Convention & Visitors Bureau nabs major tourism award – KPLC

SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA (KPLC) –

The Lake Charles/Southwest Louisiana Convention Visitors Bureau has been awarded the Shining Example Award for Tourism Office of the Year.

Presented by the Southeast Tourism Society, the award salutes the bureau’s achievements in tourism over the past year, which include  opening the Creole Nature Trail Adventure Point; hosting the Travel Media Showcase, a national event of media professionals; and creating “My Southwest Louisiana Home,” an original video and song. In total, e bureau brought in $385 million worth of tourism to Calcasieu Parish.

“This honor does not happen without everyone pouring every bit of creativity, energy and excellence into each project. The staff at the CVB works incredibly hard. We are passionate about what we do, and we love working with everyone in the community, ” said Shelley Johnson, executive director.

The Southeast Tourism Society covers Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.

For more on the bureau, click HERE

Copyright 2015 KPLC. All rights reserved.

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US Hospital Pioneers Use of First Mobile Compounding Cleanroom








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Sterile Drug Compounding in First Certified Mobile Unit Provided by Germfree Labs
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RALEIGH, N.C., Sept. 24, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Duke Raleigh Hospital recently became the first healthcare facility to utilize a certified USP 797 mobile cleanroom to assure uninterrupted pharmacy services. The advanced pharmacy unit, created by Germfree Labs, allowed the hospital to maintain separate, on-site sterile drug compounding operations during a major renovation project.

During building renovations it is imperative that IV compounding operations are not interrupted or otherwise negatively impacted. Full compliance with all regulations is critical to ensure an environment for safe and aseptic compounding of pharmaceuticals. Duke Raleigh worked with Germfree, the Florida manufacturer of the turnkey mobile USP 797 pharmacy-cleanroom. The fully equipped unit was engineered to provide the advanced functionality and ample capacity required for a hospital compounding operation.

“The mobile pharmacy was the perfect platform to continue all operations on-site,” according to Gene Woodall, Duke Raleigh’s Director of Pharmacy. “We were able to deliver vital sterile compounded preparations without interruption while maintaining our extensive quality assurance protocols and rigorous standards for product sterility. Concurrently, renovations to improve our main facility commenced with absolutely no impact on compounding services.”

The remodeling of a hospital pharmacy presents a range of difficult challenges to maintaining sterile drug compounding operations. “Traditional approaches are cumbersome and costly,” according to Sal Golfo, General Manager of Germfree’s Pharmacy Division. Some facilities are forced to renovate one section at a time, extending and complicating the project. Other hospitals resort to outsourcing their compounding, which adds cost and impedes workflow.

“Our challenge was to design and deliver a complete mobile pharmacy that would be immediately operational. It was imperative that the unit provide a comfortable workspace equipped to facilitate all sterile or hazardous drug services conducted in a traditional building,” said Golfo. The mobile pharmacy has distinct, controlled work zones engineered as ISO 7 environments. The Hazardous Drug Preparation Room operates under negative pressure and is equipped with Class II Biological Safety Cabinets. The Sterile IV Preparation Room operates under positive pressure and is equipped with Laminar Flow Workstations.

“During the initial planning of our renovation project, we knew we needed an innovative plan to maintain the output levels and quality standards required for our sterile compounding services,” said Gene Woodall. “Germfree’s mobile pharmacy provided an advanced, comprehensive unit with all the resources we needed to provide seamless sterile compounding during the renovations at Duke Raleigh Hospital.”

About Duke Raleigh Hospital

Duke Raleigh Hospital, a part of the world-renowned Duke University Health System, is a 186-bed acute-care facility in Raleigh, North Carolina with services including a cancer center, orthopaedic center, diabetes center, wound healing center, 24-hour emergency department, intensive and critical care, cardiovascular center, cardiac and pulmonary rehab, wellness services and community education. The hospital’s affiliation with one of the country’s best health systems provides patients with access to the most advanced technology and leading-edge medicine available. For more information visit: www.dukeraleighhospital.org

About Germfree

Germfree was established in 1962 by Jerome Landy, M.D., Ph.D, a physician and researcher. Dr. Landy originally started the company to create the biological safety equipment he needed for his research. Today, Germfree’s Pharmacy Division manufactures a wide range of safety equipment for the hospital pharmacy. Additionally the company has developed many new biocontainment technologies. Germfree is an industry leader in the manufacture of mobile life science laboratories as well mobile compounding pharmacy cleanrooms. For more information visit: www.germfree.com

 

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SOURCE Germfree Labs

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Yogi Berra: Leaving behind a catalog of Yogi-isms that will live forever

CHARLOTTE, N.C., Sept. 23, 2015 – The world of sports has lost one of its most beloved “characters.” Former New York Yankees Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra died at the age of 90 at his home in New Jersey.  Berra was born on May 12, 1925.

Berra was one of those people you thought would live forever because he was so famous for his malapropisms, which can only be described as “Yogi-isms”:

“You can observe a lot just by watching.”

“If you can’t imitate him, don’t copy him.”

“When you come to a fork in the road, take it.”

“Nobody goes there anymore,” he said of a popular restaurant. “It’s too crowded.”

And, of course, the classic, “It’s déjà vu all over again.”

Wednesdays are usually reserved for Trivia, but on this day, we pay tribute to Yogi with a commencement speech he supposedly delivered in 2007 at St. Louis University. The speech probably is not real, but it doesn’t matter because it is filled with the sort of expressions that were the essence of the man we simply knew as Yogi:

“Thank you all for being here tonight. I know this is a busy time of year, and if you weren’t here, you could probably be somewhere else.

“I especially want to thank the administration at St. Louis University for making this day necessary. It is an honor to receive this honorary degree. It is wonderful to be here in St. Louis and to visit the old neighborhood. I haven’t been back since the last time I was here.

“Everything looks the same, only different. Of course, things in the past are never as they used to be.
“Before I speak, I have something I’d like to say. To be honest, I’m not much of a public speaker, so I will try to keep this short as long as I can.

“As I look out upon all of the young people here tonight, there are a number of words of wisdom I might depart. But I think the most irrelevant piece of advice I can pass along is this: ‘The most important things in life are the things that are least important.’

“I could have gone a number of directions in my life. Growing up on the Hill, I could have opened a restaurant or a bakery. But the more time I spent in places like that, the less time I wanted to spend there.

“I knew that if I wanted to play baseball, I was going to have to play baseball. My childhood friend, Joe Garagiola, also became a big-league ballplayer, as did my son, Dale. I think you’ll find the similarities in our careers are quite different.

“You’re probably wondering, how does a kid from the Hill become a New York Yankee and get in the Hall of Fame? Well, let me tell you something, if it was easy nobody would do it. Nothing is impossible until you make it possible.

“Of course, times were different. To be honest, I was born at an early age. Things are much more confiscated now. It seems like a nickel ain’t worth a dime anymore. But let me tell you, if the world was perfect, it wouldn’t be. Even Napoleon had his Watergate.

“You’ll make some wrong mistakes along the way, but only the wrong survive. Never put off until tomorrow what you can’t do today.

“Strive for success and remember you won’t get what you want unless you want what you get. Some will choose a different path. If they don’t want to come along, you can’t stop them.

“Treat others before you treat yourself.

“Hold on to your integrity, ladies and gentlemen. It’s the one thing you really need to have; if you don’t have it, that’s why you need it. Work hard to reach your goals. There may come a day when you get hurt and have to miss work. Don’t worry, it won’t hurt to miss work.

“We all have limitations, but we also know limitation is the greatest form of flattery.

“Half the lies you hear won’t be true, and half the things you say, you won’t ever say.

“As parents you’ll want to give your children all the things you didn’t have. But don’t buy them an encyclopedia, make them walk to school like you did. Teach them to have respect for others, especially the police. They are not here to create disorder, they are here to preserve it.

“Throughout my career, I found good things always came in pairs of three. There will be times when you are an overwhelming underdog. Give 100 percent to everything you do, and when that’s not enough, give everything you have left.

“Finally, graduates and friends, cherish this moment; it is a memory you will never forget. You have your entire future ahead of you.”

Bob Taylor has been traveling the world for more than 30 years as a writer and award-winning television producer focusing on international events, people and cultures around the globe.

Taylor is founder of The Magellan Travel Club (www.MagellanTravelClub.com)

Read more of What in the World and Bob Taylor at Communities Digital News

Follow Bob on Twitter @MrPeabod

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The fall leaf show has started in Western North Carolina

Cooler temperatures and sunny weather in the mountains of Western North Carolina have kicked off the start of the region’s fall leaf color show.

“We’ve had this cool weather for the last 10 or 15 days. That has made the color really jump out,” said Howie Neufeld, plant physiologist at Appalachian State University who follows the annual show.

The visual changing of the seasons tends to reach a peak in Asheville around the last week of October, Neufeld said.

[To see peak times for various regions, check out (and download) this leaf-peeper calendar.]

Higher elevations around the city – including places in the Blue Ridge Mountains – typically show their best colors even earlier.

The most brilliant show usually comes to areas near Boone and Blowing Rock around mid-October, Neufeld said.

Plan to arrive early if you want to avoid long lines of cars during peak tourism times or if you want to take pictures. You’ll capture more vibrant colors when the sun is at a low angle – in the morning or evening. Arrive closer to sunset and stop at an overlook if you prefer to see the stars. Overlooks can be ideal for stargazing.

Neufeld recommends these locations as you plan a visit:

▪ One of the earliest displays can be seen on the Blue Ridge Parkway between Grandfather Mountain and Rough Ridge.

▪ Julian Price Memorial Park, at the foot of Grandfather Mountain near Blowing Rock, is also offering early colors this year. Among the park’s seven trails is the 2.7-mile Price Lake Loop Trail, which is flat enough to be family friendly. You’ll also be close to the Moses Cone Manor House. Visit the manor early or on weekdays to avoid crowds at this popular spot. The park’s 13.5-mile Tanawha Trail offers views of the Linn Cove Viaduct and hugs the southeastern ridge of Grandfather Mountain.

▪ Craggy Gardens is a high elevation – at more than 5,000 feet – about 20 miles northeast of Asheville. That height gives it dramatic views on the Blue Ridge Parkway and beyond. Changing of the leaves happens quickly up there, so plan a stop around the last week of September or first week in October. The show of leaves moves downhill after that, at about 1,000 feet every 10 days or so.

▪ A drive on U.S. 64 is also a good option to find scenic mountain sites. Choose a path that takes you from Hendersonville to Chimney Rock, or from Hendersonville to the highlands. Hendersonville is apple country, so you’ll find cider and other goods to take home as you’re passing through. This year’s drought should make the apple crops especially sweet, Neufeld said.

Karen Sullivan: 704-358-5532, @Sullivan_kms

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Calendar of Events – Friday, September 25 – Thursday, October 1, 2015

JOHNNY’S GONE FISHING –  901 W. Main St., Carrboro, NC. 919-932-5070. Annie Johnston http://www.johnnysgonefishing.com/love-valor-live.html.  –Kyle Forman, Folk.  Friday, Sept 11, 7-9p.   Kyle Forman is a musician that grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina. He started singing and playing the guitar at age 11. Other than guitar, he is multi-talented and plays the banjo, harmonica, piano, and the ukulele. In his live act he brings you his own unique twist on indie folk as a one man band using his guitar, harmonica, and kick drum.    free.  –The War and Treaty – Alternative, Americana/Soul, Country.  Thursday, Sept 17, 7-9pm.   CBS Radio states The War and Treaty is “one of the top bands to watch.” The War and Treaty features a husband-and-wife duo that provides a snapshot of the life of a soldier. Their latest album, “The War and Treaty: Live at Blue House Studios,” takes listeners through a soulful yet folksy journey of a soldier returning home and the trials and triumphs shared with family. Tanya Blount is most known for her appearance in “Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit” for her performance with Lauryn Hill while Michael Trotter, a wounded war veteran, is a previous winner of the Baumholder Germany Military Idol.    free.  –Windy City Slim and Ken Yow – Blues / Ballads / Esoterica.  Friday, Sept 18, 7-9pm.   Windy City Slim had been retired for 17 years when he hooked up with bass player Ken Yow in 2006 and decided to give music another whirl. Slim and Ken now have a repertoire that includes blues, African-American ballads, gospel numbers, old-time country songs, and you name it. In performance, Slim often relates the history behind his songs, and tells stories about the early musicians who first sang the songs.    free.  –Tim Carless Jeff Crawford – English Folk, Southern Soul.  Friday, Sept 25, 7-9pm.   Tim Carless and Jeff Crawford first crossed paths almost a decade ago.  subsequently they have plowed their own fields, establishing themselves as producers, songwriters and sidemen in around the local burgeoning musical community. From time to time they perform together, sometimes joined by other musical friends and allies, with a palette of music that draws upon Appalachia, Chanson, English Folk, Tin Pan Alley and the Mississippi Delta. Their set will also feature some of their own compositions.    free.  –The Walking Guys – Singer-Songwriters.  Monday, Sept 28, 7-9pm.   Based out of Nashville The Walking Guys is a collaboration of singer/songwriters literally walking their tour from Portland, Maine to Nashville, Tennessee. Four months, 1600 miles, four guys, and the story of a lifetime. WHY ARE YOU WALKING 1600 MILES? “Being on foot will force us to rely on the generosity of the people we meet to survive and take away the normal barriers that keep us from connecting with those around us. We believe this will allow us to make lasting, meaningful connections with people that would otherwise not be possible..”   free.

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FairPoint Communications to Participate in the Deutsche Bank 2015 Leveraged …








CHARLOTTE, N.C., Sept. 24, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — FairPoint Communications, Inc. (Nasdaq: FRP), a leading communications provider, today announced it will present at the Deutsche Bank 2015 Leveraged Finance Conference in Scottsdale, Arizona, on September 30 at 2:55 p.m. PDT. Representing FairPoint will be CFO Ajay Sabherwal and Paul Taaffe, vice president of corporate communications and development. FairPoint will also be hosting one-on-one meetings with investors.

About FairPoint Communications, Inc.
FairPoint Communications, Inc. (Nasdaq: FRP) provides advanced data, voice and video technologies to single and multi-site businesses, public and private institutions, consumers, wireless companies and wholesale re-sellers in 17 states. Leveraging an owned, fiber-core Ethernet network — with more than 20,000 route miles of fiber, including approximately 17,000 route miles of fiber in northern New England — FairPoint has the network coverage, scalable bandwidth and transport capacity to support enhanced applications, including the next generation of mobile and cloud-based communications, such as small cell wireless backhaul technology, voice over IP, data center colocation services, managed services and disaster recovery. For more information, visit www.FairPoint.com.

SOURCE FairPoint Communications, Inc.

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Editorial: Autumn arrives, bringing along big smiles


Posted Sep. 22, 2015 at 6:02 PM
Updated Sep 22, 2015 at 6:03 PM


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Popular Piedmont tourism attractions could see big bucks

Tourism experts say North Carolina ranks sixth in the country when it comes to most visited states.

Experts say the travel and tourism industry for the Triad portion of the state brings in about $2.8 billion in economic business and employs 25,000 people locally.

The North Carolina Zoo and the Piedmont State Parks could see some big bucks if a $2 billion bond proposal being reviewed in the North Carolina General Assembly makes its way to the March ballot for voters.

The proposal includes giving money to University of North Carolina campuses for construction, distributing funds to community colleges and also giving money to state parks and the North Carolina Zoo.

The proposed bond is being reviewed in the Senate. Senate leaders will vote on Thursday to decide if it should be on the March ballot.

Next week, the House will vote on the proposal. If allowed on the March 2016 ballot and passed by voters, money would be disbursed shortly after.

State parks would receive $75 million. For the Piedmont, that would mean upgrades to Haw River State Park, Pilot Mountain State Park, Hanging Rock State Park and Mayo River State Park.

The proposal gives the North Carolina Zoo located in Asheboro $25 million. The zoo is more than 40 years old and the director says they would benefit from the money. They currently receive funding from the state, the business’ daily earnings and from donors. The extra money would allow for them to replace their African Pavilion Exhibit, that was built in the 80s, and launch a new “Austral-Asia” exhibit.

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Don’t Bite the Hand That Feeds You


By Roan Farb, Opinion Staff Writer

rfarb@unca.edu

9/2/2015

There’s nothing that can quite beat the feeling of watching a woman on a stool playing an entire song using only her hand and an oddly shaped spoon. Perhaps the only thing more captivating is the sight of the man who stepped into the city bike lanes to get around her now colliding with a panting bicyclist.

For years now, Asheville has prided itself on the alternative culture reputation its city streets have earned it. To say the city of Asheville owes much of its tourism scene to street performers, also known as buskers, would be a massive understatement.

In the last year or so, Buncombe county lawmakers have begun to discuss the possibility of issuing “busker permits” to street performers, due to a startling increase in tourism and clogged sidewalks that force pedestrians into the city’s biking lanes.

With the idea of a permit up for discussion, and the possibility of permits becoming necessary in order to perform anywhere in Asheville, the fate of the city’s tourist scene and reputation are up in the air.

Would it be beneficial for all musicians to have permits in order to practice, display and benefit financially from their talents?

Of course not. Establishing not only financial but also official documentation before being allowed to perform does nothing but limit those who would consider performing to begin with.

Is it fair to argue that only established musicians and performers are “worthy” of the Asheville sidewalks?

Absolutely not. Last time I checked, people who decided to study law weren’t the most informed on the subject of musical ability.

The possibility of a permit system being enforced in Asheville not only discourages artists from other parts of the world from visiting, but it also encourages local performers to consider leaving Buncombe county indefinitely.

With support for local musicians and artists being encouraged by the majority of businesses in the downtown area, it’s a surprise to find how silent the local community has been in regards to busker discrimination and restrictions.

Widely spoken out against and (rightfully) criticized harshly by local musicians, the idea of busker permits has seemed to have lost its initial support from the Asheville City Council’s three-person Public Safety Committee.

Local musicians have taken up efforts of their own to combat the discrimination they face on a daily basis from the very city they help keep afloat.

An organized group under the name Asheville Buskers Collective, hold regular and frequent meetings to discuss the options artists could present to Buncombe county lawmakers in order to reach a satisfactory compromise.

ABC meets on Tuesdays at 10:30 a.m. at New Mountain Asheville and can be contacted by calling (316) 253-6597.

The group also hosts a website, http://avlbuskers.com, with loads of information on how to help keep Asheville weird.

The Asheville Buskers Collective can be found on Facebook, and frequently posts about how to busk correctly without violating any city laws.

The other big reason behind changing Asheville’s busking policies comes drenched in sweat, pedaling up one of the extensive hills of Merrimon Avenue.

Cyclist safety is obviously very important, especially in a city where biking is so widely used, but the program has reintroduced the topic of busking restrictions in Asheville, reminding local police officers that buskers are just another obstacle on the sidewalks of the city streets.

Watch for Me NC is a cooperative pedestrian and bicyclist safety program between the NC Department of Transportation and local partners.

Developers of the program aim to minimize pedestrian and bicyclist injuries and deaths in Asheville through a heavy focus on public education and police enforcement.

Watch for Me NC comprises of two key elements, safety and educational messages, that target drivers, pedestrians and bicyclists, and enforcement efforts by local police officers.

Watch for Me NC has received a mass amount of backing from many powerful local partners, such as the Asheville Police Department, both UNC Asheville and AB-Tech Police Departments, Neighborhood Services and Asheville Regional Transit, just to name a few.

With the city holding a heavy advantage in the form of funds and support over local musicians, artists, performers and poets, how exactly will it be possible for both sides of the argument to be heard?

Buskers not only bring tourism and a unique culture to the city of Asheville, but have also directly made the city what it is today.

While local businesses preach their adoration of art, poetry and music created in our city every time you walk through their doors, the support they boast of is, in most cases, one-dimensional.

Amidst the fight for buskers to keep their rights in our fair city, many businesses in the downtown area have avoided taking a stance on the issue.

Local business’ silence may be the final nail in the coffin for the buskers of Asheville.

Their disinterest on the issue only helps city officials near their goal of restricting and regulating free expression, destroying decades of culture and creation of which these mountains constantly sing.

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NC Senate passes bill to disband Cumberland Tourism Authority, put county in …

Posted: Wednesday, September 23, 2015 12:02 pm
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Updated: 2:12 pm, Wed Sep 23, 2015.

NC Senate passes bill to disband Cumberland Tourism Authority, put county in charge of $5.6M in hotel taxes

By Paul Woolverton

The state Senate gave final approval this morning to legislation give the Cumberland County Commissioners control of hotel tax money that totals more than $5.6 million a year.

The bill also creates, modifies or increases hotel taxes in Moore County, Harnett County, Sanford and Wayne County. The bill next moves to the House.

Cumberland County’s hotel tax is 6 percent of the price of a room. Existing law – which would be replaced by this bill – directs a quarter of the revenue to the Crown Coliseum complex, a quarter to the Arts Council of Fayetteville/Cumberland County, and the rest to the promotion of tourism (and some of that portion must be used to promote the Crown).

To do the tourism promotion, about $2.5 million has been allocated to the Fayetteville Area Convention Visitors Bureau.

The new law would disband the Tourism Development Authority and put the county commissioners in charge of the money.

It also would change how the revenue is distributed.

The portion for tourism promotion would drop to 20 percent, or about $1.1 million. It would have 47 percent available for capital projects, 26 percent dedicated to projects, festivals, athletic tournaments and other events and activities that would promote travel or tourism in Cumberland County.

Seven percent would be earmarked for economic development.

Three trade organizations in North Carolina’s hospitality and tourism industry oppose the Cumberland County portion of the bill. They say most of the money should be used for advertising and promotion of travel and tourism.

The trade groups also want to keep the money in the hands of an appointed Tourism Development Authority, whose membership must include people in the local hotel industry. Elected officials would be tempted to use the money on pet projects, they say.

The trade groups said the legislation for Wayne County, Harnett County, Moore County and Sanford are acceptable to them.

The Harnett County portion would expand that county’s 6 percent hotel tax to the whole county. It’s currently just in Averasboro Township.

The Moore County section doubles its hotel tax, from 3 percent to 6 percent.

The section of the bill for Sanford changes the use of its 3 percent tax. Currently, all of the money underwrites the Dennis A. Wicker Civic Center. The law change would put two-thirds of the revenue toward tourism promotion, and no more than one-third toward the civic center.

The Wayne County legislation creates a 1 percent room-occupancy tax in that county for tourism promotion.

Staff writer Paul Woolverton can be reached at woolvertonp@fayobserver.com, in Raleigh at 919-828-7641 or in Fayetteville at 910-486-3512.


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Wednesday, September 23, 2015 12:02 pm.

Updated: 2:12 pm.

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