company figures, Chef America saw a compound annual sale growth rate of more than 10 percent between 1996 and 2001 and is on track to grow in excess of 15 percent in 2002.

Nestle’s chief executive, Peter Brabeck, said, “Chef America is an ideal and strategically important complement to our own frozen food activities in the USA, which include Stouffer’s and Lean Cuisine.”

BOWLING GREEN
Western Breaks Ground on $20M Science Complex

Using a remote-controlled robotic shovel, Gov. Paul Patton helped Western Kentucky University break ground for a new $20 million science building that is designed to be part of the foundation for the state’s high-tech future.

The ShovelBot, designed by WKU faculty member Ron Rizzo and electrical engineering students Jeff Fulkerson and Jessica Lassourreille, is an example of the innovative projects that will be completed in the Complex for Engineering and Biological Sciences.

The 76,000-square-foot building will house state-of-the-art laboratories for Western’s emerging joint civil, mechanical and electrical engineering programs as well as the biology department’s biotechnology center, biodiversity center and water quality lab.

Engineering facilities will include an electronic classroom, student project design rooms, engineering prototype facility, and laboratories and will support activities such as materials science, electronics, robotics, construction materials and dynamic systems.

Biology facilities will include research laboratories for ecology and conservation, microbiology, molecular and cell biology, aquatic biology, physiology, genetics, biotechnology and water resource studies.

LOUISVILLE
U of L Names Ramsey as Interim President

The University of Louisville Board of Trustees has unanimously approved the appointment of state budget director and U of L faculty member James Ramsey as acting president of the university.

Ramsey assumes the position from Carol Garrison, who has accepted the presidency of the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Garrison was appointed as acting president upon the resignation of former University President John Shumaker, who accepted the position as president of the University of Tennessee.

Ramsey, a senior professor of economics and public policy at U of L, is also the state’s budget director and a senior adviser to Gov. Paul Patton. His background includes a number of higher education and government positions, including stints as vice chancellor for finance and administration at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, professor in the Department of Economics at Western Kentucky University and acting president of the Kentucky Community and Technical College System.

Ramsey has stated that he accepted the interim presidency to help provide stability and continuity during a transitional time and has no intention of pursuing the position on a permanent basis.

STATE
Women's Conference Slated for October 8-9 in Lexington, Louisville

Best-selling author Mary Higgins Clark will be the featured speaker at the 2002 In the Interest of Women conference, sponsored by Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Kentucky, Inc.

This year’s conference will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 8 at Heritage Hall in Lexington and on Wednesday, Oct. 9 at the Galt House East in Louisville.

Also featured this year is Gracie Rosenberger, a popular motivational speaker who has overcome tremendous physical and emotional adversity to become a true success story.

The conference will also feature women from across the country speaking on topics from organizing your life to dealing with difficult people. There will be a full day of workshops and speakers in each location. The cost is $60 per person and includes a continental breakfast and lunch. More information about the conference, including registration information, is available by calling (859) 252-3350, ext. 3813 or by visiting www.toyotageorgetown.com/women.

STATE
US News Ranks Four Kentucky Hospitals Among Nation's Best

Four Kentucky hospitals have received national recognition for their expertise in the areas of respiratory care, orthopedics, rheumatology, and heart surgery.

U.S. News & World Report annually publishes a listing of the nation’s best hospitals, based on factors such as reputation, mortality, ratio of registered nurses to patients and number of discharges, among other measures.

This year’s list included:

  • St. Joseph Hospital in Lexington was ranked No. 39 in the heart and heart surgery category.
  • Norton Southwest Hospital in Louisville was listed at No. 43 in the respiratory care category.
  • University of Louisville Hospital was recognized in the field of orthopedics, coming in at No. 45.
  • Cardinal Hill Hospital in Lexington was ranked No. 48 in the area of rheumatology.

Details of the report can be viewed online at www.usnews.com.

LOUISVILLE
Lack of Space Puts Louisville's Convention Business in Jeopardy

The Recreation Vehicle Industry Association has held its annual trade show in Louisville for nearly 40 years, but a lack of space at the Kentucky Fair& Exposition Center has prompted association officials to look for alternative venues.

The Fair & Exposition Center board has proposed a $102 million renovation that would add both exhibit and conference space, but with state’s budgetary woes, such funding has not been addressed.

Loss of the RV convention would come at a high price. The show is ranked as one of Louisville’s top 10 meetings and conventions and adds some $16 million to the local economy. RVIA officials say they don’t want to leave, but lack of space cost the show $342,000 in sales last year, plus dissatisfaction from some exhibitors.

This is the second time within six months that the community has been faced with losing a top convention. In April, the National FFA announced plans to move its convention to Indianapolis, citing an inadequate number of hotel rooms and difficulties with the technical capabilities at Freedom Hall.

STATE
Maps Show Kentucky's Progress on the Information Superhighway

The state’s Office for the New Economy has released preliminary maps depicting the current status of Kentucky’s information superhighway.

Kentucky’s primary backbone traverses the state from Cincinnati to Louisville, through Bowling Green to Nashville and finally Atlanta. The 90-mile region surrounding Northern Kentucky and including Lexington and Louisville is on par with other major areas of the country, including the 90-mile radius around Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Columbus, Ohio; and Lansing/Ann Arbor/Jackson, Michigan.

However, high-speed Internet access in the state’s rural areas is a different story. Only 30 percent of the population in Eastern Kentucky has the option to purchase cable-modem service; only 16 percent have access to DSL service. And in six counties in the eastern region, neither service is available.

“In order to attract the jobs and economic development of the future and build a quality of life for all Kentuckians, we must ensure that affordable high-speed Internet highways are available throughout the Commonwealth,” said Governor Paul Patton.

The maps are open for public comment and can be viewed on the connectkentucky Web site at www.connectkentucky.org.

Established by Patton earlier this year, the connectkentucky Steering Committee has the job of planning and building the information superhighway of the future in Kentucky.

ERLANGER
Toyota Celebrates Manufacturing Milestone with 10 Millionth Vehicle

FRANKLIN
Outokumpu Copper Retruns Occupational Tax to Employees

In a year when many companies have been making news by way of greed and unethical practices, Outokumpu Copper is taking money from a tax incentive and handing it over to its employees.

The Finland-based company recently agreed to be annexed by the city of Franklin, Kentucky in order to hook on to the city’s sewer system. The hook-up is a critical component of a planned expansion of the plant, which produces copper tubing for refrigeration and cooling products. The planned $6 million expansion project involves adding 65,000 square feet for a new manufacturing line (yet to be announced) and a research and development line.

The down side of the deal? By being annexed into Franklin, Outokumpu employees would face an occupational tax.

Not wanting to penalize their work team, Outokumpu is taking the money from a tax abatement incentive offered by Franklin - which many companies use for capital improvements or working capital – and dispersing it among its 300 employees.

Outokumpu President Geoff Palmer said the company’s decision was based on “employee loyalty.”

LEXINGTON
Acquisition by Sun Capital Moves Clark Material Out of Bankruptcy

Clark Material Handling Co. is being acquired by Sun Capital Partners, Inc., a Florida-based private equity firm that plans to finance Clark’s reorganization plan and recapitalize the its foreign operations.

Prior to filing for bankruptcy protection in 2000, the forklift manufacturer was one of Lexington’s largest businesses. The company also has operations in Brazil, Germany and Korea, but Clark North America is the only division of the company operating under bankruptcy protection.

Officials with Sun Capital say they expect the company to pull out of bankruptcy by the end of the year.

COVINGTON
O'Brien Succeeds Chellgren as President and COO of Ashland

James J. O’Brien has been named as the new president and chief operating officer of Ashland, Inc.

O’Brien was unanimously selected by the company’s board of directors to replace Ashland Chairman and CEO Paul Chellgren. Chellgren agreed to step down from his position after disclosing that he and another Ashland employee had been personally involved, a matter that breaches company policy. Upon Chellgren’s official retirement on November 15, O’Brien will assume the position of chairman and chief executive officer.

“Our committee, the task force and the board are very confident that Jim has the experience, judgment and leadership ability necessary to capitalize on Ashland’s opportunities and overcome its challenges,” said Mannie Jackson, chairman of the Personnel & Compensation Committee of Ashland’s board of directors. “In addition, his years as executive assistant to retired Ashland chairman John R. Hall were an excellent training ground for this position.”

Jackson, who also headed the board-management task force appointed to select new leadership for the 78-year-old company, said the selection committee was pleased to be able to name a successor from within Ashland’s ranks.

“One of Ashland’s key advantages has long been the depth of the management team,” Jackson said. “Having such outstanding internal candidates meant we were able to move quickly and, equally important, provide for continuity in regard to key strategic and operating initiatives.”

Ashland is in the midst of business process redesign efforts to improve profitability and returns from APAC and Ashland Distribution. Ashland Specialty Chemical is developing new strategic initiatives to foster growth, while Valvoline is continuing to push innovation and new product development.

LOUISVILLE
Churchill Downs President's New Focus is on Government Affairs

With the political stakes becoming ever higher for the racing industry, Churchill Downs Inc. (CDI) has created a new position designed to oversee the company’s public affairs and legislative initiatives.

Alex Waldrop, president of Churchill Downs racetrack, has been promoted to the newly created position of senior vice president of public affairs. In his new role, Waldrop will be responsible for coordinating the company’s public affairs activities at the national level as well as directing legislative strategies in the five states in which Churchill Downs operates.

In addition to operating Churchill Downs racetrack in Louisville, its flagship track, CDI also owns tracks in California, Florida, Illinois and Indiana.

Waldrop, a native of Mayfield, Kentucky, comes to the position well-versed in lobbying and the legislative process. Prior to joining CDI in 1992 as its general counsel, Waldrop practiced law for seven years with the firm of Wyatt Tarrant and Combs. He was named president of Churchill Downs racetrack in 1999.

Tom Meeker, CEO of Churchill Downs Inc., noted that with the number of political issues facing the racing industry, it simply became necessary to have one person to direct government affairs for the company.

‘’Right now, the political stakes are high at both the state and federal level for this industry,’’ Waldrop said to the Louisville Courier-Journal. ‘’Some of the greatest challenges we face deal with public policy issues, and in many respects the horse industry can’t grow without enabling legislation.’’

LOUISVILLE
YUM! Hopes to Spice Up Pizza Hut Sales with Addition of Pasta Bravo

YUM! Brands is test-marketing a new group of multi-branded stores that will combine its Pizza Hut brand with California-based Pasta Bravo.

Pasta Bravo is a “quick casual” restaurant chain specializing in Italian food ranging from traditional items like lasagna and chicken parmigiana to more contemporary offerings such as chicken basil cream and Thai chicken linguine. The company has 15 locations in southern California.

The combined Pizza Hut/Pasta Bravo stores are first being tested on the West Coast. YUM! is expecting the addition of Pasta Bravo to boost dine-in sales at its Pizza Hut restaurants.

Multi-branding has proven to be a highly successful venture for YUM!: Company officials note that its multi-branded stores have seen an annual increase in volume of up to 30 percent.

YUM! Is also planning to pair up Pizza Hut with its A & W All-American Food restaurants, which it recently acquired from Yorkshire Global Restaurants.

LOUISVILLE
Louisville Airport to Serve as a Model for Federal Safety Testing

The Federal Aviation Administration has selected Louisville International Airport to serve as a national model site to test next-generation technology.

Unlike current procedures, whereby the FAA tests individual components of new technology separately and at different airports, Louisville will be the first national model test site at which multiple next-generation safety, security and efficiency-related aviation technology will be tested in a comprehensive and integrated approach.

The FAA said Louisville was selected as a test site based on a number of factors, including a $30 million investment in safety technology by UPS and an agreement to include some of the Kentucky Air National Guard’s fleet in the test.

The new technology being installed at the airport will address risk areas such as runway incursions and in-air incidents as well as security issues.

LEXINGTON
UK Receives $1.4M in Funding to Help Solve Farming Problems

Through a unique collaboration with the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS), the University of Kentucky is launching an innovative new forage-animal research initiative.

The program’s goal is to develop new technologies that will enhance the health and performance of grazing animals, with the result being more dollars for Kentucky farmers.

Pastured and grazing animal operations account for between $1.5 and 2 billion in Kentucky farm income – nearly half of all farm income for the state.

The program has already brought quick results in finding the likely cause of Mare Reproductive Loss Syndrome (MRLS), and its focus on grazing animals and forages means a wide range of benefits to agriculture. MRLS, which hit several breeds and affected both large and small farms, caused more than $300 million dollars in losses to Kentucky’s horse industry – the state’s leading source of agricultural cash receipts.

OLIVE HILL
Organization Proposes New Food Processing Plant for Carter County

A new organization formed has been formed in Carter County with hopes of developing a fruit and vegetable processing factory.

The Friends of Northeastern Kentucky Farm Families is in the process of trying to obtain $3-$4 million in grant money from the Kentucky Agricultural Development Board. The plan calls for local farmers to sell their produce the factory, which would then freeze, can, pickle or dry the items and then put them on the market.

If developed as planned, the factory would employ approximately 35 full-time workers in the first year and as many as 105 within three years.

A location of the proposed plant has not yet been decided upon.

RICHMOND
Harlan Firm Receives EKU Award for Excellence in Entrepreneurship

Almost 20 years ago, Charleen Combs and Bob Harris found themselves in a quandary: Their employer, Eastover Mining Co., had been sold. Despite possible opportunities with the new owner, it was clear that the staff would be downsized.

“It seemed like a perfect opportunity to strike out independently,” Combs recalls.

Combs and Harris decided to stay in Harlan and establish their own software development company in 1983. Today, Data Futures Inc. (DFI) has carved its own sizable niche producing and providing administrative software to school districts and the healthcare industry throughout Kentucky and several other states. Total revenues last year topped $2 million.

For its achievements and contributions to the regional economy, DFI recently received the excellence in entrepreneurship award from EKU’s College of Business and Technology.

Nominees for the award must reside or have businesses located in a 47-county region of eastern and southeastern Kentucky. Award recipients are determined by the economic success of the enterprise, contributions to the community and operational achievement as measured by innovative employee training programs, superior use of technology and safety achievement, and sustainability.

Virtually every school district in Kentucky utilizes DFI products, which help manage bus transportation, track attendance, budgets, employee certification, food services, maintenance and inventory, field trips, and redistricting. The company recently opened a branch office in Kingsport, Tennessee to house two trainers/support personnel and three software developers.

“Data Futures is an outstanding example of how two east Kentuckians used their entrepreneurial talent, drive and vision to take full advantage of an occasion to create an opportunity,” said Ewell Balltrip, executive director of the Kentucky Appalachian Commission.

 

Business Briefs

BOWLING GREEN

  • Western Kentucky University closed the 2001-2002 fiscal year with a record-breaking $12.3 million received in cash gifts. The figure represents a 25.3 percent increase over cash gifts received last year and a 186 percent increase over gifts received just four years ago.

CAMPBELLSVILLE

  • Campbellsville University Trustee George W. Ransdell and his wife, Marie, have donated $1 million to the university for the construction of a new chapel. The gift represents the largest capital gift ever made to the university. The chapel project, estimated to be $4 million, will also include new academic space for the university’s School of Theology, which currently offers undergraduate and graduate degree programs.

CLERMONT

  • The makers of Jim Beam bourbon are courting the Hispanic market with a new advertising campaign designed to increase sales in that segment of the population. The latest figures from the U.S. census indicate that America’s Hispanic population grew 58 percent between 1990 and 2000; however, Jim Beam officials found that only five percent of its consumption came from the Hispanic market.

CORBIN

  • CTA Acoustics is investing $10 million to upgrade technology and expand its plant in Corbin, the company’s primary manufacturing facility. The Corbin plant produces insulation products for Ford Motor Company’s Kentucky Truck Plant in Louisville.

CYNTHIANA

  • Matt Stone, Inc., which manufactures concrete stepping stones and veneer stone products, is building a 40,000-square-foot plant near Cynthiana’s existing industrial park. The company, which supplies products for Wal-Mart, Home Depot and Lowe’s, expects to initially employ 20 workers and eventually as many as 45.

ELIZABETHTOWN

  • Summit Polymers Inc., which produces molded automotive interior trim, is planning to add 15,000 square feet of production space to its existing facility. The $2.3 million addition is expected to be completed this fall and will create around 80 new jobs. The plant currently employs 185 workers.

ERLANGER

  • Steinkamp Molding, a German manufacturer of foam and rubber injection molds, is investing $600,000 in new equipment to better meet customer demand. The new equipment will enable the company to produce higher quality molds more quickly and cost-effectively.

FLORENCE

  • Florence-based Bank of Kentucky has announced plans to buy approximately $200 million in assets of Peoples Bank of Northern Kentucky. Peoples Bank will use its remaining $42 million to settle legal matters resulting from its ties with Erpenbeck Co., an Edgewood homebuilding company that has been accused of a bank fraud scheme that involved Erpenbeck’s commercial account at Peoples. The acquisition will make the Bank of Kentucky the second largest bank (in terms of deposits) in the Northern Kentucky region.

FRANKFORT

  • R.J. Industries LLC is investing nearly $800,000 for a new plastic injection-molding line that is expected to add another 24 jobs to the company’s current 18-member workforce. The company produces molded wheel covers and center casts.
  • Frankfort First Bancorp, Inc. launched a new stock repurchase program on August 15 to buy up to 62,000 shares or approximately five percent of the company’s outstanding shares. The repurchase program will be in effect for nine months or until the total is repurchased, whichever comes first. A previous repurchase program, initiated on November 8, 2001, did not result in the repurchase of any shares, primarily due to an increase in the market price of the shares that coincided with the initiation of the plan.

FRANKLIN

  • Construction is underway for Vermont Thread Gage’s new 10,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Simpson County’s North Industrial Park. The facility will handle the production of a full range of threaded fixed-limit gaging. The company is expecting to initially employ up to 25 workers, with that number eventually reaching 50 within the first year.

GEORGETOWN

  • Toyota’s Georgetown plant is undergoing a $10 million renovation to its paint shop with a goal of reducing solvent fumes by 26 percent. The renovation is part of a company-wide plan to shift from a system using solvent-borne paints to one utilizing water-borne paints, which is a cleaner and more efficient process.
  • The Georgetown City Council has officially approved a new $4.3 million business park that will be built to attract new industries and alleviate the city’s dependence on Toyota Motor Manufacturing. The first phase of the 399-acre park will provide more than 200 acres for local businesses looking to expand as well as space for new industry, with a mix of industrial, technological, research and office space. The city estimates that land prices will range between $25,000-$30,000 per acre. If developed as planned, the park could ultimately create more than 5,000 new jobs and generate approximately $2.2 million in payroll taxes.

GLASGOW

  • T.J. Samson Hospital has opened a new outpatient dialysis center, the first hospital-based clinic of its type in Glasgow.

HEBRON

  • Hebron Deposit Bank has merged with First National Bank of Southwestern Ohio to form First Financial Bank. Both banks are affiliates of Ohio-based First Financial Bancorp. Company officials explained that the merger removes geographic references, providing a more regional approach for future expansion.

HOPKINSVILLE

  • The Pennyroyal Arts Council has received grants from the Kentucky Arts Council and the Southern Arts Federation totaling more than $15,000. The grants provide funds to bring in the Owensboro Symphony Orchestra and the Dallas Brass for performances at Hopkinsville’s Alhambra Theatre. The Dallas Brass will also conduct workshops with band students from Christian County High School and Hopkinsville High School.

HORSE CAVE

  • American Wood Products, which produces butcher block-style tops, benches and specialty products, has been acquired by AWP Butcher Block, Inc. The company will continue to operate from its existing location in Hart County.

JUNCTION CITY

  • A petition for liquor by the drink to be allowed in restaurants seating a minimum of 100 people has been certified as having enough signatures to appear on the ballot in the next election.

KENOVA

  • Marathon Ashland Petroleum has started construction of a 149-mile pipeline that will connect its Kenova products terminal with Columbus, Ohio, an area that is experiencing significant growth. The construction of the 14-inch pipeline, designed to transport some 50,000 barrels of fuel per day, has elicited criticism from property owners and environmental activists, who say the construction will harm some of Ohio’s most scenic countryside.

LAWRENCEBURG

  • The City of Lawrenceburg has begun construction on a new water treatment facility that will provide a pumping capacity of four million gallons per day. The $9 million facility is being built on property donated by Wild Turkey Distillery.

LEXINGTON

  • The Kentucky Department of Insurance has suspended the viatical settlement provider licenses held by Kelco, Inc. and three of its executives. The action was taken based on federal indictments handed down in July that included mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering and forfeiture. Viatical provider licenses allow a company or individual to buy a person’s life insurance policy for less than the expected death benefit, becoming the new owner and/or beneficiary of the policy, thus paying all future premiums and collecting the death benefit when the insured person dies.
  • Patrick DeLuca, Ph.D. has been named as the 2002 Kentucky Pharmacist of the Year by the Kentucky Pharmacists Association. DeLuca is a professor of pharmacy at the University of Kentucky and is an expert in novel drug delivery, formulation and process development of proteins and peptides and freeze-drying.
  • Lexmark’s board of directors has authorized the repurchase of another $200 million in shares of its Class A common stock. The company previously authorized repurchases of up to $1.2 billion, of which the company has acquired $1.18 billion.
  • Blue Grass Airport has received a $5 million federal grant for airport improvements, the majority of which will be utilized to construct additional aircraft parking. That additional space will enable airlines to provide the Central Kentucky area with more late-night and early morning flights. The funds also provide $400,000 for security measures.
  • Wicklund Holding Co., a Lexington-based holding company that invests in growing industries through mergers and acquisitions, has signed a letter of intent to purchase A.T.G. Sports Industries Inc. Kansas-based A.T.G. develops and installs artificial sports surfaces for indoor and outdoor track and field applications as well as playing surfaces for a number of court-based sports. A.T.G. will retain its management and operate as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Wicklund.
  • Murphy Surf-Air Trucking Co. has been sold to John J. Stoeckinger, who will hold the position of president and CEO. The company will continue its regional and local services between its lanes in Chicago, Louisville, Atlanta, Lexington, Dayton, Cincinnati, Tri-Cities, Nashville, Knoxville, the Carolinas, and Indiana. The company has also developed a new sister company, MSA Logistics, which will primarily handle truckload and expedited LTL (less than truckload) shipments.
  • Smith Management Group (SMG) has purchased the intellectual property and rights to sell software formerly marketed as Compliance Assistance 2.0. “Basically, it drills lengthy policies and procedures, permits, or any set of instructions down to the bare action-oriented necessities: Who needs to do what, when does it need to be done?” explained SMG President Scott Smith. “Then, it tracks information associated with the completion of each task.” The software will be marketed by SMG under the name OrgMan 2000.

LILY

  • The London-Laurel County Industrial Authority has issued industrial revenue bonds for up to $43 million for the expansion of Aisin Automotive Castings, which manufactures engine components for Toyota vehicles. The existing facility will be expanded by up to 150,000-square-feet and will be used to create parts for Toyota’s Tundra and Sequoia models. The exact size of the project and potential new jobs has not yet been determined.

LINCOLN COUNTY

  • The Lincoln County Area Technology Center has opened at Lincoln County High School, offering students there the opportunity to participate in on-site vocational classes. The $6.5 million center offers programs in areas such as industrial maintenance, machine tool technology, wood manufacturing, information technology and health sciences.

LONDON

  • An investment by Kentucky Highlands Investment Corporation (KHIC) is enabling Bluegrass Spring Company to expand its factory floor space by 10,000 square feet and purchase new machinery. The London company, one of the only spring makers in the Southeast region, produces precision spring, wire form and stampings for customers such as Bay West Paper, Therm-O-Disc, Matsushita, Suntec and Bretha Power Tools. Owner Jack Grosswiler is hoping to hire up to 10 new employees plus a manager for the stamping operations.

LOUISVILLE

  • Work is proceeding for a 2004 opening of the Owsley Brown Frazier Historical Arms Museum in Louisville. The collection will feature 10 centuries of arms and armor from Europe and America and is expected to be in the same class as some of the most prestigious arms collections in America, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Higgins Armory Museum. Walter J. “Chip” Karcheski has been named as the chief curator of arms and armor for the new museum. Karcheski previously served as senior curator at the Higgins Armory Museum in Massachusetts.
  • NetWorld Alliance LLC, which develops and owns Web sites that focus on news and information, is moving from Oldham County to the Eastpoint Business Center in Jefferson County, where it is building an 11,500-square-foot building. The company currently employs around 25 people and expects to add another six workers per year as the firm expands.
  • Louisville Water Company has completed its purchase of Goshen Utilities, which provides water to approximately 1,900 customers in southwest Oldham County. Goshen Utilities was previously owned by Aquasource Inc. of Pittsburgh.
  • The law firm of Harper, Ferguson & Davis has merged with Ogden Newell & Welch, with Spencer E. Harper Jr. and William W. Davis joining the merged firm as partners.
  • The Speed Art Museum will host the U.S. debut of the “Millet to Matisse” exhibit, which will run from November 6 through February 2, 2003. The exhibit is expected to draw up to 50,000 visitors.
  • Mareli Development Co. has been purchased by St. Louis-based McBride & Son Homes Inc. for an undisclosed price. Mareli has been building homes in the Louisville area since 1992.
  • Penske Truck Leasing Co. has purchased 7.3 acres at the Eastpoint Business Center where it is building an 11,516-square-foot facility. At Eastpoint, Penske will join companies such as Kroger, Underwriters Safety and Claims Inc., the Kentucky Hospital Association and Commonwealth Wine and Spirits.
  • High Speed Access, a Louisville-based provider of broadband Internet and communications services, has announced plans to dissolve the company. The firm has been without revenue-producing assets since the February sale of its Internet access assets to Charter Communications Corp.
  • Caritas Peace Center has opened a 20-bed wing for elderly psychiatric patients at a cost of $900,000. According to the surgeon general’s 1999 report on mental illness in the U.S., approximately 20 percent of the population age 55 and older has mental disorders not associated with normal aging. Statistics also show that the population group age 85 and older is the fastest-growing segment in the nation.
  • CMJ Ventures Inc., a Louisville sales and marketing company, has been acquired by Chattanooga-based Sporting Magic Inc., which plans to centralize its sales and marketing operations in Louisville. The consolidation is expected to increase the company’s Louisville employee base from 30 to 150.
  • ISCO Industries, a supplier of high-density polyethylene piping, has acquired Cooper Wholesale of Pryor, Oklahoma. Cooper is also a piping supplier but focuses on the oil and gas markets, while ISCO supplies piping to water companies, landfills and golf courses. ISCO President Jimmy Kirchdorfer said the acquisition allows the company to expand into the south-central area of the country and provides important connections to the energy market.

MADISONVILLE

  • The General Electric plant in Madisonville has been awarded a contract with the U.S. Department of Navy worth $76.7 million. The plant, which employs around 830 workers, produces engine blades and vanes for the F414-GE-400 jet engines.

MARION

  • Ceramics producer Cera-Tech, Inc. has been sold to Diversified Manufacturing, Inc., a Georgia company with interests in metal processing and wood product industries. Diversified plans to have CeraTech develop new technical products with specialized applications, possibly for the aircraft or military sectors. The new owners do not plan to make any changes to the company or relocate the business.

MARTIN COUNTY

  • Martin County Coal has been ordered to pay $3.25 million as penalty for one of the nation’s worst coal sludge spills. The company will pay $1.75 million in penalties and $1 million for damage to the environment. Another $500,000 will go to reimburse the state of Kentucky for the required clean-up.

NICHOLASVILLE

  • Schmalbach-Lubeca, a Michigan company that produces plastic food and beverage containers at its plant in Nicholasville, has been acquired by Amcor, an Australian company.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY

  • Innotrac Corporation, an Atlanta-based customer relationship management services company, has signed a lease with ProLogis for 286,000-square-feet of distribution space at Airport Distribution Center near the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport and the I-75/I-275 junction.

PADUCAH

  • Computer Services Inc. has landed one of its largest data processing contracts with a deal to provide data processing for Marshfield Investment Co., a three-bank holding company in Springfield, Missouri. CSI has also recently signed deals with Community National Bank in Monett, Missouri (near Springfield) and Marketing Solutions of Birmingham, Alabama.
  • Trees n Trends, a Paducah-based home décor company, has emerged from bankruptcy reorganization with record profits. The company faced debts of nearly $25 million when it filed for bankruptcy approximately a year and a half ago, but officially came out of Chapter 11 status on July 15 with more than $1 million in profits. To accomplish that, the company closed its Memphis distribution center and six retail stores and cut more than 200 jobs, resulting in an $11 million reduction in operating costs. The company now operates 21 stores in Kentucky, Tennessee, Illinois, Missouri, Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama.

PINE MOUNTAIN

  • The Pine Mountain Community Development Corporation has been awarded $100,000 by the Community Development Financial Institution to help create and sustain small businesses in the area.

SHELBYVILLE

  • Developers are hoping to convert the old Coca-Cola bottling plant in Shelbyville into 23 two- and three-bedroom apartments. The developers say the plans for the project, which is estimated to cost approximately $3 million, retain the historic art deco facade of the building.
  • Covington-based Clear Channel Radio Inc. has purchased WTHQ radio in Shelbyville and changed the call letters to WIBL. Clear Channel was prohibited by the Federal Communications Commission from upping the wattage of its WYBL station in Shelbyville and bought the second station in order to provide increased coverage in the eastern portion of the Louisville market.

SHEPHERDSVILLE

  • APL Logistics, an international distribution company, has leased nearly 200,000 square feet of space at the Cedar Grove Business Park. The company will handle distribution for Dow Corning and expects to initially employ around 60 full-time workers.

STURGIS

  • Martin’s Tire Company of Marion, Kentucky has bought a 30,000-square-foot spec building located in the Union County Industrial Park. The facility, which will employ 30-40 workers, will produce tire-derived fuel, which is mixed with high-sulfur coal to produce electricity.

WESTERN KENTUCKY

  • Henderson and Owensboro are among nine sites selected by McDonald’s Corp. to test its new “diner” concept. The “McDonald’s with a Diner Inside” will feature an expanded menu that includes items such as cooked-to-order eggs, Belgian waffles, diner sandwiches, meat loaf, open-faced sandwiches, mashed potatoes and a variety of desserts, all in addition to McDonald’s regular items. The diners will also offer table service as well as the traditional counter service.

STATE

  • The Commonwealth is slated to receive $130 million from a national fund for tobacco growers this year. The figure represents the largest amount available to farmers since the National Tobacco Growers Settlement Trust Fund was created in 1999 to help offset the loss in income brought about by a decrease in demand for domestic tobacco.
  • Goodwill Industries of Kentucky has been awarded a $1 million federal grant to provide services to individuals with disabilities. Funded by the U.S. Department of Labor, the two-year grant will serve 17 counties in the Central Kentucky region. The money will be used to help facilitate disabled persons’ access to Central Kentucky Job Centers, where career counseling and guidance are offered.


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