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FAST LANE - June 2005


GEORGETOWN
Toyota Selects Kentucky Plant for Hybrid Car Production

Toyota Motor Manufacturing North America has announced that the company’s first North American gas-electric hybrid production will take place at its Georgetown, Ky., plant – Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Kentucky, Inc. (TMMK) – when production of a Camry hybrid begins in late 2006.

TMMK will have the capacity to build approximately 48,000 Camry hybrid vehicles per year. The addition of hybrid production to TMMK will include a $10 million investment in the plant.

Toyota expects capacity and employment to stay the same at TMMK with the addition of the Camry hybrid, since the hybrid production will take place on the plant’s existing lines, and no new construction is planned.

The Camry Hybrid joins a growing Toyota and Lexus hybrid lineup in the U.S., that currently includes the Toyota Prius and Lexus RX 400h. The Highlander Hybrid goes on sale this month, and the 2007 GS 450h is expected to be released to the public in the spring of 2006.

Established in 1986, TMMK is Toyota’s largest plant in North America, employing approximately 7,000 Kentuckians. TMMK currently builds the Camry, Avalon and Solara and has the capacity to build 500,000 vehicles annually. Since its inception, TMMK has built nearly six million vehicles and invested nearly $5.3 billion in the Commonwealth. The plant has also resulted in dozens of auto suppliers locating their facilities in and around the area.

“Gov. Fletcher and his team, particularly the Economic Development Cabinet under the leadership of Gene Strong, have worked closely with us on this and other projects in Kentucky,” said Dennis Cuneo, senior vice president of Toyota Motor North America. “Their participation has played a significant role in our decision to produce hybrids in Kentucky.”

STATE
Kentucky Fourth in Economic Development

Site Selection, a leading international economic development publication, has ranked Kentucky fourth in the nation in its 2005 Annual Competitiveness Award.

The benchmark that measures state economic development agencies’ competitiveness – the most important factor in an agency’s ability to attract capital investment and expand economic activity in the state – is regarded by corporate real estate analysts as “the industry scoreboard.”

Open only to state-level economic development agencies, the states were ranked based on 10 criteria for measuring business-expansion activity that took place in the previous calendar year. Categories include per capita jobs and investment numbers for 2004, the number of top metros and micropolitans in Site Selection’s 2004 rankings, rates of growth in new and expanded facilities and ranking in the annual business climate survey. An indexing system ensures that all states have the same opportunity at competing for the award.

Kentucky has consistently ranked in the top 10 since the inception of the award in 2003. During 2004, 360 manufacturing and or supportive/service companies located or expanded in Kentucky, resulting in over 16,500 net new jobs created. Investment was estimated at nearly $2.3 billion, an increase of more than 50 percent over 2003.

“A state finishing in the top 10 most competitive states list year after year indicates a high degree of competitiveness,” said Mark Arend, editor of Site Selection. “Kentucky economic development officials should recognize this performance as evidence of a well-managed and effective business recruitment plan.”

“An environment that promotes new and expanding business is essential for Kentucky’s future,” Gov. Ernie Fletcher said. “With our JOBS for Kentucky tax modernization plan, which removes onerous taxes and lowers the corporate income tax rate, our competitiveness will improve even more in the future.”

HAWESVILLE
Alcoa to Close Automotive Casting Facility

Alcoa has announced that it will close its automotive casting facility in Hawesville by the end of 2005. The shut-down will impact 158 employees.

Alcoa officials said the decision to close the Hancock County facility was a result of excess capacity in Alcoa’s automotive castings manufacturing system.

“This plant closing is not a reflection on the strong workforce we have in Hawesville. They are a talented and dedicated group,” said Allen Zwierzchowski, president – Alcoa Automotive Castings. “Unfortunately this facility is operating at less than 20 percent of its capacity. With certain program contracts winding down, the plant from a business perspective is no longer viable.” Alcoa plans to sell the facility and has committed to work with the community to attract buyers that could utilize the plant and lessen the impact of the closing.

Headquartered in Farmington Hills, Mich., Alcoa Automotive Castings will continue to operate its other castings facilities in Farsund, Norway and Fruitport, Mich. Alcoa Automotive Castings supplies structural, safety-critical components for automakers worldwide.

MONTICELLO
Lake Cumberland Milling Receives $1.16 Million Grant for Soybean Mill

Lake Cumberland Milling, LLC has received $1.16 million from the state’s agricultural development fund to renovate Wayne County Feeds & Supply to include a soybean extrusion mill.

Lake Cumberland Milling’s proposed soybean extrusion mill will create a market for 250,000 bushels of soybeans for area farmers. Additionally, the availability of soybean meal in the area will save local livestock producers the transportation costs currently assessed on purchased feed.

“Kentucky’s hard-working farmers depend on grants like this to bring economic development opportunities to the counties in which they live,” Gov. Ernie Fletcher said. “By helping farmers find ways to diversify their production, we can help to ensure that Kentucky’s farmers are prosperous today and for generations to come.”

CARROLL COUNTY
North American Stainless to Invest $50M for Expansion of Ghent Plant

Citing the inclusion of recycling tax credits in Gov. Ernie Fletcher’s tax modernization as an important factor, officials from North American Stainless have announced plans to add a new electric arc furnace at its Ghent facility. The project represents a $50 million investment.

By utilizing the existing furnace on a standby basis and replacing it with a newer, more modern furnace for primary production, the investment will allow North American Stainless to improve the recycling of scrap material and increase overall melting efficiencies.

“We are very pleased the governor and the General Assembly chose to include provisions which encourage recycling in the tax modernization legislation,” said José M. Cornejo, president of North American Stainless, adding that the recycling tax credits “were important in our decision to make this investment in Kentucky.”

North American Stainless, as part of the Acerinox Group, is owned by Acerinox, S.A. of Madrid, Spain and represents the largest Spanish investment in the United States. Since 1990, Acerinox has invested more than $1.3 billion in its Kentucky facility and currently employs 1,030. The Acerinox Group is the third largest stainless steel producer in the world and consists of factories and service centers across the globe.

With an expected completion date of October 2006, the Ghent project will be well underway when more than 150 world leaders of the stainless steel industry, representing 21 countries, attend the 10th Annual International Stainless Steel Forum (ISSF) to be held in Kentucky in May 2006.

STATE
Two Loan Programs Established to Assist Kentucky Agribusiness

The Kentucky Agricultural Finance Corporation (KAFC) has approved two new programs to assist Kentucky farmers and agribusinesses.

The Agricultural Infrastructure Loan Program (AILP) is designed to help Kentucky agricultural producers with a history of tobacco involvement finance long-term projects that will improve their financial viability. Applicants must receive at least 20 percent of their gross income from farming, and provide documentation of a recent history in tobacco involvement. (The KAFC portion of the AILP loan cannot exceed $100,000 or 50 percent of the project.)

The AILP will provide assistance for the financing of buildings or structures with attached equipment for agricultural uses only. Eligible projects will include but not be limited to livestock and poultry barns, grain storage facilities, greenhouses, tobacco barns, ponds, and other projects at the discretion of the KAFC board.

The KAFC has set an initial interest rate of two percent for AILP loans originating from a participating lender. The rate can be fixed for up to 10 years.

The Producer Accelerated Payment Program (PAPP) is designed to offer entities marketing Kentucky-grown agricultural commodities the ability to offer advance payments of up to 75 percent of wholesale value to the producer upon delivery of their products. The program is available to any wholesale marketer of Kentucky-grown agricultural commodities. The KAFC will require the marketer to pledge their accounts receivables as security for the loan, and the funds will be managed by a third party administrator. This program will allow produce growers and other producers who normally wait 60 to 90 days for payment to get a substantial portion of their income much earlier.

For more information, contact Tim Hughes, KAFC Marketing and Business Development Coordinator, at (502) 564-4627 or visit the KAFC website at http://kafc.ky.gov/.

HARDIN COUNTY
East Kentucky Power too Build Fourth Renewable Energy Plant

East Kentucky Power Cooperative (EKPC) is making preparations to build Kentucky’s newest renewable energy plant at the Pearl Hollow Landfill, located south of the Bluegrass Parkway in eastern Hardin County, near the Nelson County line.

The new plant, which will produce electric power from decaying trash, joins EKPC’s three landfill gas-to-electric plants, located in Greenup, Laurel and Boone counties.

At most landfills, gas from decaying trash is emitted into the atmosphere or burned off. Tapping the methane from a landfill to produce electricity, a process that has been used in other areas of the country for years, is relatively new to Kentucky.

“In addition to being an environmental asset, this plant will provide an added level of electric reliability to the area,” said Vince Heuser, vice president of System Operations at Nolin RECC.

BEREA
Berea College Opens Kentucky's First Ecovillage Community

Berea College has officially dedicated its new “Ecovillage,” an innovative development that demonstrates energy-reducing and environmentally friendly building techniques, providing a “model of sustainable living to the Appalachian region.”

The Ecovillage, Kentucky’s only such development, incorporates a wide range of “green design” technologies to reduce energy and water use, including passive solar gain, photovoltaic panels, super insulation, dual flush toilets, low-flow showerheads, a composting toilet and roof-top capture of rainwater. The village is already being studied by others to see how its environmentally-friendly features can be applied in their geographic areas.

STATE
Eight Kentucky Military Facilities Affected by Base Realignment

A number of Kentucky military installations will be affected by the U.S. Department of Defense’s recent announcement to close and realign its U.S. facilities.

Fort Knox will lose a total of approximately 3,000 positions as some operations are moved to Fort Benning, Ga. However, Fort Knox will also acquire a brigade combat team, a combat maneuver command center and the Army Cadet Command, which is responsible for administering the Army’s ROTC program.

Fort Campbell is also being realigned and will see a net loss of some 350 jobs.

Meanwhile, other Kentucky facilities are being closed altogether. The chart below outlines the status of Kentucky bases and facilities.

PINEVILLE
Plans for Four-Star Hotel Hinge on Passsage of Alcohol Ordinance

A development group has proposed the construction of a 100-room hotel and conference center to be built across from the Wasioto Winds Golf Course in Pineville. However, developer Maurice Elledge, of Elledge & Associates, says those plans hinge on whether or not the city of Pineville will permit alcoholic beverages to be sold in the hotel’s restaurant.

Pointing out that large groups will not book the facility for conferences otherwise, Elledge told the Middlesboro Daily News that the matter “is not a moral issue, it is an economic issue.”

If completed, the hotel would bring in approximately $267,000 in state sales tax and more than $100,000 in property taxes.

According to the local report, petitions are already circulating in order to gain enough signatures for a special election on the matter.

If a new ordinance allowing alcohol is passed, the development group stands prepared to move forward with its plans for the four-star hotel. The project would create approximately 165 construction jobs during the building process and some 120 hotel jobs once completed.

LOUISVILLE
UPS Expands Air Freight Network to Support Hub

As part of its expansion in the air freight business, UPS plans to construct five regional freight hubs at airports across the country that will support the company’s main freight hub in Louisville. UPS’ Louisville facility is home to the company’s main all-points air hub.

The new facilities will be constructed in Ontario, Calif., Rockford, Ill., Dallas, Philadelphia, and Columbia, S.C., which already serve as regional hubs for UPS’s separate small package network, meaning UPS jets are routinely flying in and out every day. The six facilities will form the backbone of an expansive air network for the movement of heavy freight for customers of UPS Supply Chain Solutions.

The regional facilities, when completed and brought on line next year, will support a main freight hub to be constructed in Louisville.

“UPS is accelerating its push into the domestic air freight business and this network is going to help us bring unparalleled levels of service to the marketplace,” said Mike Eskew, UPS chairman and CEO. “UPS Supply Chain Solutions arranges the movement of air freight on any available airline, but we want to make sure we also take advantage of our own vast network.”

UPS anticipates spending about $24 million to build and equip the five new facilities, each of which will be constructed solely to handle freight. Operation of the regional freight hubs initially will create more than 200 new jobs.

Last December, UPS acquired Menlo Worldwide Forwarding, a $1.9 billion air freight forwarder based in Redwood City, Calif. After acquiring the company, UPS announced it would build a new main freight hub in Louisville to tie the Menlo network into the UPS Airlines.

LOUISVILLE
GLI Honors Small Businesses Making a Big Impact

Greater Louisville Inc., metro Louisville’s Chamber of Commerce, recently honored five small businesses that are making an impact on the community in a big way.

OPM Services, Inc., InterSpace Computers, Inc., Blendex Company, Persimmon Ridge Golf Course, Inc. and Presnell Design Group received Inc.tank·Ogden Newell & Welch Inc.credible Awards – the top small business award given annually by Greater Louisville Inc.

OPM Services, Inc. was founded in 1992 and provides financial, accounting and management services to young, emerging, start-up and transitional companies. OPM organized the group of partners that came together to create the bCatalyst business incubator in 2001.

InterSpace Computers, Inc. was founded in 1996, funded entirely by credit cards. Originally it provided replacement PC parts to individuals and businesses. Now, it serves the needs of an international customer base, providing on-site networking solutions, Internet security and system integration, as well as other IT services.

Blendex Company is one of the fastest-growing custom blenders of dry ingredients for the food industry, with a product line of over 200 food products, including custom-manufactured batters, breadings, marinades, glazes, mixes and seasonings.

Persimmon Ridge Golf Course, Inc. was honored with the National City Award for Woman-Owned Businesses. Persimmon Ridge, a private golf course and residential community, was founded 17 years ago. Now, with 300 home sites and more than 400 members, it is one of the more challenging and natural layouts in the region.

“Although we’re a Shelby County company,” General Manager Terry Gilbert said, “we pull a lot from the Louisville area and our president, Lauren Just, does a lot for the community. She’s put her life’s work into the business.”

Presnell Design Group, winner of the award for minority-owned businesses, was started in 1986 by the late David Presnell. It is a full-service, Native American engineering and architecture firm offering engineering, architecture, construction management, planning, survey and environmental services.

More than 500 companies – a record – were nominated for the awards. Judges looked at factors such as a company’s product or service, challenges, strengths, business goals, fiscal performance, job growth, business practices and community involvement in determining the winners.

LOUISVILLE
New Bank Gets Nod for IPO

Organizers of Louisville-Based Eclipse Bank have received approval from the Kentucky Department of Financial Institutions (KDFI) and the FDIC to make shares of Eclipse Bank stock available to the general public.

The bank intends to raise a total of $12 to $15 million in equity capital and has received commitments for almost half the minimum amount from the organizing group; with the FDIC and KDFI approval, it is now permitted to raise the remaining capital through a public stock offering.

John Pendergrass, Eclipse president and CEO, is optimistic that the stock will be placed quickly. “We’ve received an enthusiastic response from investors and members of the business community. The number of inquiries we have received without solicitation is very encouraging. It reflects the public’s confidence in Eclipse Bank’s organizing group and confirms our belief that a locally-owned bank will be successful.”

The Eclipse Bank stock is priced at $20 a share with a $50,000 minimum purchase.

LOUISVILLE
ResCare Continues Growth Spurt with Acquisition of Five Firms

ResCare Inc., already a leading provider of support services for people with disabilities and special needs, has expanded its reach even further with the acquisition of five companies.

The acquisition of Health Services Personnel, Inc., of Raleigh-Durham, N.C., is expected to result in annual revenues of $8.6 million. HSP provides community-based services to people with developmental, cognitive, physical and mental health disabilities.

Albemarle Homecare Services Inc., of Albemarle, N.C., provides in-home personal care, nursing and daily living assistance. Annual revenues are expected to be approximately $1.6 million.

ResCare’s purchase of 24 Hour Live-In Services Inc., also known as First Choice, expands ResCare’s services to the elderly into a new state. The acquisition of the Michigan-based company is expected to result in revenues of $2.1 million annually.

ResCare is acquiring the operations and certain assets of Home Care-Giver Services Inc. in California, Nevada, Colorado and Illinois, providing the company with a total of 12 operations with combined revenues of $13.2 million annually. Home Care-Giver Services provides personal care, meal preparation, housekeeping and transportation to the elderly and those with disabilities.

The company has also signed a definitive agreement to purchase the operations and certain assets of AmeriPsych Inc., an Arizona company that offers counseling and psychological services in seven Arizona cities. The annual revenue from the acquisition is expected to be $7 million.

ResCare provides residential, therapeutic, job training, and educational support to individuals with developmental or other disabilities, youth with various special needs, as well as adults who are encountering barriers to employment.

Founded in 1974, the company now offers services to some 34,000 people in 33 states, Washington, DC, Puerto Rico and Canada.

LEXINGTON
QX.Net Among Nation's Fastest-Growing Urban Firms

QX.net, a Lexington-based Internet service provider, has been listed as one of the fastest-growing companies in urban America by Inc. magazine.

The company ranked 55th on the magazine’s seventh annual Inner City 100 list, which recognizes entrepreneurial firms that are leading a “grassroots revival of America’s neighborhoods and making an impact that transcends the bottom line.”

The companies recognized as Inner City 100 winners were selected from more than 7,500 nominees. In order to qualify for the 2005 list, a company must have met the following criteria: be an independent, for-profit corporation, partnership, or proprietorship (not a subsidiary or division); regulated banks, utilities, and holding companies were excluded; be headquartered in or have 51 percent or more of its physical operations in “distressed” urban (inner city) areas; have 10 or more employees in 2003; and have a five-year operating sales history that included revenues of at least $200,000 in 1999, an increase in 2003 sales over 2002 sales, and 2003 sales of at least $1 million. Eligible companies were ranked according to their five-year sales growth.

The Inner City 100 is a joint initiative between Inc. magazine and the Initiative for a Competitive Inner City (ICIC). The annual list showcases thriving businesses that are creating jobs, income, and wealth for inner-city residents.

LEXINGTON
Plasticon to Acquire Nevada-Based Semco

Plasticon International Inc., a Lexington company that specializes in the production of industrial and commercial products made from recycled plastics, has signed a letter of intent to acquire Semco, Inc., a Nevada-based company that is a pioneer in leading edge resurfacing technology.

One of the major applications for Semco’s products is the resurfacing work on bridges. Plasticon provides products ranging from military usages to plastic signage and office supplies. The company is currently in the process of developing products for use in traffic barriers and plastic outdoor furniture.

According to Plasticon President and CEO Jim Turek, Semco has an excellent history of profitability and is seen as the new industry standard in resurfacing by distributors and construction companies. As a result, Turek explained, the acquisition gives his company a major advantage over its competition.

“This deal is important to Plasticon not only in terms of the synergy of our products,’’ said Turek. “It would also have a major impact on our bottom line. Distribution centers are very interested in carrying these products. Since we just signed an exclusive contract with the largest building materials distribution company in the U.S., this acquisition would give Plasticon another innovative product line which will expand our overall market share in the construction industry. We see Semco’s product line becoming a major profit center for Plasticon.”

Also boosting Plasticon’s profitability is the procurement of a new technology that is expected to increase the company’s production capacity by nearly 600 percent.

“has the potential to transform our industry, in terms of cost savings, efficiencies, and the ease of use for our end users,” said Turek.

LEXINGTON
Job Guide Now Includes Lexington

The Employment Guide, a weekly employment publication that provides recruiting solutions for employers seeing to fill hourly positions, has expanded its Louisville edition to include Lexington.

Lexington joins a circulation area that includes 57 markets nationwide with a distribution of more than two million copies per week.

“Lexington is an important market and this expansion is in response to an overwhelming demand by our advertising clients in Kentucky who wanted to capitalize on the large number of job seekers in the Lexington market,” said Richard M. Jamin, vice president/general manager of The Employment Guide.

With the addition of the Lexington market, the Kentucky edition grows from covering 15 counties to 23, covering a third of Kentucky as well as parts of Indiana.

The Louisville edition of The Employment Guide now has a special section for Lexington advertisers and job seekers.

“Our regular Louisville advertisers will receive the benefit of reaching not only Louisville job seekers, but also those in Lexington at no additional cost,” said Dave Harmon, general sales manager for the Louisville and Lexington editions.

The Lexington edition will be distributed in retail outlets, hospitals, colleges and universities, as well as on in street-side distribution boxes.

For more information, call 877-912-1765, Ext. 222. or 800-871-0800, Ext. 3507.

LEXINGTON
DHS Selects Blue Grass Airport as Washington National Security Hub

Lexington’s Blue Grass Airport has been selected by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as one of only 12 airports nationwide to serve as a security hub for general aviation aircraft seeking to fly into Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) in Washington, DC. 

General aviation at DCA was suspended immediately after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. There were approximately 660 general aviation and charter flights per week into and out of DCA at the time of suspension.

“This is a ringing endorsement for Lexington Blue Grass Airport,” said U.S. Representative Hal Rogers, chairman of the House Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee “The Department of Homeland Security clearly believes Blue Grass Airport has the right people and resources in place.”

According to the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) new plan, general aircraft operators may only fly into DCA from 12 “gateway” airports: Seattle-Tacoma, Wash.; Boston Logan; Houston Hobby; White Plains, N.Y.; LaGuardia, N.Y.; Chicago Midway; Minneapolis/St.Paul; West Palm Beach, Fla.; San Francisco; Teterboro Airport, N.J.; Philadelphia; and Lexington. Each of the gateway airports, with the exception of Teterboro, is equipped with TSA screeners. Teterboro Airport will use screeners from Newark Airport, N.J.

OHIO
Cinergy and Duke Energy to Merge in Transaction Valued at $9 Billion

A merger between Cincinnati-based Cinergy and Duke Energy, of Charlotte, N.C., will create one of the largest utility companies in the Midwest. The merger agreement will serve approximately 5.4 million retail customers, including 1.5 million electric customers and some 500,000 gas consumers in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana.

The merger, which was unanimously approved by both companies’ boards of directors, will create a combined energy company with assets totaling more than $70 billion.

The combined company, to be named Duke Energy Corporation, will have approximately $27 billion in annual revenues and $1.9 billion in annual net income. The combined company will have operations in two-thirds of the United States, as well as Canada and several other international locations – primarily in Latin America.

INDIANA
Purdue Teams with Research Park for Pharmaceutical Manufacturing

Purdue University has teamed with Purdue Research Park on a new center that combines pharmaceutical education with manufacturing and development.

One of only five university-affiliated pharmaceutical manufacturing centers in the nation, the Chao Center for Industrial Pharmacy & Contract Manufacturing combines the business know-how of the No. 1 ranked Purdue Research Park with the industry and educational expertise of Purdue’s highly ranked School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Science.

The center will assist with the development of drugs for diseases and conditions that affect the underprivileged as well as less profitable drugs that are made in small volume for the treatment of certain diseases.

The first drug to come off the production line is expected to be an antibiotic that is effective for treating multiple drug-resistant tuberculosis. Under a partnership with Eli Lilly and Co., the Chao Center will produce the drug, which Lilly will distribute, and together they will help developing countries manufacture it themselves.

In the long term, the Chao Center could support approximately 50 high-skills, high-wage careers,” said Joseph B. Hornett, senior vice president and treasurer of the Purdue Research Foundation.

 

Business Briefs

ASHLAND

  • The Advantage Valley Entrepreneurship Development System Collaborative has been awarded a $2 million grant from the W. K. Kellog Foundation to help stimulate entrepreneurial activity in the region. Advantage Valley is comprised of 11 counties in the Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia Tri-State region and while the majority of the money will go to the West Virginia counties, “Kentucky will definitely see a benefit,” Mick Fosson, director of the Ashland Area Innovation Center, told The Daily Independent. The Advantage Valley Collaborative’s proposal was one of six selected by the W.K. Kellog Foundation to be awarded money. More than 180 applicants submitted proposals for the grant.

BETSY LANE

  • Eastern Consolidated Energy, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Consolidated Energy Inc., has executed an agreement with American Electric Power (AEP) for a long-term coal supply contract for Ohio Valley Electric Corporation’s Kyger Creek Plant. According to company reports, the contract has a face value of more than $36 million. Consolidated anticipates that the contract and option, which when added to a previously consummated $73 million long-term AEP contract, will translate to over $173 million of revenues over the next 42 months. Consolidated Energy Inc., based in Betsy Layne, Ky., is engaged in coal-mining operations, gas and oil exploration and development, and development of related clean energy technologies. Ohio-based American Electric Power supplies electricity to customers in Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia.

BOWLING GREEN

  • Neace Lukens Insurance and local businessman Harvey Johnston have purchased the Thoroughbred Square retail center and select surrounding properties in Bowling Green for $6.85 million. Neace Lukens plans to invest another $500,000 to renovate their portion of the property, for which they paid $4.5 million, and will relocate its existing offices to the new space and lease out the remaining Class A office space. Johnston’s portion of the property will also undergo some $300,000 in improvements.
  • Chandler Property Management has announced plans to invest $10 million for the development of a new Hilton Garden Inn to be located across from Bowling Greens’ Sloan Convention Center. The hotel will be the first such property investment for Chandler, which has approximately 1,000 residential multi-family properties and some 26 commercial/office properties through the Southeast. The four-story, 117-room hotel is expected to open in the fall of 2006.

COLUMBIA

  • Lindsey Wilson College has broken ground on a new 42,000-sq.-ft. science center. The $9 million project, the most ambitious in the school’s history, will take approximately 18 months to complete. The project is being made possible in large part due to a $3 million gift from Lindsey Wilson trustee James R. Fugitte and his wife, Helen Lee.

CORBIN

  • San Diego-based Anacomp, Inc. has announced plans to open a new facility in Corbin that will create 50 new jobs. Anacomp provides comprehensive information outsourcing, maintenance support, and imaging and print solutions for businesses and organizations around the globe.

CRITTENDEN COUNTY

  • Citing the increasing costs of malpractice insurance premiums, doctors at Crittenden Health Systems have announced that they are discontinuing obstetric services. The decision will go into effect at the end of August.

DANVILLE

  • CKF Bancorp, Inc., parent company of Central Kentucky Federal Savings Bank, has announced plans to repurchase up to 73,004 shares of its stock. The repurchased shares will become treasury shares and will be used for general corporate purposes.

ELIZABETHTOWN

  • Schmidt’s Museum of Coca-Cola Memorabilia is set to open its new expanded facility later this summer, offering nostalgia fans the opportunity to view more than 80,000 items. In addition to items such as rare vending machines and antique bottling equipment – along with bottles, glasses, and signs bearing the famous trademark - the museum will also feature special exhibits that will be rotated throughout the year. The new 24,000-sq.-ft. museum will be located right off of I-65, providing easy access for tourists.

HARRODSBURG

  • Hitachi Automotive Products has built a Japanese teahouse at its Harrodsburg facility to help strengthen Japanese and American relationships in the workplace. The company plans to sponsor events each month at the teahouse as part of a cultural exchange training program. “My motto is, the culture is the driving force to create quality people and quality products,” General Manager Herb Nakajima told employees. “Having mutual respect for one another’s culture will help to establish a Hitachi Automotive Parts culture.” Hitachi has operated its Harrodsburg plant since 1985 and now has approximately 750 employees.

HORSE CAVE

  • A $250,000 Community Development Block Grant received by the City of Horse Cave will be used to renovate the former Horse Cave State Bank Building, which was named to the National Register of Historic Places in 2001 and is now owned by the Kentucky Repertory Theatre. The renovated space will be used for meeting space for community groups and as classroom/work space for area artists.

KNOX COUNTY

  • The Knox County Fiscal Court has amended an agreement with Pearson Government Solutions that required all jobs resulting from a new government contract be given to Knox County residents or else forego a county tax incentive. Both the company and the Kentucky Cabinet for Economic Development requested that the restriction be altered. “They felt like there might be the possibility that they can’t fill all the positions that they have with people from Knox County who are interested in working there,” Knox County Deputy Judge-Executive Bruce Murphy told the Corbin Times-Tribune. “If the company were hampered by that, it would seriously jeopardize their competitiveness.”

LEITCHFIELD

  • Campbell Hausfeld has brought back approximately 60 of the 143 employees who were laid off in January from the air compressor plant. Company officials said they hope to bring back up to 15 more in the company weeks, but that decision would hinge on the number of retail orders received.

LEWISBURG

  • Lewisburg-based Delta Mining and Exploration Corp. has completed a financing agreement that will allow fieldwork on the Montana Homestead Property as well as other properties in the area. Approximately $1 million is expected to be received within the next several months; as a result Delta will move expeditiously in setting up a work program that will fully explore the Homestead kimberlite and neighboring diamond targets.

MARROWBONE

  • Workwear manufacturer Carhartt, Inc. is converting its sewing plant in Marrowbone to a sorting facility, resulting in the elimination of 41 positions at the southern Kentucky factory. The Michigan-based company said the changeover was implemented in order to meet an increased need for special handling operations in the U.S. in the face of rising foreign competition.

NEWPORT

  • Toyota Motor Manufacturing of North America (TMMNA) has presented a $25,000 check to Newport Aquarium’s nonprofit arm, the WAVE Foundation, in support of the NavOps portion of the National Submarine Science Discovery Center (NSSDC). The funds will be used to subsidize Aquatic Adventures, the life science portion of the NavOps Deep Submergence™ program. The program aims to provide students with a more in-depth study of aquatic organisms as well as offering opportunities for students to develop a collaborative relationship with scientists working in the field.

NORTHERN KENTUCKY

  • Nextel Communications Inc. has expanded its wireless network to bring its popular four-in-one services to new areas in Northern Kentucky and Southern Ohio. Nextel customers in these areas can now take advantage of the company’s digital walkie-talkie service and wireless data services, including two-way messaging, mobile e-mail and wireless Web, along with traditional digital cellular service.

OLDHAM COUNTY

  • The Oldham County Planning and Zoning Commission has unanimously approved a zone change to Planned Use Development (PUD) and a master plan for a 1,069-acre parcel owned by the Oldham County Economic Development Authority. The master plan – which is expected to develop over “decades,” according to economic development officials – calls for 300,000 square feet of retail development, 850 homes and 2.7 million square feet of office space.

OWENSBORO

  • W.R. Grace & Co. has announced that it is closing its plant in Owensboro by the end of the year, eliminating 50-plus jobs. The closing comes as a result of a decision made by Darex, a business unit of Grace, to discontinue its specialty polymer business.
  • Dana Corporation is planning a $40 million expansion of its Owensboro plant to accommodate equipment and machinery to produce frames for the Toyota Tundra and Sequoia. Owensboro was selected for the expansion over several other cities, in large part due to a $150,000 training incentive provided by the local city and county governments. Though no additional jobs are expected to be generated by the expansion, the incentive agreement calls for Dana to retain its existing employee level of 320 for at least three years.

PRESTONSBURG

  • Citing mounting financial losses, the Kentucky Department of Parks has announced its decision to close the Jenny Wiley Golf Course at Jenny Wiley State Park. The park’s nine-hole course has seen revenue continually decline since the opening of StoneCrest Golf Course, a municipally-owned, 18-hole course that is part of a recreational/residential/industrial complex built on a reclaimed surface coal mine. The parks department has decided instead to promote packages that include golfing at StoneCrest and accommodations at Jenny Wiley’s May Lodge.

WILLIAMSBURG

  • Southeastern Kentucky Rehabilitation Industries (SEKRI), a non-profit organization that primarily works to provide jobs for people with disabilities, has announced that it will take over the Lion Apparel Inc.’s Williamsburg facility, enabling the plant to remain operative and saving some 85 jobs. The arrangement with SEKRI calls for the plant to continue producing items for Lion on a contract basis, while also adding items of military clothing through SEKRI, which handles defense contracts. SEKRI anticipates hiring up to 100 more people over the next year in order to help fill its contracts.

LOUISVILLE

  • Online mortgage broker New Equity Mortgage has purchased the former 13-acre headquarters facility once owned by the Kentucky Baptist Convention for $4.2 million and plans to invest another $3 million to renovate its new property. The company is also expanding in terms of personnel: Officials say they anticipate hiring another 60-75 people by the end of the year to add to the existing 150-member staff. The Kentucky Baptist Convention has purchased a 51,000-sq.-ft. building for $4.5 million and plans to make the move to its new facility in August.
  • In response to increasing demand for its personalized stoneware, Louisville Stoneware has opened a new corporate custom design center in Louisville. The company, which is one of the oldest stoneware manufacturing firms in the country, currently produces more than 50,000 customized gifts and has seen sales increase by 35 percent this year alone.
  • bCatalyst Advisors and Evermore Investments have formed a strategic alliance designed to enable the two financial services firms to support each other’s growth and development in the Kentuckiana region. Evermore specializes in investing in companies that have moved beyond the start-up phase and possess seasoned management, good growth prospects, and a clearly defined business plan. As part of the alliance, bCatalyst Advisors will assist Evermore in its efforts to locate and evaluate investment opportunities. “Later-stage equity investing in growth companies is both a great business and a terrific stimulus for economic development in our region,” noted Andrew McKay, CEO of bCatalyst Advisors.
  • Yum! Brands Inc.’s Board of Directors has authorized the repurchase of up to $500 million of the company’s outstanding common stock over a period of up to 12 months. The Board’s action reflects the belief that the company’s shares represent an outstanding long-term investment opportunity given the performance of the company’s global business portfolio. The board also approved a 15 percent increase in the quarterly cash dividend.

LEXINGTON

  • Lexington-based Valvoline, a division of Ashland, Inc. has signed an agreement to purchase an Indiana company that is a leading marketer of products for the professional automotive reconditioning industry. Car Brite’s products include a broad array of interior and exterior cleaners, paint restorers and protectants, among other products.
  • Anita Britton, a partner in the law firm of Stoll, Keenon & Park, LLP, is the recipient of the 2005 Winner’s Circle Award, presented by the Lexington Chapter of the National Association of Women Business Owners (NAWBO). The award recognizes a Kentucky woman who has shown outstanding leadership, contributed to her community and assisted other businesswomen through personal support and mentoring. Past NAWBO recipients include Martha Layne Collins, Elaine Chao, and Phyllis George.
  • AMR, a firm specializing in professional management services to associations and organizations, has changed its name to AMR Management Services to better reflect the growing number of services being offered.

INDIANA

  • Guidant Corporation shareholders overwhelmingly approved an agreement whereby Johnson & Johnson will acquire Guidant for $76 per share or $25.4 billion in fully diluted equity. The agreement, which was announced on December 15, 2004, remains subject to European and U.S. regulatory review, as well as other customary closing conditions. Indianapolis-based Guidant develops, manufactures and markets a broad array of medical products and services.

OHIO

  • Alcoa has announced it will close its KAMA rigid plastic sheet manufacturing plant in Elyria, Ohio in the third quarter of this year in order to align system production with demand. The plant employs 66 people. The Elyria plant produces plastic sheet for thermoforming into consumer products such as deli trays, clam shells and cookie trays. Production will continue through September as it is transferred to other Alcoa KAMA facilities.

TENNESSEE

  • Dollar General Corporation has announced plans to invest $70 million for the construction of a 1.1 million-square-foot distribution center in Marion, Indiana. At full capacity, the Dollar General facility is expected to employ approximately 500 people. Additionally, the Tennessee-based company’s third-party transportation provider has indicated that it expects to employ about 90 people. The facility is slated to be complete by the fall of 2006.
  • A major gift from Bill Gatton, an East Tennessee automobile retailer, has given East Tennessee State University the required $5 million for the school’s proposed College of Pharmacy. Upon announcing his public support for the ETSU proposal, Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen required the university to raise $5 million in donations prior to going before the Tennessee Board of Regents and the Tennessee Higher Education Commission. An additional $2.5 million will be needed before the first class of pharmacy students can arrive in the summer of 2006. “From a business standpoint, the ETSU pharmacy school is a solid investment in the economic development and expansion of the Tri-Cities Tennessee/Virginia region,” Gatton said. “Furthermore, as a citizen, I see this initiative as a ‘shot in the arm’ for strengthening our health care systems, particularly in underserved areas.” Gatton has also made generous contributions to the University of Kentucky, his alma mater: The university’s Carol Martin Gatton College of Business and Economics is named in his honor.

WEST VIRGINIA

  • Toyota has announced a $120 million expansion of its engine and transmission plant in Buffalo, West Virginia, boosting employment by 150 to about 1,150. Beginning in 2007, Toyota Motor Manufacturing, West Virginia will build 240,000 additional automatic transmissions per year, bringing the plant’s total automatic transmission capacity to 600,000 units. The expansion will increase the company’s total investment in Buffalo to more than $920 million. TMMWV currently machines engines for the Corolla, Matrix, Sienna and Lexus RX330 models as well as automatic transmissions.



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