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FAST LANE - May
2003
STATE
Regional Cooperation is Key to Knowledge Economy
The
key to building the Ohio Valley into a major player in the knowledge
economy hinges on regional cooperation, according to the experts at
a recent conference sponsored by the Ohio Valley Affiliates for Life
Sciences (OVALS).
OVALS is an alliance
formed by four of the areas major research universities - the
University of Cincinnati, the University of Kentucky, the University
of Louisville, and Wright State University. The alliance was formed
in an effort to reshape traditional approaches to economic development
by advancing their research in life sciences while working to attract
life science enterprises to both states. The collaborative approach
represents a sharp shift away from economic development efforts that
place states in competing roles.
Last months
conference, entitled Life Sciences without Boundaries: Bridges
to Collaboration, focused on the significance of taking a new
direction.
In addressing the
audience of more than 200 scientists, university administrators and
economic development officials, Donald Harrison, senior vice president
emeritus at the University of Cincinnati, noted that the region as a
whole already has much of what is needed to build a knowledge-based
economy: biotechnology research, drug-design expertise, investment money
and lawyers specializing in intellectual property rights. What is critical
to realize, Harrison continued, is that not all of those components
will necessarily be found in one city.
Among the four OVALS
institutions are four colleges of medicine, two colleges of pharmacy,
two colleges of dentistry and one college of agriculture, along with
a host of faculty in biology, chemistry and other scientific fields
related to the life sciences. Annually, they collectively attract more
than $500 million in extramural research funding.
We need to
recognize that regional cooperation is necessary for us to become a
national player in this area, Harrison emphasized.
In addition to the
OVALS universities, conference sponsors included BIO/START, CincyTech
USA, Dayton Development Coalition, Health Enterprises Network, Lexington
United, Battelle Memorial Institute, BHDP Architecture, Emerging Concepts
Inc., Frost Brown Todd, Shire US Inc., OMERIS, and Sentron Medical Inc.
STATE
Venture Capital Fund Invests $40M in Tri-State Area
Fort Washington
Capital Partners has raised $40 million for a new fund created to drive
investment in early-stage venture capital opportunities in the northern
Kentucky, central and southwestern Ohio, and southeastern Indiana region.
The Tri-State Growth
Capital Fund I, L.P. will support entrepreneurs and new business growth
in the areas of life sciences, information technology and advanced manufacturing,
paving the way for the creation of more venture capital firms in the
region. The goal is to invest in regional and national venture firms
committed to evaluating investments in companies that will benefit the
tri-state area.
The funds
target markets include Cincinnati, Columbus and Dayton, Ohio; Indianapolis;
and Louisville and Lexington, Ky.
Fort Washington
is among a small number of firms to successfully complete fundraising
for a regional fund in todays difficult economic environment.
According to Venture Economics, the national fundraising environment
has seen a steady decline in the size of venture funds. Net venture
capital fundraising totaled $14.7 billion in 2002, compared to $64.3
billion in 2001 and $157 billion in 2000.
The Tri-State Fund
was established with investments from The Procter & Gamble Company,
Fifth Third Bancorp, Convergys Corporation, The Western and Southern
Life Insurance Company, E.W. Scripps Company, Ashland Inc., Cincinnati
Childrens Hospital Medical Center, University of Cincinnati, Castellini
Management Company and GE Aircraft Engines.
BOONE COUNTY
Toebben Donates Land for New Gateway Campus
The Toebben Companies,
a Northern Kentucky building and development firm, has donated land
and improvements valued at $650,000 to Gateway Community and Technical
College, representing the largest gift ever received by the college.
Gateway is part of the Kentucky Community and Technical College System
(KCTCS).
The land is located
off Sam Neace Boulevard and will become the main entrance to the colleges
new campus. Named Technology Way, the foundation for the roadway was
developed by Toebben Construction Company and includes the necessary
infrastructure for the water, sewer, gas and electricity that will supply
the campus. Gateway will begin construction for the first phase of its
new campus this year with a 30,000-s.f. facility designed to serve the
manufacturing industries in the area.
This donation
is a clear indication of the Toebben familys focus on post-secondary
education and their supportive role in expanding access opportunities
for the college, said G. Edward Hughes, Gateways president
and CEO.
The Toebben
family has great interest in ensuring that Northern Kentucky has a well-educated
technical work force for the future growth of business and industry,
said Bill Toebben, president of Toebben Companies. We hope our
gift can help facilitate an improved quality of education for future
generations, said Toebben.
LOUISVILLE
Alzheimer's Center Incorporates Latest Memory Disorder
Research
The
Episcopal Church Home in Louisville has opened a new long-term care
center for individuals with Alzheimers and other memory disorders
that incorporate the latest research in terms of both the facilitys
design and operation.
The Memory Care
Center of Excellence is the first long-term care community in a three-state
region to incorporate whats known as The Eden Alternative
on a large scale. As such, the facility features small groups of apartments
as opposed to long hallways that are clustered around
community living rooms and family-style kitchens. A village mall
brings many aspects of the outside world including a pet shop,
florist, soda fountain, beauty salon, town hall and business center
to residents who have difficulty navigating the real world as
a result of memory impairments. The entrance to each home bears a different
architectural style to help residents recognize their surroundings.
The new center,
which will house 52 residents, will also serve as a research and testing
site for both the University of Louisville and the University of Kentucky.
The Memory
Care Center will be a living laboratory for students delving into the
quality-of-life issues relating to the care of people with Alzheimers,
said Graham Rowles, Ph.D., director of UKs doctoral program in
gerontology and associate director of UKs Sanders-Brown Center
on Aging. The Center will also serve as one of four in-depth sites for
a major study for which UK recently received a $1.2 million grant from
the Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research.
PADUCAH
Design Work Set to Begin on Uranium Waste Recycling
Plant
Design work is expected
to begin this summer for a new plant that will recycle waste from the
Paducah Gaseous Diffusion facility.
The project will
call for as many as 400 workers during the construction phase. Once
it is operational, approximately 160 people will be needed to staff
the facility, with jobs ranging from maintenance and operations to engineering
and environmental safety.
When complete, the
plant will convert 1,500 to 1,700 cylinders of depleted uranium hexafluoride
(UF6), a radioactive material left over from enriching uranium for nuclear
fuel, into uranium oxide and hydrogen fluoride (HF). The conversion
process keeps the UF6 from reacting with moisture and emitting volatile
HF.
If the work goes
according to schedule, the conversion plant is expected to be operational
by March 2006.
LOUISVILLE
Louisville Market to See Growth in Technology and
Healthcare Jobs
Statistics from
a recent study show that the jobs with the fastest growth rate in Louisville
over the next several years will be in technology and healthcare
areas that require high levels of skill and education.
The Kentuckiana
Occupational Outlook Study was conducted by KentuckianaWorks, the workforce
development agency of the Louisville Metro Government.
The information
is included on a new Web site, www.kentuckianaworks.org, that offers
information on more than 700 occupations in the 24-county region as
well as job trends and the education and skills required to compete
for those positions. Also featured is information on average wage rates
and benefits and links to related occupations.
LOUISVILLE
Norton Donations Allows College to Double Imaging
Technology Program
Norton Healthcare
has committed to a $859,943 donation to Jefferson Community College
that will allow the college to significantly expand its radiography
and nuclear medicine program. Norton will provide $429,832 for faculty
and supplies, and pay $233,101 in space rental at Norton Healthcare
Pavilion to house the JCC program. Renovation of the Pavilion will create
two classrooms, a hot lab and two radiographic rooms for students to
use for clinical and didactic learning experiences.
According to a recent
study, the need for radiologic technologists in the Louisville region,
who currently earn a median salary of $35,360, is expected to rise by
23 percent by 2010. The need for nuclear medicine technologists (median
salary: $36,920) in the area is expected to grow by 22 percent.
LEXINGTON
Lexington Moves Forward with Development of 'College
Town'
Demolition of a
former tobacco warehouse in downtown Lexington has cleared the way for
developers to begin construction on a group of upscale townhouses and
apartments that city officials are hoping will revitalize the area.
The development is the first step in a plan to bolster housing and retail
in the area known as College Town, which is sandwiched between Lexingtons
downtown business district and the University of Kentucky campus.
Developers Bill
Lear and Jim Phelps have been working with surrounding neighborhoods
and UKs College of Architecture to design plans that will fit
in with the historic areas existing homes and buildings. The new
homes are expected to range in size from 2,000- to 3,000-s.f. and will
be priced between $250,000 and $500,000.
Nearby, another
developer, Rob McGoodwin, is nearing the final stages of a warehouse
renovation that will feature 86 loft-style apartments. Demand has been
strong enough that McGoodwin is now in the process of seeking a zone
change to launch another such project.
Also in the works
is UKs commitment to build a $8 million professional development
center for business executives on downtown property that once housed
the L.R. Cooke car dealership.
The Lexington Downtown
Development Authority, headed by Harold Tate, is currently in the process
of raising funds to support a proposed downtown master plan that calls
for identifying potential uses for other vacant downtown properties.
STATE
Grant Program Provides Horticulture Groups with Funds
for Advertising
A
new state grant program is now available to Kentucky fruit, vegetable,
greenhouse and nursery producers to help advertise and promote their
products.
Cost-share funds
through the Kentucky Department of Agriculture are part of a $2.4 million
grant awarded to the Kentucky Horticulture Council by the states
Agricultural Development Board. A portion of the funds is appropriated
from the states share of master tobacco settlement money.
Cost-share matches
of up to $2,000 per funding round will be awarded on a competitive basis
with priority being given to producer associations, cooperatives and
projects that impact multiple farms.
Applicants must
provide at least a 50 percent cash match for all proposed advertising.
For more information,
visit the KDA Web site at www.kyagr.com
or contact Kim Mullins of the Division of Value-Added Horticulture and
Aquaculture at (502) 564-7274 or kim.mullins@kyagr.com.
LOUISVILLE
Bellarmine, bCatalyst Partnership Fosters Entrepreneurial
Ventures
Bellarmine University
and bCatalyst have joined to establish a full-time campus in downtown
Louisville as part of a new alliance between the school's Center for
eWorld Education and the business accelerator.
In announcing the
plans, Bellarmine officials explained that the eWorld Campus
will serve to foster innovation and risk-taking within Bellarmine similar
to the way that bCatalyst has done for early-stage entrepreneurial ventures
in Louisville.
Though
Bellarmine launched eWorld Campus several years ago, the plans to move
into the bCatalyst building in downtown Louisville reflects a shift
in focus from that of an education entity focusing on technology to
an educational incubator, where student and faculty entrepreneurial
ventures will be given an opportunity to grow.
eWorld has already
launched a new masters degree program in applied information technology
(MAIT), which began last August with 17 students from companies such
as Humana and Aegon. Those students are currently creating the technology
infrastructure for a local physician and a former Bellarmine MBA student.
Plans call for a
second class of approximately 16 students in the MAIT program this coming
August.
For students, bCatalyst
provides a real life lab environment in which to learn the
intricacies of entrepreneurship. On the flip side, early stage companies
at bCatalyst will be able to draw upon the expertise of Bellarmine faculty
and participate with them in conducting research projects.
RICHMOND
EKU's New Business and Technology Center Will House
Innovation Center
Eastern Kentucky
University is set to begin construction on a new $14 million business
and technology center that is expected to open in the fall of 2005.
The 78,000-s.f.
facility will house part of the universitys College of Business
& Technology as well as offices for EKUs Small Business Development
Center and Center for Economic Development, Entrepreneurship and Technology,
which includes an Innovation and Commercialization Center.
The Innovation and
Commercialization Center, part of the Commonwealth's New Economy initiative,
includes a business incubator that will specialize in the development
of new products and services related to safety and security. The College
of Business & Technology will partner with EKU1s College of Justice
& Safety in the development of those products and services.
LOUISVILLE
Yum! Brands Announces $500,000 Commitment to New Ali
Center

STATE
Nomination Search Is Under Way for 2003 Women's Leadership
Award
Women Leading Kentucky,
a non-profit organization established in 1999 to advance business and
leadership opportunities for Kentucky women and provide college scholarships
for young women leaders, has announced its search for nominations for
the 2003 Martha Layne Collins Leadership Award.
The award is presented
each year to a Kentucky woman who embodies the following ideals:
- Outstanding,
exemplary leadership ability
- Contributions
that enhance the image of Kentucky
- A history of
serving as a role model for other Kentucky women
- A commitment
to continuous learning
- Values of loyalty,
perseverance and sensitivity to diversity
- A commitment
to Kentuckys people, their economic sufficiency and advancement
The deadline for
nominations is June 1, 2003. To nominate someone, send their name, address
(including ZIP), and a phone number or e-mail address to jhollow@womenleadingky.com
or to Women Leading Kentucky, P.O. Box 961, Lexington, KY 40588. All
nominees will be contacted and asked to submit information that relates
to the above criteria.
Finalists will be
recognized at the 4th Annual Womens Business and Leadership Conference
on September 16th, at the Radisson Hotel in Lexington. This years
conference theme is Courage, Ethics, Action: The New Face of Leadership
and features Tori Murden McClure, the first American to row the Atlantic
Ocean solo; author Mary Foley; Julie Anixter, director of strategy for
Tom Peters WOW!; and former University of Kentucky basketball star Valerie
Still. The conference will also offer opportunities for networking,
interactive workshops and up-to-date business information.
For more information,
visit www.womenleadingky.com.
STATE
BB&T Insurance Services Acquires Cromwell and
Old Colony Agencies
Cromwell Insurance
Agency in Lexington and Old Colony Insurance Service Inc. in Louisville
have announced plans to merge with BB&T Insurance Services, a Raleigh-based
company that is the largest retail broker in the Carolinas and Virginia
and the 10th largest in the country.
The merger gives
BB&T entry into Kentucky and a significant share of the Commonwealths
valuable equine insurance business.
Old Colony, one
of Louisvilles largest independent insurance agencies, expanded
into the equine insurance business in 2000 by merging its Lexington
office with the Lexington location of Cromwell Insurance, one of the
oldest and best-known blood stock insurance agencies in Kentucky. Old
Colony and Cromwell have 75 employees combined and more than $150 million
in annual premium volume.
Old Colony founder
and CEO Daniel McMahan will manage BB&Ts Kentucky insurance
operation. Cromwell President Tom Ludt will manage BB&Ts Lexington
insurance operation. The Old Colony and Cromwell agencies will continue
to operate with their combined group of employees in their current locations
under the names BB&T-Old Colony Insurance and BB&T-Cromwell
Insurance.
LOUISVILLE
Greater Louisville, Humana Team to Offer Small-Business
Insurance
Greater Louisville
Inc., the metro chamber of commerce and economic development agency
for the Louisville, Kentucky Southern Indiana Metropolitan area,
has announced a new health insurance association plan through Humana,
created exclusively for member businesses with two to 50 employees.
The
program came about after a GLI survey conducted in 2000 that indicated
that nearly 70 percent of small business owners in the area considered
healthcare costs to be a primary threat to their company.
That response prompted
GLI to get Louisville-based Humana involved to come up with a solution.
The new program, called GLI HealthSolutions, offers GLI member companies
the choice of six Humana health plans, two of which are only available
to GLI members, at reduced prices.
The plans are being
sold through insurance agents and are now available in Jefferson, Bullitt,
Oldham, Shelby, Henry, Hardin and Meade counties in Kentucky, as well
as Floyd, Harrison, Scott and Washington counties in southern Indiana.
OHIO
Procter & Gamble to Invest $30M in Empowerment
Zone Company
Procter & Gamble
has announced plans to invest $30 million in a minority-owned company
that will provide bottling services for P&Gs beauty care division.
As a result of the
three-year agreement, Valu-Pac, a subsidiary of CDO Technologies Inc.
of Dayton, will build a 70,000-s.f. plant in the citys Bond Hill
area. Bond Hill is one of nine economically distressed neighborhoods
that lie within Cincinnatis empowerment zone, a federal designation
that allows businesses locating within such zones to qualify for a variety
of grants, loans and tax incentives.
Procter & Gamble
is the first major corporation in the city to commit to an empowerment
zone project, giving the program a huge boost. City leaders have expressed
optimism that other companies would follow suit.
Valu-Pac anticipates
opening its new plant by the middle of next year with between 150 to
200 employees. Its initial contract will involve filling bottles of
Olay Body Wash for P&G, but the company hopes to expand to service
others clients as well.
TENNESSEE
Toyota and Bridgestone Both Select Tennessee Sites
for New Facilities
Toyota Motor Manufacturing
North America and Bridgestone Corp. of Japan have both selected sites
in Tennessee on which to build new automotive parts plants.
Toyota has selected
a 200-acre site in Jackson on which to build a die-casting plant that
will produce aluminum engine blocks. The site was originally considered
as a potential location for Toyotas newest truck plant before
the auto giant settled on San Antonio for that facility.
The Jackson plant
will be the third facility of Bodine Aluminum, Inc., Toyota's Missouri-based
aluminum block die-casting unit. Bodine presently operates plants in
Troy and St. Louis, Missouri, which produce cylinder heads, cylinder
blocks and other castings for most of Toyota's North America-produced
vehicles. The company currently employs over 900 people.
Operations in Jackson
are expected to begin in 2005 with plans to expand over the next several
years, eventually producing one million units annually and employing
200 team members. The project represents an investment of approximately
$124 million.
Bridgestone AMP,
a subsidiary of Bridgestone Corp. of Japan, will build a new $11 million
automotive parts manufacturing facility in Dickson, approximately 40
miles southwest of Nashville.
The new facility
will initially employ approximately 70 people in the production of shock-absorbent
pads and interior cushions for automakers including Honda, Nissan and
Toyota. By 2006, Bridgestone APM is expected to increase its employment
to 170 people as the facility expands.
Bridgestone APM
currently operates three manufacturing facilities in North America,
all in Ohio, with total employment of approximately 650. The companys
annual sales exceed $100 million.
Business
Briefs
ASHLAND
- Ohio-based RG
Properties has announced plans to build a new $30 million retail center
in Ashland that is expected to generate $12 million in annual payroll.
Construction on the Melody Mountain project is expected to begin by
fall or early winter.
BOWLING GREEN
- Western Kentucky
University has purchased one of the largest private collections of
the late author Robert Penn Warren from his bibliographer and scholar,
James A. Grimshaw Jr. Warren, a Kentucky native, was a three-time
Pulitzer Prize winner in literature and poetry and in 1986 was named
as the first poet laureate in the United States. WKU officials lauded
the collection as a rich complement to Warrens private,
working library, a gift to the university from Warrens widow,
Eleanor Clark Warren.
CAMPBELLSVILLE
- Campbellsville
Apparel Co. has received its fourth contract from the U.S. Department
of Defense to produce garments for the nations armed services.
The $9 million contract will be divided over two years.
CAROLLTON
- A new 33-unit
hotel is scheduled to open next month at the Perry Park Golf Resort
in Carrollton. In addition to the 18-hole championship-caliber course,
the resort features a pool, restaurant and driving range. The nearby
Kentucky River also offers fishing and boating and resort owners Jim
Berling and Greg Martini hope to eventually construct a softball diamond
and volleyball court to add further appeal.
COVINGTON
- Corporex Companies,
a Northern Kentucky office development and property management firm,
has launched a new office space consulting service. Among the complimentary
planning services offered are space need evaluations, design services
and counseling on available tax incentives and Enterprise Zone advantages.
ELIZABETHTOWN
- In response to
community demand, CDL Training Services and Consulting Inc., an Illinois
company that provides truck driver training, is offering courses at
the Community and Economic Development Center in Elizabethtown, a
consolidated department of Elizabethtown Community College and Elizabethtown
Technical College. CDL officials note that interest in commercial
licensing is on the rise, due in part to many companies choosing trucking
over air transportation in light of the events of 9/11. The Elizabethtown
shop will be CDLs sixth Kentucky location.
- Knights
Mechanical, an Elizabethtown firm that has serviced industrial and
commercial businesses since 1980, has expanded its operations to Glasgow.
Knights currently employs a staff of more than 150 licensed
and certified workers in Elizabethtown and will have 35 employees
at its new Glasgow office, which will service south central Kentucky
and northern Tennessee.
- The first shipments
of a popular Kentucky-made soft drink have been shipped to Cuba as
part of a $7 million trade agreement between Cuba and the Kentucky
Department of Agriculture. The initial shipment of Ski, which is canned
in Elizabethtown, was valued at approximately $35,000 and is being
sold in Cuban stores, hotels, restaurants and vending machines.
- First Federal
Financial Corp. of Kentucky has announced plans to buy back up to
10 percent of its outstanding stock shares. The stock repurchase program
will run for 18 months. A previous repurchase program in 2001 resulted
in First Federal buying back 334,105 shares. First Federal Financial
is a holding company for First Federal Savings Bank, which has 13
branches in Central Kentucky.
FLORENCE
- Northern Kentuckys
new minor league baseball team has been christened the Florence Freedom
following a name-the-team contest that elicited 2,500 entries. The
Freedom, part of the 12-team Frontier League, will play in a new $5
million stadium being constructed in Florence. The team will play
this coming season at Foundation Field in Hamilton, Ohio. Former Cincinnati
Reds player Chris Sabo has been named as the teams manager and
director of baseball operations.
GLASGOW
- R.R. Donnelley
has announced plans to establish a digital solution center
at its Glasgow plant, expanding its role in the companys production
of high-quality magazines and catalogs. The upgrade enables publishers
and catalogers who use the new digital workflow to transmit files
for print to a central site, then view, proof and approve files online
prior to printing. The expansion will create more than 30 new jobs,
most of which will be filled by current employees, many of whom will
relocate from other facilities.
HOPKINSVILLE
- Wal-Mart has
opened a new 1.25 million-s.f. distribution center in Hopkinsville,
bringing more than 700 new jobs to the community. The facility could
eventually employ up to 1,500 workers.
HORSE CAVE
- T. Marzetti Co.,
a Columbus, Ohio company that produces salad dressings and dips, has
announced plans to build a 220,000-s.f. plant in Horse Cave. The company
hopes to have the facility operating by Fall 2004, employing approximately
190 workers.
LAUREL COUNTY
- Laurel Heights
Nursing Home plans to add a second assisted living complex on property
adjacent to its existing facility, which currently includes a nursing
home with an Alzheimers unit and 32-unit assisted living facility.
The new complex, which could take up to two years to complete, would
feature 32-34 new units.
LEXINGTON
- Lexington-based
Lexmark International has closed a customer call center in Orlando,
Florida, eliminating some 400 jobs. The company plans to transfer
its customer service operations to outside contractors.
- Rector-Hayden
Realtors, one of the largest realty firms in Central Kentucky, has
been sold to HomeServices of America Inc., an independent Minneapolis
residential real estate brokerage firm that operates in 15 states.
Among HomeServices holdings is Semonin Realtors, Louisvilles
largest real estate brokerage firm. Like Semonin, Rector-Hayden will
continue to operate under the same name but will be managed by Brad
DeVries, president and CEO of HomeServices of Kentucky. The two companies,
which between them now control nearly 50 percent of the Central Kentucky
market, will operate separately for the foreseeable future, said DeVries.
- Lexington-based
Valvoline Instant Oil Change has purchased four oil change centers
in Louisville from Lightnin Lubes. The acquisition gives Valvoline
22 service centers in the Louisville area and more than 700 nationwide.
- The CEO and vice
president of sales of Kelco, Inc., a viatical settlement company,
have been convicted on 46 counts of charges that included fraud, conspiracy
and money-laundering. CEO Stephen Keller and Vice President of Sales
Grant Sutherlin are scheduled to be sentenced next month. Kellers
attorney has said he plans to appeal the case.

- Exstream Software
Inc. has opened a new office in Prague to provide sales and support
for the companys Dialogue software in Central and Eastern
Europe. Nearly 40 percent of the Lexington companys current
Dialogue customers are in Western Europe and Australia. Exstream hopes
to add more European offices within the coming year.
- Research conducted
at UKs Morris K. Udall Parkinsons Disease Research Center
of Excellence has led to an innovative treatment that holds great
promise in treating Parkinsons disease, which impairs the bodys
ability coordinate movement. The new treatment, which involves direct
drug delivery to the brain, is based on research done by Greg Gerhardt,
Ph.D., professor of anatomy and neurobiology and director of UKs
Morris K. Udall Parkinsons Center, and Don Gash, professor and
chair of the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology.
LONDON
- The London construction
firm of Elmo Greer and Sons has been awarded a $42.4 million contract
to level the land and install drainage for a new runway at the Cincinnati/
Northern Kentucky International Airport. The project involves preparation
for a new 8,000-foot north/south runway and a 2,000-foot extension
to the existing east-west runway. The entire project, which is slated
to be complete by December 2005, is expected to run approximately
$241 million in construction and land acquisition costs.
LOUISVILLE
- Ivan Ware &
Son, Inc., which sells and rents commercial and industrial boilers
and cooling products, has purchased Boiler & Heat Exchange Systems
Inc., a Chattanooga company that services and repairs boilers and
related heating systems. As a result of the transaction, Ware &
Son now has offices in Louisville, Lexington, Owensboro, Chattanooga
and Atlanta.
- Papa Johns
International has expanded its roster of international markets, adding
locations in Aruba, Greece and the Bahamas. The Louisville-based company
opened its first international restaurant in Mexico City in 1998 and
now has more than 2,900 stores in 11 international markets.
- Advanced ChemTech
Inc. has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after failing to gain an
extension on the companys credit facilities. Officials with
the pharmaceutical research firm said the company will continue to
operate as normal during the restructuring phase and that all vendors
will be paid as scheduled.
- Word Broadcasting
Network Inc. has launched Louisvilles first Spanish radio station.
WSOH-FM features contemporary Christian music and airs around the
clock, seven days a week. The Louisville broadcast ministry also owns
WBNA-TV in Louisville and WVHI-AM in Evansville, Ind., as well as
three shortwave stations that reach South America, Africa and the
Middle East.

- Louisville-based
Yum! Brands, Inc. has acquired the Pasta Bravo restaurant concept
for $5 million from California-based Pasta Bravo, Inc. Pasta Bravo
serves made-to-order fresh pastas and salads in restaurants located
in Southern California. The acquisition includes the recipes, cooking
platform and trademarks of the quick-casual concept, but no restaurant
assets. One of our key strategies is to drive global growth
by leading the way in multi-branding innovation by providing consumers
two brands and more choice in one restaurant location, said
David C. Novak, chairman and CEO, Yum! Brands, Inc. We began
testing Pasta Bravos outstanding line of fresh pastas in a multi-branded
format with Pizza Hut late last year. Based on positive results, we
determined Pasta Bravo has the potential to be an ideal partner for
our global business. The new concept will join YUMs current
stable of restaurants, which includes KFC, Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, A&W
All-American Food and Long John Silvers.
MORGANFIELD
- The Union County
Economic Development Foundation has placed a 100,000-s.f. spec building
in Morganfield back on the market after plans with a French food production
company faltered. Fleury Michon announced last fall that it would
purchase the building and 21 acres for $500,000. In the meantime,
however, the company failed to establish a U.S. partner to produce
and market its ready-to-eat entrees and does not feel prepared to
move forward until such a partnership is set. Fleury Michon also rethought
the size of the spec building and determined that it was more space
than the company needed.
- Rayloc, which
specializes in the refurbishment of automotive parts, is building
a 100,000-s.f. distribution center on 10 acres of property donated
by the City of Morganfield. The property is located behind Raylocs
current location.
NICHOLASVILLE
- Information technology
solutions provider Accent Systems Inc. has formed a new company that
specializes in business data protection. asiGuardian, LLC will focus
on securing network data, reliable data backup services and business
recovery solutions. The new company, which has its operation center
in an underground location 30 miles outside downtown Lexington, will
focus on a regional service area that includes Kentucky, Indiana,
Ohio, West Virginia, Tennessee and Missouri.
NORTHERN KENTUCKY
- Delta Air Lines
has scrapped plans to launch daily nonstop flight service between
the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport and Rome, which
was slated to begin May 1. Faced with a steep decline in passenger
demand, due largely in part to the war with Iraq and concerns over
terrorism, the airline is cutting its flight capacity by 12 percent
system wide. Delta will, at least for now, continue to offer transatlantic
service from Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky to London, Paris and Frankfurt.
OWENSBORO
- Swedish Match
has announced plans for a $5 million expansion at its Owensboro facility,
where it produces moist snuff tobacco. The project will add a third
production line, allowing the company to increase the production of
its popular Timber Wolf and Sequoia brands by 50 percent. Company
officials say that plans for a fourth line have already been designed
to accommodate future growth: Figures show that the moist snuff market
has tripled in the past decade. Swedish Match currently employs nearly
375 workers at its Owensboro plant, which is its only North American
smokeless tobacco facility.
PADUCAH
- Gilliam Candy
Co., one of Paducahs oldest businesses, has closed after being
sold to Quality Candy of California. The closing has resulted in most
of the companys 30 full-time employees losing their jobs at
the candy manufacturing plant, which was founded in 1927. Gilliam
CEO Bill Lacy said the availability of cheap sugar on the world market
made it too difficult for small U.S. companies, which have to pay
more for domestic sugar, to compete. The company will now be part
of the Sophie Mae Candy Co., which produces Sophie Mae peanut brittle,
Slo Poke Caramels, Kits and B.B. Bats Taffy.
- Steel distributor
JMS Metal Services has purchased the assets of TBI Steel Inc., another
Paducah company that has been in the steel distribution and processing
business since 1906. Terms of the purchase were not disclosed. Both
companies have clients in portions of Arkansas, Indiana, Illinois,
Missouri, and Tennessee as well as Kentucky.
- The Paducah Area
Transit System has purchased the assets and inventory of Security
Taxi for an undisclosed price. PATS plans to continue to operate the
service utilizing the same personnel.
PIKEVILLE
- Beginning this
summer, Pikeville College will offer business majors a new emphasis
in management information systems, with courses in business programming,
management information systems, database management systems, Web design
and development, e-commerce, telecommunications and networks, and
systems analysis and design. Currently, 135 students are enrolled
in the colleges business program, which also offers an emphasis
in accounting, computer science, and management.
RADCLIFF
- U.S. Cavalry,
a Radcliff-based company that markets military and law enforcement
supplies and specialized homeland security equipment, has emerged
from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company has reorganized, bringing
on a new firm of investors and a new board with strong military and
security background, and plans to introduce new products and services
with an emphasis on homeland security training, international marketing
and specialized tactical products.
SOMERSET
- Lake Cumberland
Regional Hospital is slated to begin construction this month on a
new $7 million outpatient cancer treatment center. The 11,000-s.f.
center will focus on radiation therapy, utilizing a linear accelerator.
The project will also include a 1,500-s.f. wing that will house a
cancer support group co-sponsored the American Cancer Society (ACS)
as well as a library, office space for ACS and the Kentucky Cancer
Program, and a 60-seat multimedia classroom. When complete early next
year, the hospital will be the only hospital within its seven-county
service area to offer radiation therapy.
VERSAILLES
- Osram Sylvania
has broken ground for a new 440,000-s.f. distribution center adjacent
to its Versailles lamp and glass plants. The new facility, which is
expected to employ approximately 140, will replace the companys
existing distribution centers in Lexington, Chicago, Atlanta, Dallas
and Columbus, Ohio.
WESTERN KENTUCKY
- Kentuckys
catfish cooperative is finding so much demand for its product that
it is now in the market for a substantial amount of additional pond
acreage. "Demand for Kentucky farm-raised catfish is growing
by leaps and bounds," Agriculture Commissioner Billy Ray Smith
said. "Sales have increased 500 percent in the last six months
alone. The member-owners of the co-op currently have 392 acres of
water in production, but they need another 600 acres in the next 18
months to fulfill their current orders and keep growing."
STATE
- Kentuckys
Property and Buildings Commission has refinanced education buildings
and housing bonds for the University of Louisville that will save
the commonwealth more than $5.5 million over the next 13 years and
more than $975,000 for UofL over the next decade. The commission has
also approved refinancing bonds for UK and Morehead State that are
projected to save a total of $960,000 for the state and the two universities.
- The Kentucky
Geological Survey has released a new geologic map of northern Kentucky
designed to offer construction and transportation planning industries
a greater knowledge as to the location and specific mineral composition
of rock in the region. The information is expected to be highly useful
in helping reduce or avoid hazards associated with landslides and
slope instability in the area, which has suffered some of the highest
per capital financial losses from landslides in the nation. The map
illustrates all or parts of 15 counties in northern Kentucky, representing
a 2,087-square-mile area. More information is available at www.uky.edu/KGS/mapping/mapping.html.
INDIANA
MUNCIE
- nFive Indiana
airports have submitted an application for a $1 million federal grant
to help launch an intrastate airline that would provide daily flights
between Evansville and Indianapolis. From Indianapolis, passengers
could connect to other Indiana cities. Airport authorities in Gary,
Lafayette, South Bend and Terre Haute have joined Evansville in making
the application for funds from the federal small-community air service
fund, which has made approximately $20 million available this year.
A group of Indiana airports applied for a similar grant last year,
but was denied.
NEW ALBANY
- Floyd Memorial
Hospital has announced plans for a $50 million expansion designed
to enhance the hospitals cardiac unit and expand other services.
OHIO
CINCINNATI
- The Partnership
for Greater Cincinnati, a regional economic development initiative
of the Greater Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce, reports that it attracted
33 new businesses to the region during 2002. The new businesses represent
more than $153 million in capital investment, nearly 1,100 new jobs
and the retention of approximately 700 existing positions.
TENNESSEE
GOODLETTSVILLE
- Dollar General
Corp. has authorized the repurchase of up to 12 million shares of
company stock. At the time of the announcement, the shares were worth
approximately $125 million.
MEMPHIS
- America West
Express has launched new flight service out of Memphis, offering two
daily nonstop, round-trip flights between Memphis and its Phoenix
hub.
- Memphis-based
Concord EFS, Inc., a leading electronic transaction processor, and
First Data Corp., a global leader in electronic commerce and payment
services, have announced a definitive agreement to merge in an all-stock
transaction valued at approximately $7 billion. The transaction gives
Denver-based First Data the opportunity to unite its majority interest
in the NYCE automated teller machine network with Concords STAR,
MAC and Cash Station networks. Concord has 2,600 employees, 833 of
whom are employed at its Memphis headquarters. The combined company
will have approximately $10 billion in annual revenues with more than
31,000 employees worldwide.
NASHVILLE
- Healthcare giant
HCA Inc. has completed a $1.125 billion purchase of Health Midwest,
a Kansas City-based hospital chain. Health Midwests 14 hospitals
in Kansas and Missouri now make up HCAs Midwest division. As
part of the purchase, Nashville-based HCA has committed to a minimum
of $450 million in capital expenditures in Kansas City and will create
two charitable foundations in Kansas and Missouri.
- Gaylord Entertainment
Co. is investing $7.5 million to give the famous Grand Ole Opry House
a facelift. The project includes two additions that will house a new
gift shop, box office, concession area, and restrooms as well as other
improvements. The renovation is expected to be complete by October.
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