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FAST LANE - October
2003
BOONE COUNTY
Northern Kentucky Lands New $50M FedEx Facility
FedEx
Ground Support Systems, Inc. has selected a 96-acre site in unincorporated
Boone County for its newest distribution hub.
Construction of
the 335,000-square-foot facility is slated to begin this year with completion
planned for mid-2005.
Within the first
three years of operation, the company expects to employ more than 80
office and clerical employees and 300 package handlers at the business-to-business
small package distribution hub. The new facility will also create an
additional 100 independent contractor positions.
At full capacity,
the new hub will process up to 45,000 packages per hour and could eventually
employ more than 235 office and clerical employees, 1,300 package handlers,
and 400 independent contractors.
FedEx officials
say the Boone County site was selected based its central location, proximity
to customers distribution centers and interstate highways, and
a skilled and available workforce.
COVINGTON
Ashland Cuts 500 Jobs to Boost Bottom Line
Ashland
Inc. (NYSE:ASH) recently announced that will eliminate approximately
500 jobs in Ashlands wholly owned businesses and corporate resource
groups. The goal is to reduce selling, general and administrative expenses
by approximately $75 million a year in fiscal 2004. This amount is in
addition to $25 million in annual savings already achieved from a previously
announced program earlier in fiscal 2003.
Ashland
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer James J. OBrien said the
savings initiative reflects an effort to build and maintain a Top-Quartile
Cost Structure (TQCS). Reducing our costs is a pivotal part of
our strategy to produce top-quartile results relative to our peers.
Becoming a low-cost, operationally excellent organization is critical
to serving our customers, enhancing our financial strength and restoring
our ability to grow, he added.
Eighty percent of
the current reductions will be completed before Nov. 30. The company
expects to record approximately $18 million in before-tax charges in
the September quarter for severance and other costs related to the personnel
changes occurring by Nov. 30.
Ashland eliminated
about 200 jobs earlier in fiscal 2003 and recorded $8 million in severance
and related costs in earlier periods. The combined total of 700 jobs
is equal to about 7 percent of Ashlands salaried employees.
OBrien added
that Ashland is examining additional cost reductions through a realignment
of activities across the corporation and outsourcing.
OBrien instituted
a companywide review of operations a year ago shortly after he became
CEO, in an effort to improve the companys disappointing performance.
Through the first nine months of its last fiscal year, income was off
more than 50 percent. Credit rating agency Standard & Poors
recently issues a caution that a downgrade of its long-term rating is
possible if improvement is not seen soon.
FRANKFORT
Business Grant Opportunities Offered Online
PlanGraphics, Inc.,
a Frankfort information technology firm, has added a new feature to
its Web site that lists various grant opportunities available to businesses.
The site provides
information regarding federal, state and local government grants, as
well as foundation grant funding opportunities and information related
to various industries.
The site also permits
viewers to register for automatic e-mail notification when the list
of grants is updated, which occurs about once a month.
Many of these
funding opportunities can be utilized to assist in developing spatial
information assets and solutions for emergency operations that also
have dual use potential throughout the organization,
explained Joyce Jackson, PlanGraphics client development manager.
The automatic notification allows interested parties to stay up-to-date
and informed about current grant opportunities.
The grant information
is available on PlanGraphics Web site at www.plangraphics.com/
grants/grants.htm.
LOWES
Just Short of the Century Mark, Bank of Lowes Closes
Its Doors
One
of the nations smallest banks has officially closed its vault
for the last time.
The Bank of Lowes,
located in the Western Kentucky community of Lowes, closed on August
31, just short of its 100th anniversary.
The bank, which
had fewer than 500 customers and around only $1 million in assets, was
owned by the Wilkerson family for nearly six decades. With its original
vault, wrought-iron bars at the teller windows, and dedication to doing
things the old-fashioned way (i.e. without computers), the tiny operation
drew the attention of publications ranging from People magazine to the
Wall Street Journal.
In 2000, it was
purchased by Barry Hurley, who owns three Georgia banks. Though ownership
changed, Jack Wilkerson and his sister, Dorothy McClellan, continued
in their roles as president and vice chairman/treasurer, respectively.
Recently, however,
Hurley converted his bank charters from the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp (FDIC) to the Office of Thrift Supervision, which doesnt
allow for multi-state operations. With no other banking operations stepping
forward to take over, the Bank of Lowes was forced to close, becoming
another casualty in the sea of change.
BOWLING GREEN
Plan to Close U.S. Postal Center Leaves 240 Workers
Without Jobs
Technological advances
have resulted in a decision by the U.S. Postal Service to close its
Bowling Green Remote Encoding Center next March. The facility is one
of four in the country that is being closed.
The Bowling Green
facility is currently responsible for handling letters and packages
that are deemed unreadable by optical scanners at regional mail-handling
stations. However, with the recent advancements in character recognition
technology, 89 percent of printed mail and 80 percent of handwritten
addresses can be coded by machine. When the center opened in 1997, only
two percent could be coded that way.
According to William
J. Brown, Southeast area vice president for the postal service, the
remote encoding service (REC) locations were designed as a temporary
solution to automate and expedite the processing of those addresses
that were difficult to ascertain.
The plan from
the start was to downsize the REC operation as technology enhancements
enabled us to automate more mail, he explained.
The closing will
result in the loss of 240 jobs.
GEORGETOWN
Bengals, Georgetown College Extend Training Camp Contract
A
new agreement between Georgetown College and the Cincinnati Bengals
football team will keep the teams training camp at Georgetown
College through 2005.
This is as
fine a training camp facility as any NFL team enjoys, said Bengals
President Mike Brown. Sometimes you get lucky, and that happened
to us eight years ago when the people at Georgetown first proposed that
we train here. We have a great relationship, and Im very pleased
to take it out into the future.
The deal represents
a two-year extension of an original seven-year commitment. The Bengals
began training at Georgetown College in 1997, coming to Central Kentucky
from Wilmington, Ohio, where they had trained for 29 years.
The partnership
has been mutually beneficial for both parties as the colleges
vision for a new athletic complex coincided with the Bengals plans to
relocate. The venture with the Bengals provided Georgetown with the
financial catalyst needed to build a state-of-the-art facility. The
resulting construction project has produced a new stadium, conference
center, athletic fields and student dormitories.
The Bengals
have been faithful in doing everything they promised they would do,
said Dr. Bill Crouch, president of Georgetown College, and we
hope weve handled our end. Weve had an exciting atmosphere
at camp this year under Coach (Marvin) Lewis, and were excited
about the future.
BOWLING GREEN
Humana, BB&T Gifts Create Business Leadership
Professorship
Humana Inc. and
BB&T Bank have each donated $250,000 to Western Kentucky Universitys
Gordon Ford College of Business. The donations, which will be matched
by the Commonwealth of Kentuckys Regional University Excellence
Trust Fund, will be used to create visiting professorship positions
in business leadership and ethics.
The programs
provided through this gift will enable us to prepare competent graduates
and leaders with high ethical standards who seek to create new or expand
existing business organizations and bring new ideas for business development
to Kentucky, said WKU President Gary Ransdell. This endowment
will allow us to enhance the encouragement of personal character and
professional leadership with integrity, and to foster entrepreneurship
and leadership among business graduates and faculty.
LOUISVILLE
Bluegrass Convention Announces Plans to Leave Louisville
in 2005
The
International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) has selected Nashville,
Tennessee to host its annual World of Bluegrass events beginning in
2005. The World of Bluegrass has been hosted for the last seven years
at the Galt House in Louisville, where it will continue to be hosted
in 2003 and 2004.
Were
having a phenomenal run in Louisville
but were stretching
the space in the locations that currently work for us there, says
IBMA Executive Director Dan Hays. Even without the growth we expect,
theres more demand than we can centrally accommodate in Louisville
today.
The annual bluegrass
homecoming includes the trade associations annual convention,
the IBMA Awards Show and Bluegrass Fan Fest, which attracts more than
22,000 annually over the course of the seven-day event.
The convention attracted
approximately 15,000 in 2002, creating an estimated economic impact
of some $3.3 million for the Louisville area according to statistics
from the Greater Louisville Convention and Visitors Bureau.
In selecting a new
site, IBMA officials said the primary considerations were availability
of quality space and services to accommodate growing attendance and
needs for additional exhibitor space, a centralized location in proximity
to IBMAs membership and the music business, autumn dates that
prevented the fewest conflicts with other major music events, and properties
that would fulfill those needs at reasonable rates.
IBMA serves as the
bluegrass music industrys non-profit trade organization and represents
some 2,500 artists, composers, labels, publishers, event producers,
broadcasters, media, educators, agents, managers and other associations
in 30 countries.
FRANKLIN
Biotechnology Company Expands Kentucky Research Operations
Sygen
International plc, a United Kingdom-based company that ranks as a world
leader in applying quantitative genetics and biotechnology to animal
breeding, has announced plans to expand its operation in Franklin. The
facility is operated by PIC USA, a Sygen subsidiary headquartered in
Franklin that is the worlds largest and most extensive pig breeding
company.
Sygen is planning
to add two research facilities at the Franklin site. One facility will
be dedicated to continuing the companys research involving pig
breeding. The other will be devoted to the research of shrimp genetics.
Both facilities are expected to be complete by early next year.
Since launching
its U.S. operations in 1973, PIC has expanded rapidly and currently
employs 180 throughout its facilities in Kentucky. The expansion will
add around 25 new jobs to the staff of 150 currently employed at the
Franklin facility. Ten of those positions will be held by employees
who are transferring from the companys Berkeley, California location.
Sygen officials
say the Franklin site was selected for the expansion because it allows
for a world-class research and development center close to the companys
major customers and largest markets.
STATE
U.S. Senate Approves Nearly $80M for Kentucky Defense
Projects
The U.S. Senate
has approved Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnells request for nearly
$80 million in defense-related projects that will take place in Kentucky.
Seventy-three million
dollars has been appropriated for projects in Louisville that will be
handled by United Defense, Raytheon, the McConnell Technology Training
Center (MTTC) and the University of Louisville. The funding has been
earmarked as followed:
United Defense:
$34.3 million for the manufacturing of Mk45 5 Mod 4 Guns, $9 million
for 5 Mk45 depot overhauls; $7 million to overhaul surface vessel
torpedo tubes; and $1.2 million for minor caliber gun research and testing
Raytheon:
$4 million to overhaul Phalanx close-in weapons systems and $8 million
for research and development work on the Phalanx SEA RAM ship defense
system.
MTTC: $8
million to resolve U.S. Navy shipboard problems through innovative products
and technologies. The Navy projects that MTTCs initiatives will
save more than a half billion dollars over the next 15 years.
University
of Louisville: U of L will receive funding for continued research and
development of new state-of-the-art armored vehicles for the U.S. Army.
U of L will also receive $1.5 million for its work in support of the
Nanoscience Army Missile Defense Initiative.
Another $5.25 million
has been allocated to KECO Industries in Florence for research and testing
of a new bulk fuel transfer system that will reduce the time it takes
for the U.S. Army to deploy existing fuel lines. Accu-Counter in Kenton
County has been awarded $1.5 million, which will be used to enhance
the ability of Special Operations Forces to gauge the reliability of
their weapons.
SPENCER COUNTY
New Taylorsville Lake Resort to Feature Conference
Center, Hotel
The Spencer County
Economic Development Authority has broken ground for the first private
development on Taylorsville Lake, 26 miles southeast of Louisville.
Edgewater Resort
will encompass 163 acres overlooking the 3,050-acre lake, leased indirectly
from the Louisville District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The proposed $45
million resort will be sited on a prominent peninsula on Taylorsville
Lake, approximately a quarter mile from the lakes marina, which
can accommodate everything from canoes to houseboats. Launching facilities,
fuel and boat rentals are also available.
Plans for the resort
call for it to be developed in two phases. Phase I will include the
construction of most of the 120 cottages. Phase II will feature the
development of the remaining cottages and a condo-hotel
(similar to those found at Hilton Head, S.C.) and conference center.
Construction of the cottages will begin this year, with the condo-hotel
and conference center scheduled to begin within 18 months. The resort
will offer the only overnight accommodations directly on the lake.
The project is expected
to generate an economic impact of around $14.5 million in the first
year its development and grow to $37 million annually by the end of
its third year. The project will create approximately 145 jobs in Spencer
County.
FLEMINGBURG
Champion Closes Manufactured Home Plant; Cites Drop
in Demand
Champion
Enterprises Flemingsburg plant is one of four homebuilding plants
being closed by the Michigan-based company as a result of a reduced
demand for manufactured housing.
In addition to the
Bluegrass Housing plant in Flemingsburg, which employs around 120 workers,
Champion is closing its facilities in Georgia, North Carolina and Texas.
Thirty-five of the companys retail sales centers are also being
closed.
The manufactured
home industry has suffered a 65 percent drop in sales over the past
five years. Last year, Champion cut 1,500 jobs in an effort to return
to profitability. This years lay-off involves another 1,000.
We are committed
to a return to a sustained profitability, said Al Koch, the companys
chairman, president and CEO. These decisive steps to size operations
to lower industry demand are required in light of continued tough market
conditions. We also believe they will position the company with substantial
operating leverage if and when the market improves, particularly with
nine idle facilities that could be re-opened as opportunities arise.
LOUISVILLE
International Bartering Service Opens New Office in
Louisville
Tradebank International,
one of the worlds largest barter/trade exchange networks, has
opened its newest office in Louisville.
By
joining Tradebank, businesses become part of network of companies that
offer more than 100,000 products and services, enabling them to trade
with other businesses in their respective cities and throughout the
organization. The membership network includes listings for auto mechanics,
dentists, restaurants, hotels, salons and limousine services, to name
just a few.
Bartering, or trading
goods and services for those of another, has turned into a $6 billion
a year business in the U.S. alone. Statistics show that more than 80
percent of Fortune 500 companies and thousands of other businesses across
the world barter.
The Atlanta-based
company was founded in 1987 and now has branches through the U.S., Canada
and Europe. Louisville native Jeff Ballard is the owner and operator
of the new Kentucky location. Since opening in August, businesses including
Golds Gym, Minute Man Press, Signs Now, Flowers by Juliet and
Distinctive Home Accents have already become part of the network.
Membership in the
network requires a one-time fee of $495 (which is refundable if Tradebank
does not bring new business to the client) and a quarterly accounting
fee of $29.95. There is a 15 percent fee on purchases only.
For more information
on Tradebank of Louisville, visit www.tradebank.com or contact Jeff
Ballard at (502) 608-9411.
OWENSBORO
Large Scale Biology to Produce Research-Grade Drug in Owensboro
Large Scale Biology
Corporation has announced plans to begin producing research-grade aprotinin
at its biomanufacturing facility in Owensboro.
Aprotinin is a drug
that affects blood clotting and is utilized during high-risk surgeries,
such as cardiopulmonary bypass, to reduce bleeding.
Employing its patented
GENEWARE® technology, the California-based company has conducted
field trials of the recombinant aprotinin successfully since April and
is now planning industrial-scale production of its active pharmaceutical
ingredient (API) for use in research and development.
Estimates of the
biomanufacturing market for research grade aprotinin, a protease inhibitor,
range up to $20 million annually.
Given global concerns
and supply constraints related to bovine-sourced aprotinin, industry
analysts say this may be an opportunity for Large Scale to exploit its
ability to provide the market with a safer product. The companys
GENEWARE technology provides a method for producing biopharmaceuticals
free of human or animal pathogens by using tobacco plants as the production
host.
LOUISVILLE
Plastech Unveils Plans for Second Auto Parts Plant, 400+ New Jobs
Plastech
Engineered Products has announced plans to expand its presence in Louisville
with a second facility that could create as many as 425 new jobs.
The Michigan-based
companys existing plant in Louisville, which opened in 1999, produces
plastic interior components for the Ford Explorer vehicles made at Fords
Louisville Assembly Plant. The plant currently operates with a staff
of 370.
The new facility
a leased building situated in the Jefferson Riverport International
Industrial Park will build exterior vehicle parts such as bumpers.
In February, the
Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority granted approval for
$8.5 million in tax incentives in an effort to entice the company to
expand in Louisville. At the time, Louisville was in the running with
cities in several other states for the $78 million building.
bring those services back to the area.
SOMERSET
Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital Announces $55 Million Expansion
Lake
Cumberland Regional Hospital has unveiled plans for a $55 million expansion
that will include the construction of a new five-story, 116,000-square-foot
patient tower and a three-level parking garage.
The project represents
the eighth addition made to the 234-bed acute care hospital since it
was built in 1976. During that time, the hospital has nearly doubled
its facility size and added new off-site outpatient service locations
for diagnostic imaging, surgery, sports medicine, and sleep disorders,
as well as a new cancer treatment center now under construction and
slated to open in early 2004.
In addition to the
new construction, several areas of the existing hospital building will
be remodeled or expanded. As a result, more than 60 percent of the hospitals
rooms will become private.
Lake Cumberland
Regional Hospital is the largest non-governmental employer in Pulaski
County, with 1,200 employees and an annual payroll of nearly $46 million.
TENNESSEE
Caremark, Advance PCS Merger Creates $23B Pharmaceutical
Firm
Nashville-based
Caremark Rx Inc., one of the nations largest pharmaceutical services
companies, has signed an agreement to purchase AdvancePCS for $6 billion
in stock and cash.
The transaction
creates a company with a market capitalization of $13 billion and combined
annual revenues of $23 billion. As such, Caremark gains the distinction
of being Nashvilles largest company.
Caremark Rx
and AdvancePCS are a compelling strategic fit with relatively little
market overlap, said Mac Crawford, chairman and chief executive
officer of Caremark Rx. Historically, our two companies have specialized
in different areas of the pharmaceutical benefits management sector.
AdvancePCS has built a strong base of managed care customers while Caremark
Rx has focused on the employer marketplace. Both companies are widely
recognized for their skill in serving their respective customer bases.
Upon completion, this combination will create a diversified customer
portfolio with a balanced, clinically-focused offering that should enable
us to deliver exceptional care, service and cost efficiency to our customers
and their participants.
On a combined basis
during the twelve months ended June 30, 2003, Caremark Rx and Texas-based
AdvancePCS managed more than 600 million prescription claims.
INDIANA
Sluggish Sales, Competition Force Thomson to Announce
Job Buy-Outs
In
an effort to reduce costs and remain competitive, electronics manufacturer
Thomson has offered voluntary job buyouts to the majority of its 1,100
employees in Carmel, Indiana.
Thomson officials
have said it is imperative that the company cut costs by at least $25
million a year. If the voluntary job buy-out doesnt elicit enough
response, layoffs will have to be the next option, they added.
The company has
seen a drop in U.S. sales of consumer electronics products and has been
in talks with potential partners in China. However, Thomson officials
say that as things now stand, the company has too much overhead to make
it attractive to other such businesses.
Thomson has already
cut a significant number of jobs over the past several years. The staff
numbers in Carmel have dropped by more than 300 in the past three years
and the Marion, Indiana picture tube plant saw 820 positions cut this
past summer.
Business
Briefs
BOWLING GREEN
- In an effort
to alleviate the states shortage of healthcare workers, Norton
Healthcare of Louisville has donated $240,000 to Western Kentucky
University to create a scholarship fund for students enrolled in medical
technology, healthcare information systems, respiratory care, pre-pharmacy,
and both the associates and bachelors degree nursing programs.
Students awarded these scholarships are guaranteed jobs with Norton
when they complete their degrees and must agree to work for Norton
for the number of years they receive the scholarship. The United States
Bureau of Labor Statistics reports there will be a deficit of more
than 1 million nurses nationally by the year 2010 due to an aging
population and technological advances.
CORBIN
- CTA Acoustics
Inc. has informed its staff that it needs to reduce its hourly staff
by 95 to 100 employees and has issued voluntary separation packets
to eligible workers. The announcement came just a week after the company
was granted preliminary approval for state grant money, based on the
promise of the creation of new jobs. The company is currently in the
process of rebuilding a new factory after its Corbin plant suffered
a devastating fire in February that killed seven workers and injured
dozens more. A follow-up investigation uncovered a number of health
and safety violations at the factory, which could mean a fine of up
to $7,000 for each violation.
ELIZABETHTOWN
- Elizabethtown
Technical College has become the states first public institution
to earn national certification by the American Design Drafting Association
(ADDA) for its computer-aided drafting (CAD) program. The certification
identifies schools that meet ADDA curriculum standards and provides
industry with assurance that the schools graduates have received
quality instruction.
EASTERN KENTUCKY
- The state of
Kentucky has awarded a $1 million forgivable loan to the Appalachian
Development Alliance (ADA), a non-profit organization made up of economic
development leaders from eight community development organizations
in the eastern portion of the state. The funds from $1 million loan,
which is derived from coal severance tax funds, will be made available
to small and developing businesses in eastern Kentuckys coal-producing
counties.
FORT THOMAS
- Lexington-based
Cardinal Hill Healthcare System has announced plans to open a 33-bed
long-term acute-care hospital at St. Luke Hospital East in Ft. Thomas
by the end of the year. While most acute-care hospitals focus primarily
on patients with an average stay of five days, Cardinal Hills
hospital within a hospital at St. Lukes will be
dedicated to patients who continue to require a high degree of acute
medical intervention. With an average stay of 25 days or more, such
patients have been found to benefit from a facility that meets both
their medical and rehabilitative needs.
GLASGOW
- The first phase
of development is nearing completion at Highland Glen Industrial Park,
situated near the intersection of U.S. 68 & 80. A CSX rail line
crosses the property, which is also adjacent to the Glasgow Airport.
GREENUP COUNTY
- Over the protests
of local hoteliers, the Greenup Fiscal Court has unanimously approved
a three percent tax on hotel and motel accommodations. The tax will
be utilized to fund a new commission to boost area tourism. Greenup
County is home to three hotels, where prices average approximately
$60 per night. The tax will add an additional $1.80 to that price.
HOPKINSVILLE
- With Hopkinsville
Mayor Rich Liebe casting the deciding vote, the Hopkinsville City
Council has voted against allowing the citys larger restaurants
to serve alcohol on Sundays.
JUNCTION CITY
- Penn Ventilator
Company has informed its 85 employees that the plant will close by
the end of the year. The Dayton, Ohio-based company - which produces
fans and ventilation systems for restaurants, hotels, factories and
the military - has operated a facility in Junction City since the
mid-1960s and is one of the communitys largest employers. Company
officials said the decision was based on a declining demand for the
companys products.
LEBANON
- Spring View Hospital
has been sold by Louisville-based Norton Healthcare to LifePoint Hospitals
Inc., a Tennessee company that operates 28 hospitals in small communities.
The agreement also includes the sale of the Norton Spring View Nursing
Home and Spring View Pediatrics. Terms of the transaction have not
been disclosed.
LEXINGTON
- The University
of Kentucky has broken ground on four new student residence halls
that will house a total of 684 students. The dormitories are the first
new student housing facilities to be built at UK since 1979. As
our enrollment numbers continue to climb, so does the demand from
our students for on-campus housing, said UK President Lee T.
Todd Jr. Todays students are interested in the full college
experience and living on campus is part of that. The new halls
which are to be built at an estimated cost of $46 million
are expected to be completed and ready for occupancy by fall 2005.
- The U.S. Department
of Transportation has awarded more than $8.6 million in federal funding
for improvements to Blue Grass Airport. The funding will aid in bringing
the airport into compliance with FAA safety design standards by adding
600 feet to the end of the airports commercial service runway.
Construction is expected to begin this month, with completion targeted
for the fall of 2007. In addition, the Lexington-Fayette Urban County
Airport board has announced that it is issuing $35 million in bonds
to help fund $66 million worth of improvements to the runways, tarmac,
terminal, rental car facilities and general aviation areas. The airport
will receive approximately $31 million in federal money and passenger,
facility and concession fees to help pay for the project.
- The James N.
Gray Co. has been awarded a $27.4 million contract through the U.S.
Department of Defense to design and build three new facilities and
upgrade infrastructure at Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield, California.
- Software Information
Systems, Inc. has opened a new branch office in St. Louis. The new
office, which will be headed by Charles Bozeman, complements the companys
seven other offices in Kentucky, Ohio, West Virginia, Tennessee and
Indiana.
- Bank One has
awarded the YMCA of Central Kentucky a $25,675 grant to launch a new
program for low-income high school students in need of assistance
preparing for, or improving existing scores on the ACT or SAT tests.
Funds for the Bank One/YMCA College Prep Program will be used to purchase
computers, software, materials and salaries for instructors.
LOUISVILLE
- Humana Inc. has
been named to the CIO 100 list, an honor bestowed by CIO magazine
on companies that demonstrate creativity and commitment in the
resourceful use of technology during difficult economic times.
The company was specifically cited for excelling in technology management
and investment practices that drive value and enhance customer service.
To achieve that, Humana has focused on process re-engineering while
extending several single systems to enterprise solutions, particularly
in the areas of automated health plan enrollment, physician contract
loading, Web-based self-service and security, and complex employer
group set-up. The Louisville-based company was the only health benefits
company and the sole Kentucky firm to the named to the list.
- Tuscarora Inc.
is closing its urethane foam molding plant in Louisville, which produces
protective packing utilized by pharmaceutical and medical supply companies.
The plant is slated to be shut down next month, at which time the
Louisville operations will be combined with those of other company
facilities in Mount Pleasant, Tennessee and Holden, Maine. The Louisville
plant employs 20 workers, all of whom will be given the opportunity
to transfer to other locations, according to company officials.
- The Kentucky
Golf Foundation has launched a $1.6 million capital fundraising campaign
to construct a home for the Kentucky Golf Hall of Fame. Golf House
Kentucky will be located at Persimmon Ridge Golf Club and will also
house administrative offices for Kentuckys governing bodies
for golf. Kentucky is one of only three states in which the governing
bodies for amateur and professional golf share administrative staff
and resources.

- Kindred Healthcare,
Inc., a national provider of long-term healthcare services, has signed
a lease to operate an existing 60-bed long-term acute care hospital
in Nashville, Tennessee. The company plans to invest more than $1.4
million in renovations, equipment and facility improvements to the
Bordeaux Hospital facility.
- CarMax Inc.,
a Virginia company that has built a network of used car superstores,
is investing up to $20 million to develop a dealership in Louisville
near the Hurstborne/Bluegrass Parkway intersection. The 50,000-square-foot
facility will be the companys first Kentucky location and is
slated to open early next year with an inventory of up to 500 used
vehicles and more than 100 employees.
- Louisvilles
historic Brown Hotel has become one of only a handful of U.S. hotels
to offer complimentary high-speed wireless Internet access, enabling
guests and visitors to access the Internet from anywhere in the hotel
without the need for wires or cables. Most laptop computers can access
the wireless network through either built-in or added-on network components.
If a guests computer does not have the capability, all that
is needed is a wireless network card, which can be borrowed from the
hotels front desk, free of charge.
- First Commonwealth
Mortgage Corp. has announced plans for a $268,000 expansion of its
Louisville facility. The project, which is the companys second
expansion in less than a year, will create 90 new jobs with an estimated
payroll of $5.2 million.
- Fresh on the
heels of an April expansion on the West Coast with new facilities
in Fresno, California and Vancouver, Washington, Louisville-based
ISCO Industries has reached an agreement to purchase the Houston,
Texas branch of Maskell-Robbins. Maskell-Robbins is a well-respected
supplier of polyethylene pipe (HDPE), fittings, fabrication and fusion
services. ISCO is one of the nations largest distributors of
HDPE and now has 13 stocking locations with this Houston expansion.
MIDDLESBORO
- Virginia-based
Smithfield Foods Inc. has completed the acquisition of a 90 percent
interest in Cumberland Gap Provision Company for $56.9 million. Cumberland
Gap is a processor of hams, sausages and other specialty processed
pork products. The Middlesboro company, which had sales of $70 million
2002, will now operate as a separate, stand-alone entity within Smithfields
John Morrell & Co.
MOREHEAD
- Morehead State
University has broken ground for a new $3 million space tracking system.
The tracking system will be located on a ridge top overlooking Eagle
Lake and will support research and radio frequency astrophysics and
satellite telecommunications. The centers antenna system will
be utilized to provide commercial satellite tracking services as well
as to investigate galactic occurrences such as black holes and neutron
stars. The new facility will also serve as a teaching and research
center for MSU students studying physics, astrophysics, satellite
telecommunications, pre-engineering and computer science. The center
is expected to be complete late next year.
MUHLENBERG COUNTY
- Peabody Coal
Company has announced that it is closing its Gibraltar surface mine
this month, having exhausted thecoal that can be profitably mined.
Though parent company Peabody Energy Corp. owns a number of mining
affiliates, the Gibraltar mine is the last active mine operated by
Peabody Coal Co., which was once the most prominent mining company
in Western Kentucky and was headquartered in Henderson, Kentucky in
the late 1980s. The shutdown will result in the loss of 71 jobs.
NEWPORT
- Shire Pharmaceuticals
Group plc has filed a lawsuit to prevent Barr Laboratories from introducing
a generic version of Adderall XR, Shires leading extended-release
medication for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). The
lawsuit triggers a stay of FDA approval of up to 30 months from Barrs
notice to allow the court to resolve the suit. Even if Barr receives
a final approval from the FDA, it cannot lawfully launch its generic
version before the earlier of expiration of the stay or a district
court decision in its favor. Shire Pharmaceuticals is headquartered
in Great Britain, but retains its U.S. headquarters in Newport.
RICHMOND
- Eastern Kentucky
Universitys College of Education has received a $2 million grant
from the Kentucky Educational Professional Standards Board to direct
a statewide effort to identify, develop and implement the infrastructure
required to create model teacher education programs across the Commonwealth.
EKU will serve as lead agent for a statewide consortium of higher
education (including state universities and private colleges) to improve
the quality, accessibility and transferability of educator preparation
coursework and professional development opportunities, and to streamline
articulation processes among educator preparation programs throughout
Kentucky.
SHEPHERDSVILLE
- AEC One Stop
Group is leasing a 168,000-square-foot warehouse and distribution
facility in Shepherdsville to handle distribution of the companys
extensive inventory of CDs, cassettes, videos, DVDs and video games.
The company is a division of Alliance Entertainment Corp., a Florida-based
business that is one of the nations largest home entertainment
product distribution companies. AEC expects to hire a staff of 85
workers and will begin operating out of the new facility in December.
STEAMS
- Outdoor Venture
Corp. has been awarded a $7.8 million contract to produce tents for
the U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force. Outdoor Venture, which employs approximately
100 workers in McCreary County, specializes in making tents, liners
and covers for the military.
WAYNE COUNTY
- P.J. Murphy Forest
Products is opening a facility in Wayne Countys EZ Industrial
Park, where the New Jersey-based company will manufacture wood by-products.
The facility is expected to open by the end of the year with an initial
staff of 10-15 employees. The Wayne County plant will be the second
Kentucky location for the company, which also has a plant in Bowling
Green.
WHITESBURG
- Earnest Cook
and Sons Mining has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after
suffering significant financial losses associated with the April collapse
of a coal silo at its Sapphire coal preparation plant. A statement
released by the company said that all mining, trucking and processing
operations would be continued during the reorganization process. Cook
and Sons is the largest private employer in Letcher County with approximately
400 employees.
WILLIAMSBURG
- Rains Gas and
Appliance Inc., which has been in business in Williamsburg for more
than 43 years, has merged with Knoxville-based Holston Gases Inc.,
a regional supplier of industrial, medical and propane gases with
locations throughout middle and east Tennessee and in Corbin, Kentucky.
Holston plans to expand the Rains operation which in the past
has sold only propane to include various other gases and equipment.
- Cumberland College
has been awarded $225,000 in federal funding for a new technology
center. The three-story facility will feature a complex of computer
labs as well as classrooms equipped with a smart board, projection
system and audio-visual controls for instruction.
STATE
- Fall enrollment
in the Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS) has
set another record, topping 71,000 students. This fall semesters
enrollment figure represents a 4.8 increase from the Fall 2002 enrollment.
KCTCS colleges have increased enrollment by 56 percent since fall
1998.
- Dinsmore &
Shohl LLP, which has law offices in Louisville and Lexington as well
as locations in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and West Virginia, has
merged with the Dayton firm of Killworth, Gottman, Hagan & Schaeff,
LLP. The merger creates one of the largest intellectual property departments
in the region with 39 attorneys practicing intellectual property law.
Killworth, Gottman, Hagan & Schaeff is recognized as a major
force in the Ohio marketplace, and is particularly admired for the
strength of its patents prosecution practice, said Clifford
A. Roe, Jr., managing partner for Dinsmore & Shohl.
- Kentuckys
seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose to 6.1 percent in July,
according to the Kentucky Department for Employment Services. The
states seasonally adjusted jobless rate was 5.9 percent in June
2003, and 5.5 percent in July 2002. The U.S. seasonally adjusted jobless
rate in July decreased to 6.2 percent from 6.4 percent in June.
- The Kentucky
chapter of the National Federation of Independent Business has announced
its endorsement of U.S. Representative Ernie Fletcher for governor
of Kentucky. The announcement represents the 6,000-member organizations
first-ever gubernatorial candidate endorsement. A statement released
by NFIB noted that Fletcher has an accumulative 97.5 percent NFIB
voting record in Congress. He has also been instrumental as the primary
sponsor of the NFIB-backed Association Health Plan legislation, which
would allow small-business owners to band together to purchase health
insurance at reduced rates.
- The U.S. Department
of Agricultures Farm Service Agency has made $5.4 million in
low-interest loans available to horse breeders affected by Mare Reproductive
Loss Syndrome (MRLS). MRLS struck the equine industry in Kentucky
in 2001, causing scores of mares in foal to abort their pregnancies
or deliver stillborn offspring. The cause of the disease is still
unknown, though many experts believe it to be associated with an unusually
high number of Eastern tent caterpillars that year, which were then
ingested by the horses. The parameters to qualify for the USDAs
loans are quite stringent, however: To qualify, breeders must have
reported a 30 percent loss in their foal crop (due to MRLS), be denied
credit from a lender and earn 70 percent of their gross income from
the horse industry.
- Kentucky has
been awarded $2.3 million in federal funding for the states
three National Scenic Byways. The money will be used by the Southern
and Eastern Kentucky Tourism Development Association for marketing,
interpretive planning, byway facilities and corridor management plans.
U.S. Representative Hal Rogers, who played a vital role in securing
the funding, noted that the National Scenic Byways designations help
attract more visitors and make it easier for them to explore
[the states] rich heritage. Kentucky highways that have
the official scenic byway designation include: The Country
Music Highway (between Greenup and Whitesburg), The Wilderness Road
Heritage Highway (between Berea and Middlesboro) and The Red River
Gorge Highway (between Stanton and Zachariah).
- Attorney General
Ben Chandler has filed suit against five of the nations largest
drug companies, accusing them of cheating Kentucky taxpayers and Kentuckians
on Medicare out of millions of dollars by reporting false drug pricing
data used to set reimbursement rates. The litigation alleges that
Abbott Laboratories, Inc., Dey, Inc., Schering-Plough Corporation,
Schering Corporation, and Warrick Pharmaceutical Corporation committed
fraud by intentionally misrepresenting the wholesale cost of their
drugs to the state, costing the state Medicaid program and Medicare
patients millions of dollars of unnecessary expenditures. For example,
the drug Albuterol, a common asthma drug, has a reported average wholesale
price of $21.41. However, evidence shows the actual cost of the drugs
to small pharmacies is only $3.75, a difference of over 570 percent.
This drug retails for only about $17.00. As a result of such inflated
prices, government health plans and consumers in Kentucky have grossly
overpaid for drugs. The total amount of damages is expected to be
in excess of $100 million. Kentucky is the 10th state in two years
to individually file suit against drug companies for the false reporting
of average wholesale prices of prescription drugs.
INDIANA
- Hillenbrand Industries
has announced that it will acquire Advanced Respiratory, Inc., a privately
held Minnesota company that specializes in equipment for respiratory
disease. The agreement calls for Batesville-based Hillenbrand to pay
$83 million for the company, plus up to $20 million more if Advanced
Respiratory meets certain revenue-growth targets. Hillenbrand President
Frederick Rockwood said the acquisition was part of a strategy to
expand the healthcare segment of the company, Hill-Rom. Hillenbrand
also owns Batesville Casket Company and Forethought Financial Services,
both of which serve the funeral services industry. Advanced Respiratory,
based in St. Paul, Minnesota, employs approximately 300 employees
throughout the U.S. and contracts with 500 independent respiratory
therapists for in-home training.
- Keller Manufacturing
is closing its furniture manufacturing plant and headquarters in Corydon
and will move the operations to the companys facility in nearby
New Salisbury. Costs associated with the aging Corydon facility, which
is nearly 110 years old, were a primary factor in the decision. In
addition, the New Salisbury location provides the company with addition
room for growth. Approximately 50-80 of the 360 jobs in Corydon are
expected to be affected by the consolidation.
OHIO
- Faced with sluggish
sales and high debt, the Formica Corp. is cutting jobs at its manufacturing
facilities and regional headquarters in Evendale, Ohio. The company,
which is in the midst of a reorganizing after filing for bankruptcy
in March 2002, is shifting production of its laminate countertop material
to plants in Quebec and California. With the most recent job cuts,
the employee group in Evendale will drop to around 400. At the time
the company filed for bankruptcy, there were 663 employees.
Procter
& Gamble has acquired a controlling share of interest in Wella
AG for $5.06 billion. P&Gs acquisition of the German hair
products giant represents the largest transaction in the Cincinnati
companys history.
TENNESSEE
- Restaurant Hospitality
magazine has named Lebanon-based Cracker Barrel as the Chain
of the Year. The award recognizes restaurant chains that are
financially stable, offer service and quality to customers and maintain
a high level of brand concept and appeal. For a company that
is more than three decades old, Cracker Barrel has stayed true to
its roots while remaining current and relevant. While others have
jumped on the current comfort food trend, Cracker Barrel has built
an empire on the kinds of food and atmosphere that makes people want
to come back again and again, said Michael Sanson, editor-in-chief
of the magazine. The Tennessee company was one of eight finalists
for the award.
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