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    USI Services Group, Inc. Employee Honored with the Building Service Workers Award

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    New York, NY (PRWEB) December 17, 2014

    USI Service Group, Inc. (USI) recently recognized employee Jeffrey Camacho for his efforts and dedication to excellent job performance. Mr. Camacho received the Building Service Workers Award for Window Cleaning. Each year dedicated men and women who keep homes, offices and schools running smoothly are honored, also recognizing the unsung heroes who keep the city safe and clean.

    With leading professionals like Mr. Camacho, USI continues to prove that theyre one of the leading forces in the facility care services industry. Having employees recognized by clients for their roles within the organization speaks volumes to the leadership of the USI executive team members. Most importantly, these accolades illustrate that employees are receiving the appropriate training for their roles to fit their job descriptions.

    USI Services Group, (USI) founded in 1906 as a family business, USI is a premier provider of facility care services throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. With a depth of industry experience and a workforce of thousands, USI provides professional grade facility care services for national and regional clients. USI's Service Portfolio includes national retail chains, shopping malls, major entertainment venues, office campuses, industrial complexes, as well as hospitality companies, pharmaceutical companies and clients in many other industries. USI's comprehensive line of building care services can be customized for each client organization's requirements, helping clients to reach their business goals and making lives better.

    For more information about USI, please visit http://www.usiservicesgroup.com or dial 1-(800)-858-8782 to speak with a representative directly.

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    USI Services Group, Inc. Employee Honored with the Building Service Workers Award

    $277 YouTube Video Made 4U Local Tree Specialist Call 435-782-8031 Today! – Video

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    $277 YouTube Video Made 4U Local Tree Specialist Call 435-782-8031 Today!
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    $277 YouTube Video Made 4U Local Tree Specialist Call 435-782-8031 Today! - Video

    Tree Removal Service Elmwood Park NJ | 973-577-4009 |Emergency Tree Removal NJ | Emergency Tree Serv – Video

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


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    Tree Removal Service Wayne NJ | 973-577-4009 |Emergency Tree Service NJ – Video

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Tree Removal Service Wayne NJ | 973-577-4009 |Emergency Tree Service NJ
    NJ Tree Removal Service: Emergency Tree Removal NJ. Tree Services NJ. Tree Removal Service Wayne NJ | 973-577-4009 |Emergency Tree Service NJ ...

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    Work begins on 20-year ash tree removal plan

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The city of Ames Public Works Department began removing ash trees in public right-of-ways in Ames Northridge Heights neighborhood Wednesday morning, marking the initial step of a 20-year response plan to the emerald ash borer insect that devastates the tree species.

    Wednesdays tree removals in the northwest part of the city came after a Dec. 9 City Council decision to amend the response plan it approved in October in order to limit the appeals process for trees in public right-of-ways the areas between curbs and sidewalks so that work could begin this winter.

    Tree removals will continue through the winter, with stump removals to follow in the spring. The city has identified 2,355 public ash trees it plans to remove over 20 years but for now is limiting its efforts to trees in right-of-ways and city parks that have the potential to do damage by falling over and hitting people or vehicles after being killed by ash borer infestations.

    Were being proactive with it to avoid having a lot of dead trees, and avoid having the expense and the risk that can be on the city for the right-of-way trees if we have a large windstorm or something like that, said Justin Clausen, the Public Works Departments operations manager, who recently took over the job following Corey Mellies promotion to director of fleet services.

    Ash borers have been confirmed in Boone and Story City but not Ames, Clausen said. But he added, for all intents and purposes, theyre probably here, too.

    In developing its 20-year plan, the city of Ames looked to how infestations have been handled in cities in states east of Iowa, where the ash borer has plagued communities for several years. (The insect was first identified in the U.S. in Michigan in 2002, but likely arrived stateside years before that inside wood shipping materials delivered from Asia.)

    The (areas in the U.S.) that didnt do anything, they kind of got caught with it, Clausen said. Its kind of an exponential curve: once the trees start dying, an infestation takes over, it really takes over fast. Were trying to avoid that.

    Over the first five years of the Ames response plan, the city plans to focus on trees with defects that make them more likely to cause problems, and trees with a breast-height diameter of less than six inches.

    The city will inject treatments into healthier and larger ash trees this year, and every three years after that until they, too, are removed later down the road. The phased removals are intended to buy the city time, balancing costs over a longer period.

    According to a City Council action form from October, the plans 20-year estimated cost is about $2.6 million in contract labor, including just under $1.1 million over the first five years. Those costs include tree removals, treatment, stump grinding and replanting.

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    Work begins on 20-year ash tree removal plan

    Lost-Item Tracker Tile Arrives On Android

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    When Tile, the square-shaped lost-item tracker that attachesto bags, bikes, key chains and more, announced this fall that it had raised $13 million in funding (a combination of a seed round and Series A investment), the company said it had earmarked some of that money to be put towardshiring more Android engineers. Now that investment has paid off, as Tile today debuts support for Android smartphones, allowing a larger group of users the ability to find missing or stolen items usingtheir mobile device.

    Tile, in case you missed it, was one of crowdfundings bigger hits, demonstrating both the potential that comes from raising funds directly from an interested consumer user base, but also the drawbacks. Tile initially struggled to meet its expected shipping times, and then had to struggle through a backlog once things were finally up-and-running. That backlog cleared up around Black Friday this year, and now Tile is processing orders as usual.

    The company declined to provide an update on sales figures today, however, but as of October the company reported it had sold half a million devices.

    However, according to data from tracking firm SimilarWeb,Tilewent from a 40 popularity score to a 70 SimilarWebs popularity score is its ownmetric thats based on traffic to the app page and store ranking over the past six months in the U.S. Additionally, Tile hasbeen steadily climbing the Lifestyle Category Chart in iTunes and currently sees a lot of external traffic from search to itsapp store page.

    The small, Bluetooth device works by pairing with a users smartphone, where a mobile app allows you to track the Tiles location. But instead of only being limited to the range of the Bluetooth connection, Tiles clever idea and its potential differentiating factor is its network. Tile devices set to a Lost mode canbe picked up by any phone thats within range. Its the kind of grand plan that would only really work at scale, but in the U.S., Tiles home market, the company has already seen a few success stories like that of a man wholost his keys on an airplane, and eventually tracked them down when the plane landed in Orlando.

    Tile has several competitors, including Duet, BiiSafe, Chipolo, Findster, TrackR,Stick N Find, hipKey, Hone, and others, but Tile is better designed, and has proven to be more reliable, according to reviews. Despite the initial delays,it was worth the wait. Though I havent personally had a need to tap into Tiles network, Ive used the app several times around my own home to find lost keys, and it has always been useful for this sort of minorchallenge.

    Until today, the Tile app that allowed for configuring the device pairing and tracking your items was iOS-only. But now, Tiles app is available on Android.

    The app will work on most devices running Android 4.4 or higher and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE 4.0). However, the app has been optimized for the Samsung Galaxy S5, LG Nexus 4, LG Nexus 5, HTC One, and HTC One M8. The company says its planning to add support for more Android devices in the future.

    While the Android release of a previously available app is not always the most interesting news, in Tiles case, it could impact the companys bottom line without the Android support, Tile was missing the ability to sell to a huge chunk of the smartphone market worldwide. In addition, as more Tile users come on board thanks to the Android expansion, that benefits the current iOS user base as well, as it offers a larger community to call uponwhen items go missing. (Mark as Lost doesnt currently send push notifications on Android as on iOS, but thats shipping in a future release).

    Tile is currently sellingfor $25 on the company website and in theAmazon Wearable Technology store.

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    Lost-Item Tracker Tile Arrives On Android

    Best Plastic Sheds – Video

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


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    Handmade Christmas Memorials for Grave Sites, Cemetery Memorials – Ricks Sheds – Video

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


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    Ancient dental plaque sheds light on Easter Islanders' diets

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    December 17, 2014

    Image Credit: Thinkstock

    John Hopton for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

    Those working in the field of history will often point out that it is not as glamorous as the Indiana Jones movies make it, and for a PhD student digging the remnants of ancient food from teeth excavated on Easter Island, that is certainly the case. Indiana Jones and the Hardened Plaque does not have the ring of a box office smash, but hardened plaque, also known as dental calculus, is helping us to understand the diets of the fascinating ancient culture that gave us the world famous stone heads.

    The study concerns whether or not palm was part of the diet of natives of Easter Island, known locally as Rapa Nui. Biological anthropologists Monica Tromp, a University of Otago, New Zealand, PhD student, and Idaho State Universitys Dr. John Dudgeon conducted a previous study which suggested that palm was part of Easter Islanders diets. But this was confusing because no other archaeological or ethnohistoric evidence supports palm having a dietary role on Rapa Nui. Rather, evidence suggests that palm became extinct soon after colonization in the thirteenth century.

    The latest study points to the traces of palm in the calculus being from the environment that food was grown in, rather than from the food itself. Such a finding will impact the study of dental calculus worldwide.

    Thirty teeth from burials excavated in the early 1980s were analysed, and the results were published in the Journal of Archaeological Science. This included identifying starch grains in the dental calculus after removing and decalcifying the plaque from each tooth. Ms Tromp and Dr Dudgeon identified starch grains that were consistent with modern sweet potato, while none of the grains showed any similarities to banana, taro or yam, or other starchy plants that are posited to be part of the diet.

    The researchers then tested modern sweet potato skins grown in sediment similar to that of Rapa Nuis and found that as tubers grow, their skins appear to incorporate palm phytoliths from the soil. They found that the vast majority of phytoliths (plant microfossils) embedded within the calculus were from palm trees.

    So this actually bolsters the case for sweet potato as a staple and important plant food source for the Islanders from the time the island was first colonised, says Ms Tromp. She adds that plaque is an excellent target for looking at the plant component of ancient diets as microfossils become embedded in dental calculus throughout a persons life. You can get a good idea of some of the plant foods people were eating, which is not an easy task. It is particularly difficult when assessing the role of plants in Oceanic diets because of the scarcity of plant remains.

    On a related note, it was reported in October that the use of sweet potatoes on Rapa Nui is evidence of ancient interaction between people from the isolated Pacific island and natives of South America. It is thought that Easter Islanders may have sailed to South America some time between 1300 and 1500, long before Europeans arrived.

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    CAG blames railways for ground water contamination

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    NEW DELHI: Picking holes in the environment management by Indian railways, Comptroller and Auditor General of India has found there were no specific instructions by the Railway Board for installation of Effluent Treatment Plant (ETP) at workshops, sheds and production units of railways.

    Sludge from ETPs was disposed off in open area leading to contamination of ground water, CAG in its latest report said.

    CAG has suggested workshops, production units and sheds need to take effective steps for proper disposal of ETP sludge as per guidelines issued by Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) to prevent contamination of ground water.

    "No ETP was provided in 60 per cent of the units test checked. In eight workshops and sheds, where ETP was provided, sources of effluents were not connected to the ETP," it said.

    Railways is the single largest user of both energy and water in the country. Conservation of energy and water is essential to avoid wastage.

    A review was taken up to assess the performance of 138 workshops, sheds and six production units in addressing the environmental impact of its operations or maintenance activities and measures adopted for conservation of energy and water.

    CAG also found that monitoring of air quality along with the provision of pollution control equipment was inadequate.

    "Air pollution control equipments such as wet scrubber, fume extractors, dust collectors were not provided in 69 per cent workshops and sheds test checked," it said.

    Pollution control equipments in two production units Chittaranjan Locomotive Works in Chittaranjan and Diesel Locomotive Works in Varanasi were not maintained in working condition.

    Monitoring of implementation of the recommended safety measures was done only in 12 per cent of the workshops and sheds test checked.

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    CAG blames railways for ground water contamination

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