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FAST LANE - March 2002


STATE
Kentucky Ranked Among Top Business Locations

A commitment to leadership development, an “enviable work ethic,” low energy costs and accessibility to transportation have earned Kentucky a top spot on Site Selection magazine’s annual ranking of states.

The magazine’s 2001 Governor’s Cup award went to the state of Illinois. Kentucky received second-place honors, followed by New York in the #3 position.

All 50 states were reviewed for the competition, with judging based on 10 criteria, including: total new and expanded facilities per one million population, total capital investment in new and expanded facilities per one million population, total new jobs created at new and expanded facilities per one million population in 2001, percentage of growth in new and expanded facilities from 2000 to 2001, number of top 100 metros in the annual ranking of top metros, number of top 100 small towns in the annual ranking of small towns and the number of 100-plus job projects per one million population in 2001.

A detailed report of the results is published in the magazine’s March edition and can also be seen online at www.siteselection.com. The March issue also includes a feature story about Kentucky and interviews with six Kentucky leaders from the manufacturing, construction, education and government sectors.

Site Selection is distributed to more than 45,000 business executives who are responsible for corporate site selection and facility planning around the globe.

STATE
Nominations Sought for Entrepreneur of the Year

Ernst & Young is seeking nominations for Southern Ohio/Kentucky-based entrepreneurs as part of its 16th Annual Entrepreneur of the Year Awards (EOY), a program honoring outstanding owners of fast-growing companies.

Eligibility for the EOY award is based on a number of factors, including:

  • Owners and managers must have primary responsibility for the growth of a company.
  • Their companies must have been operating for at least two years.
  • If the company is publicly held, the founder must be an active member in top management.

Award recipients are selected within a diverse range of categories and industry segments, including Technology/Communications, Retail, Real Estate/Construction, Health Sciences, Manufacturing, Service, Emerging and Master Entrepreneur of the Year. In addition, an award for Socially Responsible Entrepreneur of the Year has been established this year.

Winners from the Southern Ohio/Kentucky region will be eligible to compete for the National Entrepreneur of the Year award. National award recipients from past years include John Schnatter, founder of Louisville-based Papa John’s International Inc., Michael Dell of Dell Computers and Steve Case of America Online.

Nominations must be submitted by April 5, 2002 in order to be considered.

For more information, contact Kris Baker, Program Manager, Entrepreneur of the Year awards, Ernst & Young, Aegon Center, 400 W. Market Street, Suite 2100, Louisville, KY 40202 or call 502-585-6696. Information, including nomination forms, can also be found at the Ernst & Young Web site: www.ey.com/us/eoy.

STATE
New Partnership Promotes Kentucky Products Online

Consumers shopping by computer soon will be able to click directly from the Kentucky Department of Agriculture Web site to kentuckyvirtual.com to buy products from participating businesses over the Internet.

The department’s Web site, www.kyagr.com, offers businesses a service that enables them to build and post their own Web page at no charge. Now, businesses that have a free KDA Web page and also sell products on kentuckyvirtual.com will have the option of adding an icon that will take users directly from the Web page to that company’s section on kentuckyvirtual.com. Once there, customers can make purchases online.

Kentuckyvirtual.com’s client companies sell food products, crafts, furniture, jewelry, pottery and many other items.

“The Internet has become a powerful economic tool which can help us promote Kentucky products,” said Gov. Paul Patton. “This is a prime example of an innovative idea matching our traditions and heritage with technology.”

PADUCAH
Paducah to Serve as Base for Newly-Merged River Barge Line

The merger of two of the nation’s largest river barge lines is expected to be a significant plus for Paducah, which will serve as the company’s towing headquarters. Nashville-based Ingram Industries, has purchased Midland Enterprises for $230 million, forming a company second only in size to American Commercial Barge Lines.

The new company will possess approximately 4,200 barges and 140 towboats. Nashville-based Ingram currently employs some 400 people in the Paducah area. Midland, headquartered in Cincinnati, has about 350 in Paducah, which has long been considered a national hub for river shipping due to its location.

While the merger alone is not expected to change employment levels, company officials say that the industry is currently experiencing a shortage of deckhands. As a result, Ingram/Midland and American Commercial are anticipating needing at least 500 more people in the coming year.

DANVILLE
Danville Launches First Phase of Ambitious Redevelopment Project

Danville’s Third Street Development Corporation has contracted with a Louisville firm to launch the first phase of work required for the redevelopment of one of the city’s most prominent downtown structures.

Architectural Investments, Inc. (AI), which has expertise in redeveloping historic buildings for commercial use, has been hired to evaluate the Hub-Gilcher buildings from an engineering and rehabilitation standpoint. AI will also collaborate with the Third Street board on a financial study to determine prospective tenants, demand for space and prevailing rental rates.

The buildings involved in the project were constructed around 1917 and encompass approximately 85,000 square feet. The buildings were most recently were used by the Hub department store, which closed in 1995.

According to Donovan Rypkema, a national expert in economic redevelopment who visited Danville last year, the Hub-Gilcher project may well be the largest economic redevelopment project attempted by any small town in the U.S.

Redevelopment of the area has consistently been cited in local forums as the highest economic priority for Danville and Boyle County.

BEAVER DAM
Daicel Announces Plans to Build New Auto Parts Plant in Ohio Co.

Daicel Chemical Industries has announced plans to establish a new manufacturing operation in Beaver Dam that will produce airbag inflators, an essential component of automobile airbag systems.

A 65,000-square-foot plant is being planned for construction in the Bluegrass Crossings Business Centre Park in Ohio County. The new facility is expected to be operational by the end of the year, employing approximately 70 people and growing to as many as 130 by 2005.

The plant will have an annual capacity of 1.2 million inflator units for driver’s seat airbags with the capability of increasing production to 3.5 million units by 2008.

The new subsidiary, known as Daicel Safety Systems America, LLC, is a joint venture with Toyoda Gosei Co., Ltd., an automotive supplier that currently operates two plants in Kentucky.

LEXINGTON
UK Improves Research Ranking; Effort Put it Closer to Top 20 Goal

The University of Kentucky is making progress in its quest to attain status as a Top 20 research institution. UK has advanced two places in the annual rankings of the top 200 research universities, recently published by the National Science Foundation.

UK is now ranked 47th among all research universities and colleges, both public and private, up from the 49th spot.

The NSF rankings are based on research expenditures. UK reported $202,392,000 in expenditures for fiscal year 2000, a 16 percent increase over the previous year.

“Our faculty and staff are to be congratulated on their increased research productivity, reflected not only in these numbers but also in the record increases in new grants and contracts brought in over the past few years,” said Jim Boling, acting vice president for research.

CASEY COUNTY
Corn Needed for Fuel Ethanol Could Provide Farming Alternative

Two Casey County businessmen are hoping to help Kentucky farmers by building a fuel ethanol plant that would utilize 600,000 bushels of corn per year.

To achieve that goal, chemist Kevin Williams and his brother Kirby, a retired engineer, have applied for a grant through the state’s tobacco settlement money and other funds earmarked to offer alternatives to tobacco farming.

In addition to rejuvenating Kentucky’s family farms, the brothers say the plant’s product would also lessen the United States’ dependence on foreign oil.

After beginning with a demonstration version, the Williams want to eventually build a plant that could produce 1.5 million gallons of fuel-grade ethanol per year.

GEORGETOWN
Georgetown's New 'Smart Park' Designed to Diversify Economy

Georgetown’s efforts to diversify its economy have been furthered by the purchase of 52.02 acres off of U.S. 62 that will be used for its proposed “smart park.”

Concerned that the community was becoming too reliant on the presence of Toyota Motor Manufacturing – payroll taxes from the auto giant equate to approximately 70 percent of Georgetown’s operating budget - the city has set out to create an office/industrial park that will attract high-tech industries such as research laboratories and communication centers.

So far, the city has purchased nearly 400 acres at a cost of $4 million.

Toyota itself is helping promote the idea. The company is paying 50 percent of the proposed park’s land costs, up to $4 million.

Coincidentally, the announcement of the new “smart park” came within days of UK’s presentation of an honorary doctorate of engineering to Toyota CEO Fujo Cho. It was Cho’s responsibility to oversee the development and start-up of the Georgetown plant in the mid-1980s.

ASHLAND
AEI Resources Files for Chapter 11; Creditors Approve Prepackaged Plan

AEI Resources Holding Inc. has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy under a “prepackaged” plan that has the support of its major creditors.

AEI, also known as Addington Enterprises, will receive a $150 million loan to continue operations during the course of the bankruptcy process and will receive an additional $250 million loan when once the bankruptcy plan is approved by the court.

The failure of AEI’s bonding company, Frontier Insurance Co., is being blamed in large part for AEI’s troubles. Those problems were compounded by the events of September 11 and a slowing economy.

In a statement issued by the company, CEO Don Brown emphasized that the bankruptcy proceedings “are not expected to have any impact on daily operations” and that the company’s 4,000 employees would not be affected.

“Our mines and office will remain open and transactions will proceed as always,” Brown added.

AEI operates coal mines in the Appalachian region, Illinois and the Rocky Mountains. The majority of AEI’s employees are in Kentucky and West Virginia.

SHELBYVILLE
New Spanish-Language Directories Target Growing Hispanic Population

With Kentucky’s Hispanic population tripling between 1990 and 2000 to nearly 60,000, Bluegrass Telephone Directory is reaching out to that segment by publishing a Spanish-language business directory.

The Shelbyville company, which also produces The Blue Book Area Calling Directory, is planning to distribute La Conexion in both Louisville and Lexington this spring. The guides will be available at groceries, churches, restaurants as well as other locations that typically draw Hispanic customers.

In addition to ads highlighting area businesses, the guides will also feature information such as how to contact immigration offices, how to obtain a driver’s license and where to find healthcare providers and services.

If your company is interested in being included in the guides, contact Bluegrass Telephone Directory at 888-578-3765.

FORT MITCHELL
Northern Kentucky Landmark Hotel to Join the Villager Lodging Chain

The Drawbridge Inn and Convention Center, one of Northern Kentucky’s most well-known landmarks, has become part of the Villager hotel chain after being independently owned and operated for more than 30 years.

As part of the change, the name will be altered slightly to become Drawbridge Villager Premier Hotel and the 485-room hotel will undergo some renovations and updates, but will continue to be owned and managed by Jerry Deters, the original owner and manager of the Drawbridge.

Deters has said that the move to join a national chain gives the hotel complex more exposure. The Villager chain is owned by Cendant Corporation, one of the world’s largest hotel franchises.

LEXINGTON
Health Providers and Insurers Team to Improve Industry and Economy

Lexington healthcare providers have partnered with insurers to form a new organization designed to promote both the well-being of local residents and the area healthcare industry.

The new Lexington Health United organization includes most of the area’s hospitals and health-insurance providers along with groups such as the Greater Lexington Chamber of Commerce and Lexington United. The organization plans to promote comprehensive community wellness programs and develop areas of common interest that unite the providers in a single cause. Smoking cessation has been identified as its first key community wellness program.

Healthcare plays a major role in the Lexington economy, with health-related jobs numbering more than 23,500 in 1997. Accordingly, Lexington Health United is now studying the industry’s effect on the area’s economy. The organization is also working to identify sources of venture capital to encourage start-up health-related businesses in the Bluegrass.

BOWLING GREEN
Corvette Enthusiasts to Converge in Kentucky for Annual Gathering

Hundreds of Corvette enthusiasts will converge on Bowling Green in May for the annual “Gathering,” an event sponsored by the National Corvette Museum

The three-day event, scheduled for May 9-11, brings together Corvette owners, engineers and C4 Corvette specialists with road tours, technical seminars and tours of the GM Corvette Assembly plant. This year’s gathering will feature a two-day “Corvette School” seminar, led by C4 Corvette Specialist Gordon Killebrew. A full weekend of social events is slated as well, including a barbecue, speed events at Beech Bend Raceway Park, and an auction to benefit the museum.

Registration information and event details are available at www.corvettemuseum.com or by calling 800-53-VETTE.

LOUISVILLE
Thousands Expected in Louisville for Mid-America Trucking Show

LEXINGTON
Four University Alumni Inducted into Gatton College Hall of Fame

Two international businessmen, the chairman of a leading accounting firm and a prominent Kentucky banker are the newest inductees into UK’s Gatton College of Business and Economics Hall of Fame.

Bambang Suibyo, former finance minister of Indonesia, earned his Doctor of Business Administration degree in accounting from the Gatton College in 1985. He is currently chairman of the government’s task force for fiscal decentralization.

Zaki Baridwan was awarded his master’s degree in accounting at UK in 1984 and his doctorate in 1989. Now president director of Bank BNI in Indonesia, Baridwan presides over more than 650 bank branches and an employee group numbering more than 15,000.

After earning his MBA from UK in 1973, Randolph C. Blazer served in the U.S. Army, where he was responsible for helping install the force’s first computerized personnel system. Blazer is now chairman and chief executive officer of KPMG Consulting, Inc.

O. Trigg Dorton received his bachelor’s degree in commerce from UK in 1942 and eventually succeeded his father as president of the Second National Bank (now Citizens National) in Paintsville. Dorton, now retired, remains highly involved in professional, civic and charitable organizations throughout the state.

RUSSELL COUNTY
Hitachi Cable Auto Parts Plant to Bring 100 Jobs to Russell Co.

Hitachi Cable Indiana (HCI) has announced plans to expand its automobile parts operation with a new plant, to be located in Russell County, Kentucky.

HCI’s new Kentucky plant will provide fluid movement systems – hoses, tubes, fittings and connector assemblies - directly to automotive companies as well as to other suppliers and business partners.

The new 50,000-square-foot production facility will be located in the Russell Springs Business Park and is expected to be operational by mid-year.

Company officials anticipate hiring approximately 100 people in the first year, based on current business projections.

 


Business Briefs

BARBOURVILLE

  • The James Graham Brown Foundation of Louisville has provided a $300,000 grant to Union College that will be used to modernize the residence halls and install a new dormitory security system.

BARDSTOWN

  • Heaven Hill Distilleries Inc. has expanded its brand portfolio with the purchase of Whaler’s Rum from the Levecke Corporation of California. The Hawaiian-style, premium-label brand features an array of tastes, including vanilla, spiced and coconut flavors. Rums, particularly the flavored varieties, have gained popularity in recent years and now hold nearly 12 percent of the U.S. market.
  • Johnan America Inc. has announced plans for a new 25,000-square-foot manufacturing plant in Bardstown’s Wilson Industrial Park, where it will produce components for the automotive industry. The company, a subsidiary of Johnan Seisakusho Company Ltd. of Japan, has had a limited-production facility in Bardstown since 1998. With the new facility, Johan expects to create some 40 new jobs within the first two years of operation, with up to 200 jobs possible in the future.

BRACKEN COUNTY

  • Northern Kentucky Family Health has broken ground for a new $1 million medical center. The 6,000-square-foot healthcare facility, located at the intersection of Kentucky 9 and Kentucky 19, will serve patients Bracken, Robertson, Mason, Harrison and Pendleton counties.

CAMPBELLSVILLE

  • Campbellsville University’s board of trustees has approved plans for a $1.4 million construction and renovation project involving the school’s athletic facilities. The new 12,000-square-foot O.D. and Bessie Hawkins Athletic Field House will include two classrooms, a weight room, football and baseball locker rooms, and six offices. The project also calls for the addition of a 5,500-square-foot wellness and athletic training center in the J.K. Powell Athletic Center, which currently houses the gymnasium and aquatic center, faculty offices and classrooms.

CATLETTSBURG

  • Marathon Ashland Petroleum LLC has selected C&I Engineering of Louisville to provide engineering, procurement and construction support services for the offsite portion of expansion at the company’s Catlettsburg refinery.

CAVE CITY

  • Mammoth Cave, one of Kentucky’s premier tourist attractions, is slated to undergo nearly $6 million worth of infrastructure improvements in the coming years. Among the projects scheduled are the renovation of the park’s visitor center, construction of a bike trail from the park’s headquarters to Park City, updating the cave’s lighting system, and repaving some roads. As one of 20 national parks to be selected as a Center for Environmental Innovation, the park’s projects will be planned using environmentally friendly solutions or technology.

DANVILLE

  • Vacuum cleaners produced by the Matsushita plant in Danville have been ranked #1 in the latest assessment by Consumer Reports. Built for Sears under the Kenmore brand name, the Matsushita-made products topped the list in both the upright and canister categories. The vacuums are designed, produced and tested at the Danville facility.

ELIZABETHTOWN

  • Fort Knox National Company (FKNC) has been selected to provide customer service representative-assisted electronic payment services for National Enterprise System, a national collection agency. FKNC allows collectors to accept payments from customers by direct debit of their checking or savings accounts.
  • Dana Corporation has announced plans to build a $2.8 million addition to its Elizabethtown plant, where it produces frames for Ford Motor Company. The new 42,000-square-foot addition will be utilized for painting frames with a special process known as electrocoating. As a result of problems at Ford, Dana had recently announced that it would be laying off approximately 80 of its 1,000 Elizabethtown workers. However, the company has been able to reduce that number to 40.

ERLANGER

  • Gap Inc. has announced that it will be closing its Banana Republic distribution center in August. The closure will affect some 250 employees, but Gap officials anticipate that many of the jobs will be absorbed by the company’s five other distribution centers in the Northern Kentucky area or eliminated through attrition. Employees who are not able to secure positions either inside or outside of the company will be offered transition packages.
  • In response to customer complaints citing problems with oil-sludge build-up in models manufactured between 1997 and 2001, Toyota Motor Manufacturing has sent letters to three million Toyota and Lexus owners offering to make repairs related to the problem. Still, the company insists that it is “not aware of any cases…in properly maintained engines” and emphasizes that “engine oil gelling” is the result of not changing the oil at the recommended intervals.

FORT MITCHELL

  • Huff Realty has merged with Columbus, Ohio-based HER Realtors to form Real Living, Inc., which in turn has acquired Cleveland-based Realty One, the largest real estate firm in Ohio. The newly-formed company now ranks as the third-largest privately-held real estate company in the nation, with sales of more than $5 billion and a network that stretches from Northern Kentucky to the Great Lakes region.

GEORGETOWN

  • Carolina Pottery, which closed its store at Georgetown’s Factory Stores of America Outlet last year, has announced plans to reopen. The store shut down last year when the chain’s owner went bankrupt. Tim Marsh, the original owner of Carolina Pottery, has purchased the company’s remaining assets and is reopening stores across the country.

GLASGOW

  • Western Kentucky University and the Kentucky Community and Technical College System have teamed to open a new $9 million facility that provides students the opportunity to take courses and earn degrees through Western and Bowling Green Technical College. Located on a 30-acre site next to Barren County High School, the facility will offer extended education and job training for students in Barren, Adair, Allen, Clinton, Cumberland, Metcalfe, Monroe and Russell counties.

GRAVES COUNTY

  • Plans are moving forward for a new industrial park to be built near U.S. 45 in the northern part of Graves County. As of mid-February, sale agreements had been secured from nearly two-thirds of the 16 landowners involved. Some $9 million in federal funding will be put towards the $39 million price tag for the first phase of the project. Funding is also being sought from the Purchase Area Community Reuse Organization, the state, and other sources. If fully developed, the industrial park will include approximately 3,000 acres and could bring up to 7,000 new jobs to the area.

HARDIN COUNTY

  • Kentucky is one of the finalists in Hyundai Motor Company’s search for a site on which to build its first U.S. manufacturing plant. The Korean-based company is considering a 1,500-acre site in Glendale for the $1 billion facility, which will initially employ approximately 2,000 workers. The company is expected to announce its final decision this summer.

HOPKINSVILLE

  • A new Wal-Mart distribution center is slated to open in Hopkinsville this spring, bringing up to 600 new jobs to the area.

LEXINGTON

  • GRW Engineers, Inc., a Lexington engineering, architectural, planning and mapping firm, has acquired Elrod-Dunson, Inc., a 22-person engineering firm. The wholly-owned subsidiary, GRW Elrod Dunson, Inc. will have offices in Nashville and Knoxville, Tennessee.
  • Right Place Media has been awarded media buying responsibilities for Sinclair Broadcast Group’s television stations in Cincinnati (WSTR-WB), Lexington (WKDY-FOX), Nashville (WZTV-FOX, WUXP-UPN), and Birmingham (WTTO/WDBB-WB, WABM-UPN). Account billings are expected to be between $500,000 and $750,000.

LOUISVILLE

  • Two Weber Shandwick executives have purchased the public relations firm and have renamed the company New West LLC. New owners Rebecca Simpson (who will serve as New West’s CEO) and Tom Howell (chief operating officer) say the company will continue to be an affiliate of the Weber Shandwick system. The firm employs approximately 30 people and has a client list that includes Brown & Williamson, General Electric, and Tricon.
  • With passenger counts falling following the events of September 11, the Regional Airport Authority of Louisville and Jefferson County is deferring a number of previously planned projects, including runway extensions and a terminal renovation. A hiring freeze, reduction in employee travel, and a hold on equipment purchases have also been put in place.
  • A company restructuring leaves Louisville’s Worthington Steel plant operating, but will result in the loss of eight salaried positions. The Ohio-based company is shutting down plants in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Virginia and Oklahoma and dissolving partnerships in Brazil. Though the Louisville plant is small, employing only 70 people, it is a significant producer of steel for Southern auto assembly plants.
  • Louisville-based Sani-Dryer LLC has inked a deal with Winn-Dixie to install its cart-sanitizing system at the grocery chain’s Blankenbaker Lane store. Sani-Dryer’s system sanitizes and dries up to 3,000 shopping carts per day, eliminating germs and viruses transferred from either food or previous users. The Sani-Dryer system is already in place at a Cincinnati Thriftway store and is also being used by Superquinn stores, a chain of 19 supermarkets in Ireland.
  • United Graphics Printing Group has been awarded a three-year, $5.1 million contract with Norton Healthcare to provide its entire forms business along with other miscellaneous printing jobs.
  • The Presnell Group, an architectural, engineering and construction company, has changed its name to Qk4. The new name, which was the brainchild of Red7e advertising and the Guthrie/Mayes public relations firm, draws from the words “quintessential knowledge” and the four elements of earth, air, fire and water.
  • Creative Alliance Inc. signed an agreement with Yorkshire Global Restaurants to develop all print, point-of-purchase materials and merchandising for the Lexington-based company. Yorkshire is the parent company of Long John Silver’s and A&W Restaurants.

MARION

  • Martin’s Tire Recovery has announced plans to build a new manufacturing facility that will recycle rubber tires into products such as mulch, mats, floor tiles, and rubber chips. Rubber mulch is becoming an increasingly popular alternative to wood mulch, offering more durability and efficiency. Owner Ken Martin has not yet determined the location of the new plant, which will require approximately 50,000 square feet and is expected to employ about 60 new workers. Martin’s current operation, which employs 40 people, shreds used tires and sells the material to power companies for use as fuel.
  • Par-4 Plastics has purchased the former Tyco manufacturing facility for $650,000. Tyco, which closed its 113,000-square-foot electro-mechanical manufacturing plant in 2000, at one point had the facility on the market for $2 million. However, in a purchase plan put together by the Crittenden County Economic Development Corporation, Tyco agreed to a selling price of $1,650,000 in which it will receive a $1 million tax-deductible credit for donating the remainder to the city. As part of the plan, Par-4 then agreed to pay the city the $650,000 for the building. In addition, Par-4 will be exempt from city property taxes on the building and the 24 acres on which it sits for the next five years. Par-4, which produces custom injection and molded plastic products, plans to utilize the facility for future expansion.

MAYFIELD

  • Continental General Tire has been named as the exclusive supplier for Ford Motor Company’s 2003 Expedition sports utility vehicle. To meet the demand of that contract, Continental has announced that it will be hiring approximately 65 new workers in order to increase production to some 20,000 tires per day.

MAYSVILLE

  • Howard Publications, owner of the Maysville Ledger-Independent newspaper, has been acquired by Lee Enterprises Inc. for $694 million. The deal involves newspapers in 10 states, including Kentucky.

MURRAY

  • Mattel Inc. has informed the remaining employees at its Murray plant that the facility will be shut down in June, rather than the previously announced October date. The company announced last April that it was closing the plant – the last of its U.S. manufacturing facilities – and moving the operations to Mexico, putting approximately 1,000 Kentuckians out of work. Local economic development officials are now working to bring other businesses to the area to fill the vacant space.

NEWPORT

  • The Carnegie Library is offering to sell its building in downtown Newport to the city for $500,000, under the condition that it remain in public use. The city, which is applying for a $400,000 federal Renaissance grant to assist in the purchase, wants to use the 100-year-old building to house museums highlighting the region and life along the Ohio River.

NICHOLASVILLE

  • Computrex Inc., a freight-payment and audit company in operation since 1973, is in the midst of Chapter 7 bankruptcy following claims filed in court by shippers who say the company owes as much as $25 million to carriers.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY

  • Citing lower hotel occupancy rates resulting from a sluggish economy, the Comair strike, and an overall reduction in tourism after September 11, The Northern Kentucky Convention and Visitors Bureau is seeking a 1.06 percent increase in the area’s hotel/motel tax. The current tax rate is 10.24; an increase would boost that figure to 11.30 percent, adding approximately $1.60 to the cost of the average stay at an average hotel room rate. In order for the measure to be implemented, the issue would require approval from Boone, Campbell and Kenton counties.

PADUCAH

  • BellSouth’s Paducah call center is slated to close later this year as part of a regional consolidation that will merge 75 sales, service and collection centers in 28. The closure will result in the loss of 87 jobs. As part of consolidation, the Louisville call center will add another 130 positions, bringing its overall employment to approximately 400. Paducah employees will have the option to transfer to Louisville or apply for other BellSouth jobs in the Paducah area.

RICHMOND

  • Nichidai America Corporation has purchased 10 acres in the Richmond Industrial Park South II with plans to built a 28,000-square-foot manufacturing facility to produce forged automotive parts. The new plant, which will represent the company’s first U.S. manufacturing facility, is expected to be operational early next year and employ approximately 30 people.

SOMERSET

  • Plaid Clothing, formerly known as Palm Beach, has announced that it is closing its Somerset facility at the end of the month. The plant, owned by Intercontinental Branded Apparel, produced men’s suits and coats.

WESTERN KENTUCKY

  • The Sierra Club is moving to sue four Western Kentucky chicken farms, claiming that the facilities produce a toxic level of ammonia. The farms – located in Webster, McLean and Hopkins counties – are contracted by Arkansas-based Tyson Foods to supply chickens for its processing plant in Henderson County. Tyson officials maintain that there are no comprehensive studies to measure how much ammonia is released from such facilities and that the Environmental Protection Agency has no guidelines as to how to report agriculturally-produced ammonia.

WHITLEY CITY

  • Long John Silver’s has teamed up with Pizza Inn to open a new co-branded restaurant in Whitley City. The 3,200-square-foot, freestanding restaurant, which will be operated by franchisee Kirby Cordell, represents the first such pairing for the two chains. Pizza Inn, a Texas company, has some 450 restaurants in 21 states. Lexington-based Long John Silver’s operates more than 2,300 stores in the U.S. and abroad.

WINCHESTER

  • Fire has damaged three buildings at Fort Boonesborough, a popular tourist site near Winchester. Fortunately, recent repair work on some of the buildings had required that many of the more valuable items, such as a portrait of Daniel Boone, be removed, thus sparing them from any fire or water damage. The fort is expected to open as usual on April 1.
  • Ale-8-One, the Winchester soft-drink company that enjoys an avid customer base throughout the Central Kentucky region, has signed an agreement with Coca-Cola Enterprises that will allow Coca-Cola to distribute the ginger-based drink in 61 Kentucky counties as well as markets in Ohio and Indiana. Ale-8 is currently available only within a 60-mile radius of Winchester. The new distribution plan will take effect in April.

STATE

  • Five Kentucky companies are among those featured on Forbes’ Platinum 400 list, a compilation recognizing the best of the nation’s large companies. The companies named to the Platnum 400 represent those that have achieved long- and short-term growth and return on capital. This list is culled from some 1,000 companies that have at least $1 billion in annual revenues. The Kentucky companies selected for the list were: Lexmark International (#52), Genlyte Group Inc. (#142), Brown-Forman Corp. (#280), Ashland Inc. (#354) and Toyota Motor Manufacturing NA (#361).
  • Kentucky farmers are being urged to participate in the 2001 Agricultural Resource Management survey, a study that will provide vital statistics about the economic condition of production agriculture. Data collected from Kentucky producers will be the last financial picture presented to Congress as they begin work on the next Farm Bill and will serve as a resource when policymakers determine federal assistance. For more information, visit www.usda.gov/nass or call 800-928-5277.


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