Posts Tagged ‘david nichols’

WedJan9

Intelligrated expansion to bring high-tech jobs to area

Posted by rrichardson January 9th, 2013, 3:48 pm Post a Comment

Intelligrated, Inc. celebrated the opening of a new $10 million office expansion in Mason Wednesday that is expected to bring hundreds of high-tech jobs to the area.

The expansion, which nearly doubles the space of Intelligrated’s headquarters just off I-71 on Innovation Way, is an integral part of the fast-growing supplier of material handling systems’ growth strategy, said CEO Chris Cole.

The 122,000-square-foot addition will allow Intelligrated to expand engineering, research and development staffing.  The company added 180 mostly technical and professional Ohio jobs in the past year and expects to add 200 more employees in 2013.

“We have a facility here that I think is the most modern and advanced facility in our field,” said Cole.  “This facility should make it easy to hire the very best technical talent in the industry.”

The expansion is the latest milestone in the company’s rapid growth since it launched in 2001, a week before the 9/11 attacks.  Intelligrated acquired larger rival FKI Logistex’s North American operations in 2009 and completed the acquisition of New York-based Knighted, a provider of supply chain software solutions, in December.

Intelligrated, one of Greater Cincinnati’s largest privately held companies, doesn’t disclose sales, but Cole said the company broke $600 million in new orders in 2012 and enjoyed a record year in profitability.

“When we started we wanted to be a $500 million company.  We passed that goal now and we’re working on the goal to a billion dollars or more in sales and we think we can do in the next five years,” he said.

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TueDec18

Questions linger in wake of teen robber’s death

Posted by rrichardson December 18th, 2012, 10:14 pm Post a Comment
Lashawn Daniels

Lashawn Daniels wrote poetry and aspired to work at P&G, say those who knew him. The Mason teenager died Dec. 10 while attempting to hold up a gas station armed with a BB gun. Photo/Facebook

As friends and family gathered Tuesday to say their final goodbyes to a Mason teenager shot to death during an attempted robbery, Mason Mayor David Nichols is left to grapple with the question of why.

Why did Lashawn Daniels, a 19-year-old college student with no criminal history, attempt to rob a Springfield Township convenience store Dec. 10 armed with a BB gun?

Why did the poetry-writing teenager, who’d overcome the odds simply to graduate high school, not take Nichols, whom he considered a mentor, up on his offer for help?

“We’re all asking, ‘What happened?  What did we miss here?’,” said Nichols.  “I will always wonder and question myself, ‘Was I quick enough?’  What if, what if, what if…  I have to answer that on my own.”

Nichols vividly recalls the day he met Daniels in the spring of 2011 while visiting Mason High School.  Daniels, then a senior, approached him, firmly shook his hand and asked if he were the governor.

After a few chuckles, Daniels began telling the mayor the story of his life, a sad tale of a homeless teenager from a broken home, who lived with host families his senior year of high school, but who was determined to overcome the odds and land a dream job at Procter & Gamble, said Nichols.

“He said he was determined to break the chains of his family history,” said Nichols.

The pair struck up a correspondence that lasted until just weeks before Daniels’ death.  Nichols wrote letters of recommendation for the teen, who graduated in 2011, and invited him to attend city council meetings.

By most accounts, Daniels was on the path to success.  He worked two jobs during the summer, moved into his own apartment and enrolled at the University of Cincinnati – Blue Ash College, according to his friends and family.

“The young man seemed to be trying to overcome so many things,” said Nichols.  “He knew the odds were against him, but he was trying so hard to totally make it on his own.”

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ThuAug9

Mason med technology business expands headquarters, workforce

Posted by rrichardson August 9th, 2012, 12:18 pm Post a Comment

EMerge Health Solutions, a six-year-old medical documentation company, is expanding into new headquarters in Mason.

The company, which grew out of a gastroenterology practice in Avondale and had been operating out of the Mason Municipal Center, announced its relocation this week to larger office space along I-71 at 7264 Columbia Road.

The move allows eMerge to accommodate growing demand for its for its high-tech medical records system and growing workforce, company officials said.

The company’s hands-free documentation and workflow solutions for the healthcare industry allows physicians and nurses to document procedures in real time by utilizing keyword-driven voice commands. The system is designed to eliminate paperwork and increase productivity.

“We chose this new space to accommodate the increasing demand for our solution and our rapid company growth,” said Trent McCracken, the company’s president and CEO.

EMerge relocated its headquarters from Avondale to Mason earlier this year after receiving a $250,000 investment from CincyTech, the downtown-based public/private venture fund.

The money is part of $850,000 raised from investors as the company moves toward broader commercialization.

After five months, the company outgrew its office space at the Mason Municipal Center and will now occupy space vacated by AssureRX, another Mason company that recently expanded into larger office space in Mason.

The move is the latest in a string of high-profile development deals in Mason including Seapine Software’s new $7 million technical center on Western Row Road, and headquarters expansions by Top Gun Sales Performance, AssureRx Health Inc., Rhinestahl Corp. and Intelligrated.

“The way our leadership team understands the dynamic needs of high-tech, entrepreneurial firms has given companies like eMerge Health the opportunity to grow and expand, bringing more jobs to Mason and propelling our city to a new level of business attraction and retention,” said Mason Mayor David Nichols.

The rise of the tech and bio-health industry in Mason has a “multiplier effect” on the city’s ability to accomplish other economic strategies, added Michele Blair, Mason’s director of economic development.

“The intent is gaining this critical mass in the high-technology and bio-health industries that brings momentum in additional emerging companies’ interest and greater workforce availability in science and technology fields,” she said.

The company, which employs 11, expects to expand its workforce to fill the new space, McCracken said.

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TueJul10

Fire/EMS services charter amendment approved for November ballot

Posted by rrichardson July 10th, 2012, 1:08 am Post a Comment

Voters in Mason will have the chance to thwart an “extreme deficit situation,” according to one council member, in the city’s safety, fire and EMS services budget this fall.

Mason City Council approved a charter amendment Monday that will go before voters on the Nov. 6 ballot.

The proposed ballot measure would add a 0.12 percent income tax on top of its existing 1 percent income tax, though only for nonresidents.

Anyone who works in Mason pays the current income tax, although Mason residents who work in another community with a 1 percent income tax don’t pay Mason’s income tax.

An estimated 21,000 people work in the city, which is home to more than 1,100 businesses. Sixty percent of people who pay Mason income taxes live outside the city, according to Councilman Tom Grossmann.

The fire income tax and the existing income tax would cost someone working 40 hours a week at $10 an hour $4.48 a week. That’s 48 cents a week more than what he or she pays now.

The proposed charter amendment also includes a property tax levy for fire/EMS not to exceed 5 mills.

The city has a 5-mill property tax levy for fore and EMS scheduled to expire at the end of 2013.

The 5-mill levy, which would take effect Jan. 1, 2014, would cost the owner of a $100,000 home about an extra $18 a year if council decided to take the full 5 mills.

The levy under the proposed charter amendment would cost a homeowner more than the existing levy because the new levy is adjusted for inflation.

It also gives City Council the flexibility to set the rate of the proposed levy and the fire income tax.

The proposed ballot measure took nearly a year to draft and included many “heated moments,” said Mason Mayor David Nichols.

Some of those exchanges spilled into Monday’s meeting.

Mason resident Tom Muennich, a former city councilman, admonished council members for the tax hike.

“It is unheard of for anyone to put taxes on just because of our inability to raise revenue,” he said. “We, the voters, have one recourse and that’s not to vote you back in.”

Several residents expressed disapproval of raising income taxes on people who work in Mason, but don’t live there.

“How is that fair and just for that increase to be handed off onto other people, who, quite frankly, don’t have a vote?,” asked Joey Dezenzo.

Council members also sparred over the income tax hike for fire/EMS services.

Councilman Victor Kidd said an income tax increase would create an “unnecessary controversy as an unfair, reoccurring tax policy in the city of Mason.”

“Increasing the earnings tax could be perceived as a slick political strategy having not passed the last tax levy,” he warned. “Increasing the earnings tax to fund fire services opens the door to other incremental increases, which leads us down a slippery slope.”

He also said that the city’s 1 percent income tax served as a recruiting point for new businesses.

Councilman Don Prince disagreed, arguing that Mason’s income tax rates are among the lowest in the region.

“I don’t think it will affect our ability to attract businesses,” he said. “Nobody gets to vote where they work unless they work where they live. Most communities do it that way.”

Councilman Rich Cox said the income tax hike on nonresidents would create a “clerical nightmare” for business owners by taxing resident and nonresident employees at two different rates.

He recommended eliminating the property tax and enacting a flat 0.25 percent income tax increase.

Grossman, however, said such a plan would create an unfair burden on working people, the majority of whom don’t live in Mason, he said.

The city responds to about twice as many fire calls at homes and apartments than at businesses, city statistics show.

“Shouldn’t people who own homes and use services pay for them?” he asked.

Despite cost-cutting measures, the current fire levy does not produce enough money to pay for the 33-member fire department, forcing the city to dip into a fire reserve fund, City Manager Eric Hansen said.

The fire department’s budget runs between $5 million and $6 million.

Exacerbating the department’s funding woes is the elimination of state personal property tax and reimbursement that decreased funding for the fire and EMS operations by more than 12 percent or $700,000 a year, said Hansen.

If voters reject the charter amendment this fall, Hansen said, “We reduce our services or we stabilize our revenues. And council would have to determine whether they want to go back and just change the services. … Or they go back and look at other revenue alternatives.”

Paul McKibben contributed

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TueJul3

Top Gun expansion expected to bring 140 new jobs

Posted by rrichardson July 3rd, 2012, 4:25 pm Post a Comment

Top Gun Sales Performance, a fast-growing supplier of sales support, consulting, training and personnel,  is relocating this week to the former CNG Financial Building in Mason.

The $4-million relocation from the company’s current 18,000-square-foot headquarters on Thornberry Court in Mason to its new 68,000-square-foot space is expected to bring 140 new jobs over the next five years.  The company currently employs about 60 employees.

The City of Mason and the Mason Port Authority are providing a $200,000 performance loan to support the relocation.  In addition, the city is providing $200,000 to the company to renovate second-floor space to create an information technology technical resource center for start-up digital information technology and bio-health IT companies.

Mason Mayor David Nichols said the city’s support of Top Gun is part of its aggressive approach toward encouraging new business investment. He said the CNG building, which has been vacant for several years, is one of the last remaining Class A buildings available in Mason.

The move is the latest in a string of high-profile development deals in Mason including Seapine Software’s new $7 million technical center on Western Row Road, and headquarters expansions by AssureRx Health Inc., Rhinestahl Corp. and Intelligrated.

The city said the investment in Top Gun’s new building is expected to produce more than double its investment in earnings tax revenues.

“We are extremely excited about this opportunity to continue our growth in Mason,” said Steven Osborne, president of Top Gun.

Osborne, a former Mason Council member, started the company in 2000. It expects sales this year of $5 million, up 25 percent from last year. Some of the company’s worldwide clients include Panasonic, Luxottica and Procter & Gamble.

Top Gun has doubled its office space twice in the last couple of years. The new building includes a state-of-the art data center to support both Top Gun’s clients and IT start-ups. Osborne said he’s already lined up tenants for the technical resource center.

Mike Boyer contributed

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FriJun29

Area’s first GOP Victory office opens in Lebanon

Posted by rrichardson June 29th, 2012, 3:40 pm Post a Comment
Mitt Romney

Mitt Romney speaks about the Supreme Court ruling on health care in Washington, Thursday, June 28, 2012. (AP Photo)

Local Republicans opened the area’s first GOP Victory office this week in Lebanon.

The headquarters, located behind the Golden Lamb at 30 W. Main Street, will house Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign and serve as a base for phone banking and door-to-door activity, according to the Warren County Republican party.

U.S. Rep. Steve Chabot, State Auditor Steve Yost and Mason Mayor David Nichols spoke before a crowd of more than 100 people who gathered Monday to celebrate the opening.

A second Victory office will officially open in Fairfield on July 5, a Victory spokeswoman said.

Two Cincinnati offices — one on the east side and one on the west — will come later, she said.

The Democrats have a headquarters on U.S. 42. The Obama campaign opened a separate office last month at 108 W. Main Street in Mason.

 

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ThuJun28

Warren Co. GOP on third chairmen in two years

Posted by rrichardson June 28th, 2012, 10:40 am Post a Comment

Mason Mayor David NicholsPaul McKibben reports:

The Warren County Republican Party  has its third chairman in two years.

Mason Mayor David Nichols has been serving in the post since April, replacing Lebanon City Councilman Jeff Monroe, who became chairman of the party’s central committee. The GOP dominates Warren County politics.

The party elected Monroe last September to replace county Prosecutor David Fornshell as chairman. Fornshell became party chair in June 2010 and prosecutor in February 2011. The party elected Fornshell prosecutor to replace Rachel Hutzel who won a seat on the Ohio 12th District Court of Appeals.

Nichols and Monroe were elected to their new party posts April 10 following the March primary when central committee members were elected. County Commissioner Pat South said Monroe preferred to return to being chairman of the central committee.

South said it’s not been detrimental to have three chairmen in about two years.

“All of the people who have been our chairmen were actively involved in the party,” she said. “So it wasn’t like there was a stranger coming … to lead the group.”

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TueApr24

Mason mayor connects with Mason Heights students

Posted by rrichardson April 24th, 2012, 4:35 pm Post a Comment
David Nichols

Mason Mayor David Nichols recently took time to read to third grade students at Mason Heights Elementary. Photo provided

Mason’s mayor recently took some time to connect with the city’s youngest residents.

Mayor David Nichols read the book “Amelia Bedelia 4 Mayor” to third grade students at Mason Heights Elementary.

“Mayor Nichols was outstanding with the kids – he did great special voices for the characters in the book, and we all loved having him at Mason Heights,” said Eric Messer, school principal.

Nichols spoke to students about the importance of reading and answered a few questions about his job as mayor.  When asked about the best part of his job, the mayor replied, “Helping people.  Always help people when you can.”

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MonMar19

5 Questions with Mason Mayor David Nichols

Posted by rrichardson March 19th, 2012, 10:43 am Post a Comment
Mason Mayor David Nichols

Paul McKibben reports:

In December, Mason City Council selected Councilman David F. Nichols to be the city’s new mayor, replacing Don Prince, who remains on council. Nichols was first appointed to council in 2008 and was elected to his own term in 2009. Originally from Lexington, Ky., he’s lived in Mason since 1999.

At one time Nichols was president of Interlott Technologies, which made instant lottery machines. In 2002, Fortune magazine named the business one of the top small companies in the United States. The company was later sold. He’s now retired from business.

Nichols has a bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of Kentucky. His work experience includes time in Kentucky state government. A cancer survivor, Nichols and his wife Christa have a teenage daughter named Cari.

Nichols talked to The Enquirer recently about his goals as mayor, economic development in Mason and other issues.

What are your goals during the next two years as mayor?

For the very same reasons I came on council and what they have been for the last three years, given my business experience and that I served in state government – economic development and finance. Mason changed drastically even in the years that I’ve been up here. You had a great period of growth. Then the economy faltered. Where Mason is so fortunate compared to other places is that there have been a lot of smart decisions made prior to me. But the revenues are not what they used to be. It’s easy to build things and do things when the revenue and money is coming in. It’s different when that doesn’t happen and you’ve got long-term costs and so forth. You will find a direct correlation between the standard of living in a community and how healthy that business community is.

What challenges are facing Mason and how will the city address them?

Stabilize our revenues. It’s job retention and job growth. Economic development is the key for us. The vast majority of the city government’s revenues come from the earnings tax. One percent. We’re still one of the lowest in the state. A lot of people get confused that we get the majority of the property tax. That’s not the case. That goes elsewhere to different places and ours comes from earnings. We’re still one of the lowest and we’ve done it to be pro-business as much as possible.

Mason is the second largest city/township in Warren County with a population of 30,712 people according to the 2010 Census. It grew by 39.5 percent. Is the city growing too fast?

No. I think you went through a period in the late ’90s and 2000s that Mason was faced with challenges because of all of the growth. Mason had to make a lot of hard decisions early on and a lot of political battles were fought. And this is not unique to Mason. The population growth I think has stabilized but the goal will be to grow the business population. We’ve got a lot of available land. You can’t be bringing in hundreds of jobs and not experience some growth.

Why do you think people have chosen to live in Mason?

We love that small-town feel and at the same time a city government long before I was involved that really put an emphasis on family. The park system’s second to none. They were spending their money fairly wisely at the time given the revenues coming in. They were planning. The way they laid the city out in the comprehensive plan. It’s a good conservative region. I felt there was a lot of opportunity. They were doing it right and it was a new enough community with all of this growth so much that took place in the ’90s, they had a chance to do it right. A lot of times you go into a place and that window of opportunity was 50 years ago or 60 years ago. You get to learn from other communities’ mistakes when you’re starting that late. We got one of the best school systems in the country. Tax structure. Location. The proximity. We’ve got the arts and the life of a wonderful city to our south, Cincinnati and you got Dayton to the north.

If you could pick one company in the world to relocate to Mason, which would it be and why?

I would go probably with an Apple-type company. One thing I love about the late Steve Jobs is he challenged everybody to think out of the box. Constantly.

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MonMar12

Mason to declare March Development Disabilities Awareness Month

Posted by rrichardson March 12th, 2012, 5:19 pm Post a Comment
Voices of Warren County

Singers from the Voices of Warren County choir performed for the Lebanon Rotary Club on Dec. 22, 2011, at the Golden Lamb restaurant in Lebanon, Ohio. The choir is made up of individuals with developmental disabilities. Share/Dawn McKenna

The City of Mason will issue a proclamation Monday evening at its city council meeting designating march as Developmental Disabilities Awareness Month.

The proclamation is accompanied by a performance from the Voices of Warren County Choir, one of 70 local choirs set to participate in the 2012 World Choir Games in July.  The choir is comprised of developmentally-challenged adults who seek to raise awareness of and inclusion of people with disabilities.

The proclamation and performance will take place at 7:30 p.m. at the Mason Municipal building,  6000 Mason-Montgomery Road.

Mason Mayor David Nichols will also honor organizations that participated in the Mason Community Center’s “TryIt! Sports!” event held in January.

The one-day program sought to help families with special needs members feel more comfortable trying a new activity without the pressure of having to join a team or class.

More than 90 people participated in the event, and its success led the community center to develop a volunteer therapeutic recreation advisory panel to further assist families with special needs members.

“The most effective way to increase this awareness and inclusion of all adults is through everyone’s active participation in community events like our ‘Try It! Sports’ program to help the public learn and acknowledge each individual’s contributions,” said Nichols.  “Our community is better – together.”

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