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    ADDING and REPLACING Apogee Reports Significant Fiscal 2015 Q3 Sales, Earnings Growth

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    MINNEAPOLIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Please add the Consolidated Condensed Statement of Cash Flows at the end of the release due to inadvertent omission by Business Wire.

    The corrected release reads:

    APOGEE REPORTS SIGNIFICANT FISCAL 2015 Q3 SALES, EARNINGS GROWTH

    Apogee Enterprises, Inc. (Nasdaq:APOG) today announced fiscal 2015 third-quarter results. Apogee provides distinctive solutions for enclosing commercial buildings and framing art.

    FY15 THIRD QUARTER VS. PRIOR-YEAR PERIOD

    COMMENTARY I am pleased that Apogee again achieved another quarter of outstanding revenue and earnings growth, said Joseph F. Puishys, Apogee chief executive officer. In our third quarter, all four segments had double-digit revenue growth, while all but one segment had strong earnings growth.

    Architectural glass operating income tripled, and the architectural framing systems and large-scale optical segments each saw approximately 30 percent growth in operating income, he said. Operating income in the architectural services segment was impacted by writedowns on a few projects, issues of which were resolved.

    During the quarter, Apogee improved gross margin by 140 basis points and operating margin by 200 basis points, said Puishys. He added, At 8.4 percent, our operating margin is at its highest level in five years. Overall Apogee converted 21 percent of incremental organic growth to operating margin.

    At the same time, our backlog grew sequentially and year on year to its highest level in six years, as we continue to win future work at improving margins, he said.

    We are expecting a strong finish to fiscal 2015 and have raised the bottom end of our earnings per share outlook and now expect to earn $1.64 to $1.72 per share for the year, Puishys said.

    Here is the original post:
    ADDING and REPLACING Apogee Reports Significant Fiscal 2015 Q3 Sales, Earnings Growth

    Sound Seal Expands Product Teams with Key New Hires

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Agawam, MA (PRWEB) December 17, 2014

    Sound Seal, a leading manufacturer of acoustical and noise control products serving the industrial, architectural, commercial and construction industries, announced today that it has added three key team members to its product teams. Greg Szczesny has been named sales engineer for the Impacta acoustical floor underlayments products; Jeffrey Schaaf joins as estimator for Sound Quality architectural acoustical products; and Mike Keeney has been appointed project manager for WoodTrends acoustical wall and ceiling panel products.

    Recognized for his focused, results-driven approach, Szczesny possesses over 20 years of experience in sales, project management and new business development. Previously, he was a program manager at Excel RP where he was responsible for developing and managing customer relationships, assessing new technologies and overseeing tooling programs. Szczesny also held positions as project manager and business development coordinator for The Prestressed Group before enjoying his experience as a technology education instructor. As a sales engineer for Sound Seals Impacta acoustical floor underlayments, Szczesny will identify and capitalize on market opportunities to maintain and build customer accounts in the U.S.

    Schaaf has a proven record of managing estimating processes and ensuring customer satisfaction. He previously served as an estimator for companies such as Babcock Power Services, Nine Points Woodworking and Wright Architectural Millwork. As an estimator for Sound Seals Sound Quality architectural acoustical products, Schaaf will play a pivotal role in the full proposal/bid process, from creating work scope through final preparation, always delivering the utmost in customer satisfaction.

    Keeney brings over 15 years of experience working with architects, general contractors and customers. Prior to joining Sound Seal, he was a project manager for R & R Window Contractors where he managed all aspects of project management, from shop drawings to close-out procedures. He has held similar positions at Schuco-USA and Permasteelisa North America. As a project manager for Sound Seals WoodTrends products, Keeney will assist customers in the design, choice and installation of decorative real wood wall and ceiling panels.

    Sound Seal is committed to building and enhancing our acoustical and noise control product offerings, and attracting superior industry talent is one of the key ways we accomplish this, said Joe Lupone, CEO of Sound Seal. We are extremely excited to welcome Greg, Jeff and Mike to the Sound Seal team, who join us at a very exciting time following the recent acquisition of Industrial Noise Control.

    For more information on Sound Seals products or to speak with a Sound Seal sales representative, click here.

    About Sound Seal Since 1978, Sound Seal has been a leading manufacturer of acoustical noise control products offering the widest product selection in the soundproofing industry with innovative solutions and outstanding customer service. Sound Seal consists of three product divisions: the Industrial Division that addresses in-plant noise control and environmental noise control; the Architectural Division that handles interiors and finishes, including an award winning line of WoodTrends products; and the Impacta Flooring Division that offers floor underlayments. For more information, please visit http://www.soundseal.com or call 413-789-1770.

    For more information, contact: Jeff Lavery or Jill Anderson SVM Public Relations for Sound Seal Jeff Lavery or Jill Anderson jill.anderson(at)svmpr(dot)com (401) 490-9700

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    Sound Seal Expands Product Teams with Key New Hires

    Renovating Your Home in Boston? Not So Fast.

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    For home renovations, it seems theres no time like the present. With an improving economy and rising home value, now is as good a time as any to add that spare guest room or build the deck of your dreams.

    According to the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University, spending on home remodeling should surpass $145 billion this year. Thats the highest amount spent in eight years.

    But before you pull out the wallet, Boston homeowners should know some of the unique aspects of renovating in our historic city.

    Advertisement - Continue Reading Below

    First of all, its important to know that renovation is different from preservation and restoration. Renovation means to update a building, leaving features that are of use in the buildings current function, according to Bostons Landmark Commission.

    So if youre looking to renovate your home, the first step is to figure out whether your house is on the National Register of Historic Places, the official list of the nations places worthy of preservation.

    Jim Igoe is the executive director of Preservation Massachusetts, a nonprofit historic preservation organization. He said that if your house is on the register, you might want to consider renovating your home correctly, so that youre preserving its historic and cultural heritage. The title is honorary though, so historical preservation is up to you.

    This could be as simple as repairing your windows rather than tearing them out and installing 21st century windows, or choosing to restore your original wood exterior, rather than getting aluminum or vinyl siding.

    Unfortunately, just because your house is on the NRHP, that doesnt mean anyone will give you money to restore your house correctly, Igoe said. And keeping your renovation consistent with history can be time-consuming.

    If your house isnt on the NRHP, it still might be located in a historic district. There are nine in Boston: Aberdeen, Back Bay, Bay State Road and Back Bay West, Bay Village, Beacon Hill, Fort Point Channel, Mission Hill Triangle, St. Botolph, and South End. Each one has different rules.

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    Renovating Your Home in Boston? Not So Fast.

    Renovating in Boston? Not So Fast.

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    For home renovations, it seems theres no time like the present. With an improving economy and rising home value, now is as good a time as any to add that spare guest room or build the deck of your dreams.

    According to the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University, spending on home remodeling should surpass $145 billion this year. Thats the highest amount spent in eight years.

    But before you pull out the wallet, Boston homeowners should know some of the unique aspects of renovating in our historic city.

    Advertisement - Continue Reading Below

    First of all, its important to know that renovation is different from preservation and restoration. Renovation means to update a building, leaving features that are of use in the buildings current function, according to Bostons Landmark Commission.

    So if youre looking to renovate your home, the first step is to figure out whether your house is on the National Register of Historic Places, the official list of the nations places worthy of preservation.

    Jim Igoe is the executive director of Preservation Massachusetts, a nonprofit historic preservation organization. He said that if your house is on the register, you might want to consider renovating your home correctly, so that youre preserving its historic and cultural heritage. The title is honorary though, so historical preservation is up to you.

    This could be as simple as repairing your windows rather than tearing them out and installing 21st century windows, or choosing to restore your original wood exterior, rather than getting aluminum or vinyl siding.

    Unfortunately, just because your house is on the NRHP, that doesnt mean anyone will give you money to restore your house correctly, Igoe said. And keeping your renovation consistent with history can be time-consuming.

    If your house isnt on the NRHP, it still might be located in a historic district. There are nine in Boston: Aberdeen, Back Bay, Bay State Road and Back Bay West, Bay Village, Beacon Hill, Fort Point Channel, Mission Hill Triangle, St. Botolph, and South End. Each one has different rules.

    More here:
    Renovating in Boston? Not So Fast.

    A voice for Yvonne Sampson

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    LOUISDALE If Yvonne Sampson didnt have a prosthesis in her throat, silence would rule the little house she and her husband built 40 years ago.

    Raymond Sampson is deaf and mute, and Yvonne had throat surgery more than four years ago after a bout with cancer.

    Sampson, 76, was fitted with a voice-restoration prosthesis that allows her to talk, but it requires special cleaning and care several times a day.

    Its pretty quiet now, said Sampson, pressing a finger to the stoma or hole in her throat.

    The prosthesis in her neck essentially replaces her voice box, which was removed during a total laryngectomy.

    If I didnt have that, you wouldnt hear me, she said.

    The couples daughter, Janet Martell, was shown how to clean and care for the prosthesis just after the surgery in Halifax and was sent home to Richmond County to provide the daily care her mother needs.

    She is worried about what could happen if her mother needs emergency care. There are no medical staff in Cape Breton or in the Guysborough Antigonish Strait health district trained to provide the specialized care needed for a throat prosthesis.

    Martell works in a local kitchen three days a week and goes to her parents house before work, during breaks and after work to make sure her mother hasnt choked on a piece of food or had her airway blocked by infection or a buildup of blood.

    If my mother, God forbid, choked on something, shed die in less than five minutes, said Martell.

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    A voice for Yvonne Sampson

    National model of restoration: Nine Mile Run

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

    17-Dec-2014

    Contact: Joe Miksch jmiksch@pitt.edu 412-624-4356 University of Pittsburgh

    PITTSBURGH--A stream runs through it. A much nicer, healthier stream.

    Pittsburgh's Frick Park is home to Nine Mile Run, a stream that had been known as "Stink Creek." From 2003 to 2006, the City of Pittsburgh and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers poured $7.7 million into restoring 2.2 miles of the stream and tributaries into waterways approximating what they were prior to urban development.

    The project remains one of the largest urban-stream restorations undertaken in the United States.

    What can this restoration teach us as we continue to deal with streams affected by urbanization?

    The University of Pittsburgh's Dan Bain, assistant professor of hydrology and metal biogeochemistry in the Department of Geology and Planetary Science within the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, says the project has made a difference and sets an example for other cities to follow. The evidence is tallied in Bain's paper, "Characterizing a Major Urban Stream Restoration Project: Nine Mile Run," published this month in the Journal of the American Water Resources Association.

    Nine Mile Run, which is part of a watershed that drains 6.5 square miles of Wilkinsburg, Edgewood, Swissvale, Forest Hills, Squirrel Hill, and Point Breeze, had been truly abused by urbanization and industrialization. Toxins leached into the creek from a slag heap left over from the steelmaking process, sewer lines discharged into the water, and so much of the waterway had been buried in culverts or diverted from its natural path that Nine Mile Run had become toxic.

    The three-year restoration project involved rerouting the creek to a natural pathway, reestablishing flora, creating areas to catch floodwater, and building natural "slash piles" and "snags" from cut-down trees to create bird and animal habitats. It also involved infrastructure interventions: adding rain barrels to individual's homes, preventing some storm water from overwhelming the stream, and fixing parts of the underlying sewers.

    See more here:
    National model of restoration: Nine Mile Run

    Replacement Kitchen Doors and Replacement Cupboard Doors – Video

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Replacement Kitchen Doors and Replacement Cupboard Doors
    http://www.as-nu.co.uk - Looking for replacement kitchen doors and replacement cupboard doors ? Then contact As-nu kitchen doors on 01292 265557 for a FREE e...

    By: As-nu Kitchens

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    Replacement Kitchen Doors and Replacement Cupboard Doors - Video

    Zambia: Guy Scott Rejects Resignation Call

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By Chusa Sichone

    CABINET has asked Acting President Guy Scott to resign from his position with immediate effect.

    Fourteen Cabinet ministers have since asked Secretary to the Cabinet Roland Msiska and the Attorney General Musa Mwenye to convene an emergency meeting which will discuss Dr Scott's replacement.

    The ministers include Finance Minister Alexander Chikwanda, Home Affairs' Ngosa Simbyakula, Defence and Justice Minister Edgar Lungu, Foreign Affairs Minister Harry Kalaba, Gender and Child Development Minister Inonge Wina and Mines, Energy and Water Development Minister Christopher Yaluma.

    Others are Labour and Social Security Minister Fackson Shamenda, Tourism and Arts Minister Jean Kapata, Health Minister Joseph Kasonde, Education, Science, Vocational Training and Early Childhood Education Minister John Phiri and Chiefs and Traditional Affairs Minister Nkandu Luo.

    Mr Kalaba, who spoke on behalf of the group during a media briefing at his office, said following the death of President Michael Sata, the transition had been led by Dr Scott in a "dangerous and haphazard manner."

    "We urge Dr Scott to immediately resign from his position as Acting Republican President on moral grounds. As Cabinet ministers, we have decided to express a clear vote-of-no-confidence in his leadership and in his ability to carry out the remaining duration of the transition," Mr Kalaba said.

    He further accused Dr Scott of leading the transition process without due regard for peace, security, unity and stability that Zambia was renowned for.

    The 14 Cabinet ministers have since unreservedly apologised to the nation for affirming that Dr Scott should act as President during the October 29, 2014 Cabinet meeting, adding that the confidence and trust they reposed in Dr Scott was totally misplaced.

    The ministers accused Dr Scott of repeatedly abusing their confidence and trust, as well as persistently working against the Patriotic Front (PF).

    More here:
    Zambia: Guy Scott Rejects Resignation Call

    Gerald Bailey replaced as FDLE gets interim leader

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Gov. Rick Scott on Tuesday replaced longtime Florida Department of Law Enforcement Commissioner Gerald Bailey with the head of the Capitol Police.

    No explanation was immediately given for the change by the governor's office or the FDLE.

    The governor's office issued a release in which Scott announced the appointment of Rick Swearingen as the interim commissioner.

    The release briefly thanked Bailey for his service.

    "He has been a terrific leader in our law enforcement community," Scott said of Bailey.

    Bailey was appointed commissioner by former Gov. Jeb Bush and the state Cabinet on Dec. 5, 2006.

    The change came as Scott revamps his leadership team in preparation for the Jan. 6 start of his second term.

    Also Tuesday, Scott appointed Chad Poppell, chief of staff for the state Department of Economic Opportunity, as the new secretary of the Florida Department of Management Services.

    Like with the FDLE change, the governor's office gave no explanation for Poppell's replacement of outgoing Secretary Craig Nichols.

    Bailey, once a North Carolina State Highway Patrol trooper, served with the FDLE as deputy executive director, director of the Division of Criminal Investigation, inspector general, chief of crime laboratories and a special agent before taking the helm of the agency, which employs about 1,700 people with an annual budget topping $300 million.

    Originally posted here:
    Gerald Bailey replaced as FDLE gets interim leader

    Roofing Replacements Shelburne Vermont (802) 310-5284 VT Roofing Contractors – Video

    - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Roofing Replacements Shelburne Vermont (802) 310-5284 VT Roofing Contractors
    http://www.chittendenbuilders.com (802) 310-5284 Roofing Replacements Shelburne Vermont (802) 310-5284 VT Roofing Contractors Chittenden Builders your premie...

    By: VTBuilders

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    Roofing Replacements Shelburne Vermont (802) 310-5284 VT Roofing Contractors - Video

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