Rolling Stones add Gary Clark, Jr., for Petco show – U

The Rolling Stones have added Grammy Award-winning blues dynamo Gary Clark, Jr., as the opening act for the fabled band’s tour-opening Sunday concert at Petco Park.

Clark is scheduled to take the stage at 8 p.m. Sunday. Gates for the show, which kicks off the Stones’ 2015 Zip Code tour, are scheduled to open at 6 p.m. With Petco Park’s new metal detectors, which were added this year at each entrance to the stadium, an early arrival is advisable for anyone wishing to hear Clark’s opening set.

Judging by his galvanizing performances at Rock in Rio USA earlier this month in Las Vegas and at the 2013 Coachella festival in Indio, Clark is well worth the effort. He will also open Foo Fighters’ Sept. 24 concert here at Sleep Train Amphitheatre.

Gary Clark, Jr., Live at KCRW, 2014

As of this writing, tickets.com – the official ticket agency for the Stones’ concert here and for all San Diego Padres’ home games – lists the Sunday starting time for Sunday’s show as 7 p.m. This is incorrect, according to a concert representative, who indicated the website will be updated..

Clark is not the only opening act announced Tuesday for the Stones’ pending tour, which will visit 15 North American cities between Sunday and July 15. Country-rock star Keith Urban will open the band’s June 17 show at LP Field in Nashville, while blues giant Buddy Guy will open the band’s June 23 Milwaukee show. After that, Ed Sheeran will open the band’s June 27 concert at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City and the Avett Brothers will open the band’s July 1 concert at Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh, N.C. (Sheeran headlines his own show at San Diego’s Valley View Casino Center on June 23.)

Guy and the Stones first crossed paths back in the late 1960s, while Clark and Urban are no strangers to concerts by the band or each other (having performed together during thsi year’s Grammy Awards telecast). Urban sat in with the Stones during the opening date of the 2013 leg of the band’s 50 And Counting tour at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Clark, meanwhile, holds the distinction of having sat in with the band more than any other guest artist on that tour.

Clark, 31, first gained national attention when he performed at Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Festival in Chicago. Clapton was so impressed, he later said of Clark, that: “I wrote him a letter, saying, ‘Thank you – you make me want to play again’.”

In February, Clark teamed with Sheeran and Beyoncé to perform the Stevie Wonder classic “Higher Ground” for the CBS TV special, “Stevie Wonder: Songs In The Key Of Life – An All-Star Grammy Salute.”

Tagged with:

UTC Aerospace Systems Exhibits Business Jet Interior Solutions at EBACE 2015

Visit PR Newswire for Journalists, our free resources for releases, photos and customized feeds. You can also send a free ProfNet request for experts.

Tagged with:

Cheers to Asheville Beer Week 2015

Asheville Beer Week is about the brewers. And, of course, it’s about the beer. But this year, as the event enters its fourth year, and the Asheville Brewers Alliance celebrates its first year with a staff director, Jennifer McLucas, the festival is also about something bigger: the local economy.

With about 20 craft breweries in the Asheville area and more throughout Western North Carolina, the industry is beginning to have a significant impact on both the economy and the community as a whole. The ABA reports that its membership, which stretches to include areas such as Bryson City, Andrews and Boone, directly employees a minimum of 1,200 people at this point — and this number doesn’t include support-service employees.

“Beer is really Asheville’s new manufacturing industry,” says McLucas. “And as an organization, [the ABA is] trying to make it easier for breweries to do business in Western North Carolina.” The ABA is currently working to change state legislation that makes it difficult for breweries to collaborate with other businesses and nonprofit organizations on advertising. Plans are also in the works to commission an economic impact study of the brewing industry in Buncombe and surrounding counties.

McLucas notes that the WNC brewing industry is tightly linked to other aspects of the community, including the nonprofit sector, the food scene and tourism (most beer events, she says, have a 50:50 ratio of locals to tourists). “Asheville Beer Week is a celebration of the impact that we’re having,” she says. “It’s a drinkable invitation to what we’re doing in Asheville.”

Tagged with:

In Case You Missed It: News of Interest From Around North Carolina (week …

NC Furniture Manufacturers Are Owed Millions Charlotte Observer    
“North Carolina furniture manufacturers are owed more than $150 million in uncollected duties from importers of cheap wooden bedroom furniture from China. The money has gone uncollected for years by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, but Sens. Richard Burr, R-N.C., and Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., along with colleagues from other states, have recently tried to pressure the Obama administration to do something about the lost revenue. The senators have asked the agency to explain how it’s going to collect the money owed U.S. manufacturers. The answer, so far, is that it could take years. Stanley Furniture Company, a High Point-based manufacturer, is owed more than $71 million and Hickory-based Century Furniture is due more than $5.3 million in uncollected duties assessed against overseas furniture manufacturers who “dump” products into the U.S. market at artificially low prices…Since the 1990s, tens of thousands of North Carolina furniture jobs moved to Asia, where it costs less to produce furniture. The industry also suffered from predatory practices used by China, such as subsidies and currency manipulation. The North Carolina Department of Commerce estimates the state now has 33,684 workers in the industry, compared with 80,765 furniture jobs in 1993.”

CEO Survey: North Carolina Ranks No. 3 for Business  Triangle Business Journal    
“North Carolina is the third-best state for business, according to a recent report by Chief Executive magazine, moving up a notch from last year. The report is based on responses to a survey, now in its 11th year, of 511 CEOs who rated states in three areas: taxes and regulations, quality of the workforce, and living environment, which includes quality of education, cost of living, affordable housing, social amenities, and crime rates. South Carolina dropped five spots, while Georgia leaped up five spots in its place.”

More Corporate Tax Cuts Likely in NC Charlotte Observer   
“An increase in state revenue collections is likely to trigger new cuts in the state’s corporate income tax rate, beginning with the 2016 calendar year, officials said Wednesday. The latest forecast shows state revenue growing to levels that would beat targets written into state law one feature of the overhauled tax code that Republican legislators approved in 2013. ‘If those triggers do in fact meet the goals that we set forth, then we will follow through on that promise,’ Gov. Pat McCrory said Wednesday. Republicans have said cutting the corporate income tax rate has been — and will remain — an important tool for attracting businesses and improving the state’s employment picture. The 2013 overhaul trimmed the corporate income tax rate from 6.9 percent to 6 percent for 2014. It was reduced again to 5 percent for 2015. If the state generates $20.2 billion in general fund tax revenue by the end of the current fiscal year, which is June 30, then the legislation allows for a cut in the corporate tax rate to 4 percent beginning on Jan. 1, 2016.”

Bicycle Tourism: A Growing Factor in Western NC Mountain Express, Asheville    
“May flowers are here, bringing National Bike Month along for the ride. In anticipation of future tourists on bikes, a coalition of organizations in the western counties gave them a boost by supporting a new study by Kostelec Planning. The study explores ways to go beyond traditional tourism-enhancement strategies — ‘putting butts (or heads) in beds,’ as the study puts it — and offers ways to attract more pedal-powered visitors. The study, titled ‘Bikes in Beds: How to Maximize Bicycle Tourism in Haywood County and Western North Carolina,’ was produced at the request of organizations serving western North Carolina’s seven westernmost counties.”

Drugmaker and University Ally to Seek Cure for AIDS NY Times   
“Years ago, curing AIDS was considered so out of the question that some scientists dared not even mention the possibility. But in the latest sign that attitudes are changing, the British pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline is teaming up with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to start a research institute and a company aimed at curing HIV infection and AIDS. In an agreement set to be announced on Monday, GlaxoSmithKline will contribute $4 million annually over five years to the research center, set up on the North Carolina campus. It will also move a small number of its own scientists to Chapel Hill.”

  • 18 May 2015
  • Author: Laurie Green
  • Number of views: 50
  • Comments: 0
  • –>

Tagged with:

Vacations That Aim to Turn Cousins Into Friends


May 19, 2015 2:33 p.m. ET

Many parents want their children to form close ties with their cousins but live too far apart to visit often.

Is vacationing together under one roof with dozens of relatives the solution?

A growing number of families think so, and they’re sparking a run on big vacation-rental homes with enormous kitchens, dining tables that seat 20, and bedrooms lined with bunks.

Sharing a vacation-rental home affords more casual togetherness than most hotels. On a deeper level, many families are striving for the cousin effect—the emotional and social benefits children can gain from close ties with family members their own age.

“We want to be eating all our meals together. We want to be doing dishes together. We want to create that domestic intimacy,” says Amy Whitley of Medford, Ore. Her family has rented vacation homes twice in the past two years with her parents, who also live in Oregon, and her sister’s family in Massachusetts. Although the five cousins, ages 4 to 15, only see each other occasionally, vacationing in one house enables them to “jump into it and become comfortable with each other again,” says Ms. Whitley, founding editor of Pit Stops for Kids, a family-travel website.

Psychologists say relationships with extended family offer special benefits. Cousins tend to be more accepting of each other than peers at school and more tolerant of behavior that might elicit ridicule or rejection on the playground, says Eileen Kennedy-Moore, a Princeton, N.J., clinical psychologist and co-author of “The Unwritten Rules of Friendship.” Extended-family gatherings can be like “being enveloped in a social safety net.”

The family of Jim and Susan Coleman of Colts Neck, N.J., vacationed at The Camp, in Asheville, N.C.
ENLARGE


Jackie Schaefer, 16, says she didn’t know her 11 teenage cousins well before they spent the week together last August at The Camp, of Asheville, N.C., a 150-acre retreat with sports fields and courts, a pool, game rooms and a gym. Sharing three of The Camp’s big houses with 40 relatives, the cousins talked late into the night about school and college plans, then woke by 7 a.m. the next day to swim, hike and play soccer and dodgeball together.

Ms. Schaefer, of Atlantic Beach, Fla., has since been texting, calling or video-chatting at least once a week with several of her cousins. “The camp really brought us closer,” she says. A 19-year-old cousin who plays college lacrosse recently gave Ms. Schaefer, a competitive soccer player, advice about choosing a college team. Ms. Schaefer says she expects to stay in touch. “Friends might grow apart when you go to college, but with a cousin, you have that bond no matter where you are.”

Shared memories are a key part of that bonding. Ms. Schaefer’s mother, Sarah Schaefer, says her three teenagers and their cousins still reminisce about seeing their grandmother, Susan Coleman, bravely hurtle down the water slide. Ms. Coleman, who is 71, resisted the idea but gave in after coaxing from her grandchildren. The slide “was an absolute blast. We laughed so hard,” says Ms. Coleman, of Colts Neck, N.J.

Socializing across all generations is important for kids, psychologists say. They say children tend to remember multifamily gatherings more than other kinds, and enjoy hearing family stories. Both help them develop a sense of identity as part of a family with a shared past.

Children also can pick up new interests and social skills hanging out with a more socially savvy cousin, Dr. Kennedy-Moore says.

Jennifer Jones of Cancun, Mexico, says her 4-year-old son Owen wasn’t interested in soccer until he spent a week in a Park City, Utah, vacation home last March with two older cousins from Houston. Owen has since asked to join a soccer team, and he often refuses to take off a Lionel Messi jersey his cousins gave him, Ms. Jones says.

Ms. Jones also rented a vacation home in Mexico for her 11-member extended family on the HomeAway
AWAY


-1.05
%




rental site last summer, and the group intends to get together again this summer. Although there is an age gap between her children, 2 and 4, and their cousins, who are 6, 8 and 10, both groups benefit, says Ms. Jones, owner of BoutiqueMexico, a vendor of fashions by artisan designers. “The older boys help out and get down to the little kids’ level, wrestling on the ground and playing hide-and-seek.”

Jean and Phil Frigon of Clay Center, Kan., organized a vacation for their children and their families at the YMCA of the Rockies’ Snow Mountain Ranch in Colorado.
ENLARGE

Jean and Phil Frigon, of Clay Center, Kan., organized a four-day vacation in 2013 so 19 of their extended family could spend time together, Ms. Frigon says. They rented a six-bedroom cabin at YMCA of the Rockies’ Snow Mountain Ranch near Winter Park, Colo., with big living and eating areas. Ms. Frigon says their grandchildren, all under 11, “loved staying in the same house. They could pretend they were at a big slumber party.”

The kitchen was equipped with two of everything—two refrigerators, two ovens, two microwaves and two dishwashers. Each branch of the family prepared and served one meal. “The kids had someone to play with all the time,” doing crafts, hiking, and playing games and mini-golf, and adults helped watch the children so parents could grab an occasional nap, says Sally Lee, Ms. Frigon’s daughter. Her son Isaac, 12, says he had fun square dancing with his 6-year-old cousin one evening. The vacation, he adds, “really helped me know who my cousins are, and what they like to do.”

Nearly 1 in 4 travelers has switched in the past two years to vacation-rental homes from hotels or condos, according to a survey last February of 2,832 people by MMGY Global, Kansas City, Mo., a travel-marketing agency. Maria Kirk of Ocean City, N.J., owner of ShoreSummerRentals.com, which posts vacation rentals on the Jersey Shore, says demand for houses with eight or more bedrooms has risen 25% in the past three years.

Growth in online vacation-rental sites such as HomeAway, VRBO and Airbnb is opening up more big-house options for families. Brian Sharples, CEO and co-founder of HomeAway Inc., says postings of houses sleeping 11 or more have risen 50% since 2011.

The Frigon family at Snow Mountain Ranch.
ENLARGE

Multigenerational groups spend more than other travelers on shared, kid-friendly activities, according to D.K. Shifflet Associates, a McLean, Va., tourism and travel research firm. Many of the most popular destinations are near beaches, theme parks, water parks or museums, such as Orlando, Fla., Myrtle Beach and Hilton Head in South Carolina, Anaheim, Calif., and North Carolina’s Outer Banks.

Organizing a successful shared vacation is a lot of work. “It’s not your dream vacation. It’s going to be annoying and aggravating sometimes. If you’re lucky, it will also be wonderful,” says Eileen Ogintz, Westport, Conn., an author on family travel and co-chair of TMS Family Travel, a producer of travel conferences. She recommends that family members agree in advance on how to handle all costs, cooking and chores.

Grandparents pay for extended-family trips 65% of the time when they organize the vacation, D.K. Shifflet’s research shows. When younger family members make the plans, grandparents pay 24% of the time, adult children pay 39% of the time, and all share the costs 33% of the time.

Cooking for 20 isn’t everybody’s idea of a good time, but extended families save money by preparing at least some of their own meals. Some vacationers have each branch of the family plan and prepare a dinner, and also assign each evening’s cleanup and trash-removal duties in advance.

Most vacation homes require minimum rentals of one week, which can be too much togetherness, says Edith Wagner, editor of Reunions Magazine. Things that can help include looking for a shorter rental term, finding a house with enough room to allow privacy, or setting aside blocks of time for nuclear families to be together on their own.

It’s important to set dates for shared summer vacations at least a year in advance, and two years for larger groups, Ms. Wagner says. That gives families time to coordinate calendars and reserve the kind of housing they need. Eight-bedroom family cabins at YMCA of the Rockies typically are fully booked for the summer at least a year in advance, a spokeswoman says.

Write to Sue Shellenbarger at sue.shellenbarger@wsj.com

Tagged with:

North Carolina lawmakers honor Duke’s NCAA title

Local News

Healthy Teens Coalition celebrates dropping teen pregnancy rates

Tagged with:

3-star RB Tre Bryant still high on Syracuse football; DT target Christian …

Syracuse, N.Y. — List week is in full swing for the Syracuse football recruiting department.

After making the cut for linebacker Rashawn Battle, a three-star junior from Wallenpaupack (Hawley, Pa.) Area High School, on Sunday, the Orange landed on Tre Bryant’s top seven Monday night.

Bryant, a three-star running back from Christian Brothers (St. Louis, Mo.) College High School, is rated the 58th-best running back in his cycle by 247Sports.com’s composite rankings. The 5-foot-10, 195-pound back has received offers from 11 schools, including all of his favorites, after carrying the ball 107 times for 1,052 yards and 20 touchdowns as a junior, according to HSGameCenter.com.

The Orange offered Bryant on March 31, though it’s unclear how seriously they have been pursuing him since four-star running back Robert Washington announced his pledge on April 25.

Washington said he was told that he would be the only running back in Syracuse’s 2016 class. However, it’s possible that SU is recruiting Bryant for the hybrid back position, which will line up on the wing, in the slot and in the backfield in offensive coordinator Tim Lester’s offensive system.

Other hybrid back targets include three-star Moe Neal, who is close friends with Washington and recently named SU to his top five, and three-star Tyler Thompson, a New Jersey product who called the Orange his leader after visiting on March 1.

Christian Colon set to announce Top 5 on Friday

One player set to release his list this week is definitely being targeted heavily by Syracuse.

Christian Colon, a three-star defensive tackle from Independence (Charlotte, N.C.) High School, will release his Top 5 on Friday, he announced on Twitter Monday night.

The 6-foot-3, 325-pound Colon has known Washington since middle school and played with him on USA Football in eight grade and at SouthLake Christian (Huntersville, N.C.) Academy as a freshman before transferring to Independence.

Colon said in late April that he’s heard from Washington and SU running backs coach DeAndre Smith, and he can envision being part of Washington’s plan to bring Syracuse back into the national spotlight.

“I’m cool with it,” Colon said. “I’d do it. It’s just getting other players to do it. I’d love to do it. But at this time in my recruitment, I’m not ready to commit yet.”

Colon is listed as the No. 55 defensive tackle in the country by 247Sports.com’s composite rankings. He is also considering scholarship offers from Penn State, Notre Dame, South Carolina, North Carolina, UCLA and Mississippi State, among others, according to 247Sports.com.

Colon said that he won’t commit to a school he hasn’t visited yet and tweeted earlier this month that he plans to announce a pledge on Nov. 6.

Contact Stephen Bailey anytime: Email | Twitter | 315-427-2168

Tagged with:

Update on Round Four: Boone Still Trailing Behind Chattanooga in First Day of …

Don’t forget to vote online at outsideonline.com/vote and see the latest results.

bracketround4

Best Towns 2015 Bracket (click for full size image)

 

Update: We’ve made a lot of progress today, but we still have a significant amount of catching up to do if we want to beat Chattanooga and make it to the final four. Don’t let them win!

Share the link to vote with your friends and neighbors and encourage them to help us win. This is an amazing opportunity for Boone and we just can’t pass it up!

voteupdate0519

Best Towns 2015 Fourth Round voting results as of 5:50 p.m. on May 19

 

By Jessica Isaacs

Only eight towns remain as the fourth round of online voting begins today in Outside Magazine‘s Best Towns 2015 competition. After maintaining a steady lead over Athens, Georgia in the third five-day round earlier this week, Boone earned a chance to vie for the top spot in the South bracket against Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Not only did we pull in enough votes to knock Athens out of the tournament, we earned 14,475 votes — more than any of the 15 other contenders from across the country who participated in the third round. This accomplishment would not have been possible without a phenomenal response from our readers, local businesses that are helping to spread the word and people all across North Carolina who are stepping up to vote for Boone as their favorite place to live, work, study and play.

The only competing town that trailed closely behind Boone was Flagstaff, Arizona, which earned 14,117 in the West bracket.

Our newest contender, Chattanooga, defeated Beaufort, South Carolina in the third round with a total of 13,283 votes.

Wondering who else made it to the top eight?

Of four wild card contenders that were added to the original top 60 through early online voting, Port Angeles, Washington is the only one still in the running and takes on Flagstaff this week to win the West.

Middlebury, Vermont and Bar Harbor, Maine are battling it out in the East, and Spearfish, South Dakota is up against Eau Claire, Wisconsin in the Midwest.

So what does this mean for our town?

Boone is now the only North Carolina town in the running for the top spot and, with just two towns left in the bracket, we have a chance to be the only contender in the South to make it to the final four.

Fourth round voting began today and will continue until 11:59 p.m. on Saturday, May 23.

We’ve earned more than 2,300 in the first 12 hours of the fourth round, but we’re already trailing behind Chattanooga. We’ve proved to be a worthy contender in the competition so far, but it’s time to kick our voting in to high gear.

votes0519

Best Towns 2015 Round Four voting results as of 11:15 a.m. on May 19

Let’s not forget what’s at stake here! If we can make it to the top spot, Boone will be recognized as the “Best Town Ever” and will be the star of a feature story in the September issue of Outside — a nationally recognized outdoor and adventure magazine. As much of our local economy depends on travel and tourism, this is an amazing opportunity for the High Country, and we can all be a part of making it happen.

We’ve accomplished a lot so far, so keep that momentum going and the votes coming! Don’t let your hard work go to waste and let Chattanooga take us out. There’s a lot on the line and this round will be a challenge, but our town can do it!

Here’s how you can help.

If you want Boone to win it all, make sure you vote online every day. Encourage your friends to do the same by spreading the word on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram using #BooneNC and #BestTowns2015 — and don’t forget to include the link to vote at Outside online.

Winners will advance until two towns remain, and the ultimate winner will be announced on June 5.

Here are the results from round three:

round3results

Best Towns 2015 Round Three voting results

 

 

Check out our other headlines to read more about the competition:

Round Three: Boone Leads with Most Votes in the Country

Round Two: Boone Takes on Savannah, Georgia

Boone Leads Ocala in ‘Best Towns’ Competition, Voting Continues

Boone to Compete for Best Town in America, Social Media Campaign Underway

Boone’s Contenders in “Best Towns” Competition Announced

Online Voting for #BooneNC in #BestTowns2015 Competition Starts Monday

 

voteviaduct

 

 

 

Comments

comments

Tagged with:

20 Family-Friendly Travel Ideas to Get You Going

To save articles or get newsletters, alerts or recommendations – all free.

Don’t have an account yet?

Subscribed through iTunes and need an NYTimes.com account?
Learn more »

Tagged with:

Hendersonville lawmakers in thick of budget discussions

The House released its first draft of the budget Monday, and will add the final touches in committees throughout the week before voting on its final version and sending it to the Senate.

Two local lawmakers will play key roles in budget discussions — State Sen. Tom Apodaca, R-Henderson, is the second-ranking member of the Senate and co-chair of the committee on appropriations for education and higher education, and state Rep. Chuck McGrady, R-Henderson, is co-chair of the House Appropriations Committee.

Apodaca said Monday that the Senate and House budgets always differ. While he said he can’t speak for the House’s priorities, one of the Senate’s top priorities is funding the second phase of teacher pay increases.

He said the Senate hopes to get starting teachers’ salaries up to $35,000 per year, and give raises to state employees hurt harder by the recession, such as prison guards.

The Senate also wants to reinstitute the income tax deduction for medical expenses for senior citizens, which Apodaca called a big issue.

Efforts to reach McGrady were unsuccessful Monday, but in an email newsletter, he stated that education funding also is a priority in the House budget.

After the new revenue numbers were released, McGrady said the House Appropriations Committee gave out new goals to committees handling different parts of the budget, resulting in the reinstatement of funding for drivers education courses, maintaining funding for pre-K programs and an increase to the child care subsidy.

The newsletter said the House budget “fully funds school enrollment growth. It also maintains teacher assistants while adding about $50 million for textbooks and digital resources. Moreover, several public school initiatives were funded including a digital learning plan at $21 million, a teacher recruitment and retention loan scholarship program at $3.2 million over two years, a program for principal development at $10 million over two years, and $15 million for an initiative intended to move towards differentiated pay (pay based on performance rather than on longevity).”

The preliminary House budget also increases funding for rural economic development grants, tourism advertising and $5 million has been proposed for the One N.C. Small Business fund, which would offer technology grants for small businesses.

Building up the state’s rainy day funds and infrastructure funding are high on the list for the Senate as well, though Apodaca said the Senate hasn’t taken a position on two $1.5 billion infrastructure bonds proposed by Gov. Pat McCrory in April.

Apodaca said he has major concerns about those initiatives and would be “hard pressed to support” the transportation bond, since there aren’t any projects listed west of Morganton.

One area Apodaca would like to address is “a glaring need for doctors in the rural areas” around Hendersonville and Asheville. He said he wants to fund 10 additional residents in the area for the University of North Carolina Medical School.

The expected surplus gives lawmakers a chance to look at the areas that have been held back during the recession, Apodaca said, but frugality shouldn’t go out the window just because the extra money is there.

“What we’ve done since 2010, the decisions we’ve made are a large part of why we are where we are,” he said, adding that the legislature can’t just start spending freely.

In his newsletter, McGrady also emphasized the need for lawmakers to use restraint.

“Overall, I’m pretty happy with this budget,” McGrady wrote. “We haven’t gone on a spending spree, even though our revenues exceeded expectations.

“When the complete budget is released and sewn together over the next few days,” the newsletter stated, “my expectation is that folks will see we’ve made some targeted investments but that we’ve also made sure that we’ve prudently put monies towards long-needed repairs/renovations and savings.”

Reach Lacey at derek.lacey@blueridgenow.com or 694-7860.

Tagged with:
Top