11 Burst results for "Maintenance Manager"

"maintenance manager" Discussed on The Voicebot Podcast

The Voicebot Podcast

03:44 min | 7 months ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on The Voicebot Podcast

"Happy to have you. You're doing some really interesting work in this space. And we're going to talk a lot about custom voice assistance. This is a topic that I've been really interested in since at least 2019, really 2018, but and I actually was involved in building a custom voice assistant way back in 2013. But all of those were different types of applications and what you're focusing on because these are more industrial. And I'm wondering just to start out, you come from an aerospace background. Did your work in aerospace lead you to identify the problems you're solving today or did it come from some other experience? Yeah, it very much there's a very strong correlation between what I was doing and what we're working on now. But there was probably probably about 50% of the definition came through the work that I did. So the last company I worked in was super interesting and I was involved from in the design department all the way through to testing and blowing things up and then and then and then through to manufacturing and then working with the customers to install these systems. So I really got to see the entire manufacturing chain. And my cofounders were doing very similar types of broad general work in the utilities and energy sectors. And what we were finding in general was that there was a lot of, there was a lot of, you know, we're working with a lot of really high-tech end products, really cutting edge. I was working on carbon nanotube electrothermal ice protection systems and it sounds straight out of sci-fi, but the tools that we were using, the software tools we're using to build these things were stuck on a 1990s. So you wouldn't believe how backwards you hire, if you haven't worked at that industry. So there was a lot of improvements could be made. And at the same time, I'd been working with my now cofounder who was my neighbor and I just building projects at home. So we would come back from our respective workplaces and just build things every single day, so working from working on drones, building, designing and building our own drones, autonomous drones, through some tracking solar panels and all sorts of things. And we thought, well, maybe we should instead of building these fun hobby projects, maybe we should work on something more useful to the world that we're part of. And so we went out and basically, you know, we had this kind of general understanding of some of the problem sets, but wanted to really get an understanding of what are other people experiencing. So jumped in a car, got my cofounder to come along, but only time I think has ever worn a shirt. And we drive around the UK just talking to factories, talking to maintenance managers, operations people, folks on the floor, trying to understand what their problems, what problems they had. And we had a hypothesis, which is very much around consolidation of data. IoT was bigger than maybe there was something we could do there. And we knew it was we knew it was about these systems that we worked with, but these folks kept saying to us, you know, my guys are spending an hour or two a day just filling in forms and working on the CMS or working on SAP and it's we're fighting fires and yet we've got a report and the stuff they're reporting on, we kind of make heads of tail because they don't have time to report on it properly..

UK SAP
"maintenance manager" Discussed on AI in Business

AI in Business

07:55 min | 1 year ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on AI in Business

"This kind of portfolio idea that you're articulating? Yeah, the portfolio idea is on a single method being more educated and not simply for the purposes of model building, but placing the AI capability in the hands of the targeted end users. So portfolio capability has to be seen as something that can be deployed and not something that can be developed or tested alone. Then secondly, the approaches that I've seen generally work as you were thinking in a predictive maintenance tends to be a general capability that is needed in industrial organizations. You could think about roughly two different ways in which you can go after predictive maintenance. One is you find specific sensors for the type of equipment where you have problems. And use the analysis available with those sensors to solve this problem. The other is you bring in a sensor data AI that works with a general set of data sources. From centers and can be applied to a variety of problems pertaining to the data that is captured by finding has generally been that when it's early days of a technology that may not sound like great advice. But just like with databases, increasingly we are finding that this classification of the underlying method and matching that against the portfolio need is the better approach for people to play. So while at the early stages, we could look at every provider, I expect that we're going to stabilize this and we are seeing this in the steel industry, where there is the computer vision AI for safety. Cameras are mounted everywhere. And they are useful for MES for tracking purposes. But then when it comes to predictive maintenance and quality improvement, there it is more seen to be done through sensors and sensor data AI. The best providers are the ones that will do the most provisioning of capability in the case of sensor data AI, for example. And over time, that is what everybody will come across as the options that they have available. When you say the best are the ones that are best at provisioning, I'm trying to think for the audience's sake, you know, what can they take home from this? In other words, how can they become better at provisioning or how should they think about provisioning because it does feel like this really ties to ROI, which is the point of the series here, what kind of advice or detail do you have, I guess, around that concept? Right. So those days where you bring in an AI specialist team and they would bring their frameworks and various specialists to work with your end user organization. It used to be a pretty heavy lift, apply or provision AI against a set of problems. Increasing these automation, we hear about AutoML data op ML ops and increasingly automation is a key part of a lot of this. So when I talk about provisioning of this AI, what I mean is connecting the AI, which is generally a learning and inference engine to the data sources and letting the AI talk to the end users through an interface that those end users will understand and for that AI to learn and improve on its own. That's what I mean. And naturally, this is an approach that works better at scale, such as what we have to deal with, which is terabytes of data coming from a single mill over a course of a month. That's generally how the plant managers or maintenance managers are thinking about their needs. I have this mill. Here's how much improvement I need 5%, 2% and willing to put that on somebody's task list so that we can square that away and there's a known method by which there is to be executed. So that's what we mean by provisioning it. Okay. And I feel like it's also maybe the second time that you've brought up the idea of kind of thinking with the end user in mind in terms of how this is going to be applied, who's going to have this in their hands. Of course, as you mentioned before, there's the problem of, you know, let's give the vendor the data. They go run away to some dark corner. They come back and say, okay, we have it. And then we don't have trust. We don't have buy in. We don't have a consideration for the user. You mentioned those initial issues. Which we might think of as sort of mishaps on the road to achieving an ROI. What might it look like from a very early days? I'm thinking to myself as the listener right now, I operate in a large enterprise or maybe I serve big enterprises. We're kind of assessing multiple projects. We're not necessarily going for the whale here. We're going for a number of the projects that might be more accessible that we could kind of test out a little bit. And I want to take to heart this advice around beginning with the user's kind of path in mind. I know you guys operate in heavy industry. Maybe there's a way to explain this in an industry agnostic way. How would you encourage enterprise leaders to consider that as part of their early project selection ROI considerations that that user experience? Great. So this is new phenomenon we are observing in the AI space and other example is Google with its vision AI where it is scanning a whole bunch of images and putting boxes around people or around regions within the picture and asking somebody knowledgeable of the domain what does that represent? Is there something alarming? Does it need reaction? In that sense, it's not very different from how photo album software have operated now for a few years. Putting a box around something that needs attention that was surfaced by the AI, but the user inputs to improve the AI. That, in my mind, is the way to engage a user is to make it possible for them to interact with the AI in a conversational type of a sense. Not necessarily chatbot. We've seen tremendous success when those interfaces are done right because it eliminates the dependence of per second labels and the cost of labeling, which is very high in industrial context. But it also makes the people who provide those labels be the owner of that AI. They are the ones who train that AI. Yeah, and of course, being able to kind of consider where this human in the loop, what you're saying is basically user in the loop. It's not some side team that works on AI. It's the people actually interacting with the outputs of the AI. They're also the ones training them. Would you go so far to say and I don't know if you would say this in industry specifically or if you would say this in any sector specifically that you tend to bias towards early projects that can always have the user as part of the feedback loop. Is there a correlation? There is a relationship here. So I think complexity and idiosyncrasy are tied to who can do this and at what stage it happens. I would say that when you're trying to recognize people in images, that's neither reducing nor complex. There's a lot of technology that has been trained. Same thing is true for second sentiment recognition in published text. These are the kinds of things for which it is better to pay a professional to do the labeling. And that that professional does not have to be within the organization. Yeah. On the opposite end of the spectrum, our life in that situation, our questions of fairness, where it has to be done under regulated context by people who are qualified to do it. And then what I was talking about is closer to that. But not quite as extreme. And that tends to happen more in the industrial world because there is a lot of their operation. And so what knowledge is required for them to operate those plants and produce a profitable outcome, you can just go out on the street and find somebody to do that. Especially without any context or contact.

Google
"maintenance manager" Discussed on Red Wing's Oil and Gas HSE Podcast

Red Wing's Oil and Gas HSE Podcast

04:22 min | 1 year ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on Red Wing's Oil and Gas HSE Podcast

"Obviously it's pulling in any additional sensors that you want to have that are on wearables. Or you know his drones collision prevention anything. Like that that you want to add. We are one central brain where you're pulling all that information. You can actually do the work in this platform. So let's say you're an operator in a refinery and you have to do operator rounds or you need to do a permit you can do all the work in the same platform. You're gonna have a phone or a tablet that's intrinsically safe and you're walking around and you have a customized software. That's we've sat down and we've worked with every single person that's going to be using the platform in order to design it in a way that it makes sense logically so it's asking you questions and it's telling you today your have ten tasks you need do one or two of them immediately and it tells you what they are in. It's asking the questions you know. Is this in good health. If something is not good then you can take a picture you can say. there's an issue with this pump. I need to sending a picture. And now i'm filling out a safety report and i'm sending it out to a maintenance manager. I'm sending out immediately or simultaneously to a safety manager. I'm sending it to a group of people and they immediately see that it's pushed to their app. They immediately see this notification. There's an issue so there's assigning work so communication is traveling laterally as well as up and down Namic so it's not just that you can work inside the same system that you can see all the analytics but then based on your your response to the questions or to the tasks like your communications might go to different groups of people or two. Different managers are two different so the next step. This is where artificial intelligence machine learning comes in the next step is it's dynamic based on your response based on the workers response to whatever they're doing inside the system the work that they're actually performing..

"maintenance manager" Discussed on Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA

Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA

03:17 min | 1 year ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA

"Kfi k. Pretty frightening scene yesterday near crossroads bar. This as a private plane crashed near bird drive on takeoff from the northern colorado regional airport. This occurred Just before seven a. m. leading to some road closures. They're six twenty three now. Northern colorado's voice one or three one thirteen ten kfi k. A. morning with gail from the auto collision specialist studios or confirmed piece out of the fort collins. Colorado and by miles blunt hearts one person taken to a hospital. This after that private airplane crashed west of the crossroads boulevard. And i twenty five interchange in loveland yesterday morning the single engine comanche piper crashed near boy drive while taking off from northern colorado regional airport again just before seven. Am this according to francis robbins airport operations and maintenance manager now. The pilot was taken to uc health medical center of the rockies Police said that the plane's passenger was not hurt. Previously airport officials had told the colorado in both the pilot and passenger sustained minor injuries. But that only one was transported to the area hospital for treatment of course taken to uc health medical center of the rockies. Now you had francis robbins again. Airport operations and maintenance manager at northern colorado regional airport saying that the plane lost power and the pilot decided nope he could not make it back to the airport so he attempted to land well the plane in that process. Clip the light pole tearing off the pilot side wing and knocking over the poll. The win actually landed on crossroads boulevard and the tail of the plane stuck out into lanes while the body of the plane ended up on the grass median. Just off of crossroads boulevard. robbins said the authorization to move the plane and its wing was granted from federal authorities. So that yes crossroads. Boulevard could reopen to traffic. It was actually that particular area was actually closed for about forty five minutes and we reported on that troubled there but did not know what the actual cause was. Robbins went on to say. It was fortunate that the light was red at the time the crash happen. Could you imagine. I mean things that make you go. Who home you talk about the unexpected. You're just driving along mine in your own business and oh all of a sudden there's a wing in your way. Oh yeah and you've got the tale of a plane sticking into lanes of traffic terrifying. Were you there. did you see this. Were you part of it. Oh my gosh nine. Seven three five three thirteen ten. Drop me a text on our thirteen ten. Kfi text line triple eight five. Three zero zero zero forty three pays to have your wits about..

northern colorado regional air francis robbins colorado regional airport uc health medical center of th uc health medical center of th colorado fort collins loveland gail Colorado robbins Robbins
"maintenance manager" Discussed on Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

01:46 min | 1 year ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

"I it's merriam webster's word of the day for september twentieth. It's in our design a force the will to move forward. The voice calling us to do things. No one thought possible. And at johns hopkins medicine. We are listening. Creating blood tests that detect cancer new treatments to reduce damage from heart attacks. New ways to help the next family who needs us so we imagine and we care not just for us but for all of us. Johns hopkins medicine forward for all of us. Today's word is collude spelled c. o. l. l. u. d. collude is a verb that means to conspire or plot. Here's the word used. In a sentence from the philadelphia inquirer by thomas fitzgerald and jeremy roebuck seven maintenance managers were federally charged with bilking the transit agency out of hundreds of thousands of dollars by colluding with vendors to charge for goods that were never provided and pocketing the proceeds. The latin prefix call. Co l. meaning together and the verb larae meaning to play come together to form collude. The related noun collusion has the specific meaning secret agreement or cooperation. Despite their playful history. The words collude and collusion have always suggested deceit or trickery. Rather than good natured. Fun with your word of the day. I'm peter sokolowski visit. Miriam webster dot com today for definitions. Wordplay and trending word look ups..

johns hopkins medicine merriam webster thomas fitzgerald jeremy roebuck heart attacks philadelphia inquirer cancer peter sokolowski Miriam webster
"maintenance manager" Discussed on Real Estate Rookie

Real Estate Rookie

05:02 min | 1 year ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on Real Estate Rookie

"That i wanna point out or people who i would not have hired in a normal scenario and they are huge contributes business. My maintenance manager is a guy that was living in a tent in came to me on fourth of july weekend. All my hausky. I had quit. Because i was pregnant and had made the mad. He comes in and he's like i need a job. Like if you can clean you can start now in. If it had been any other day i would have run a background check and all these different things and not known that he was living in a tent straight out of prison for the second time and i wouldn't have hired him but now he is a fabulous maintenance manager. This was seven years ago. I believe that. I hired him. I would be in trouble without him. He's fabulous. I have a property manager who She's kind of the head of the property so she's specifically at one property but overseas everything generally in same deal. She's the same age as i am. Only she has kids. That are twenty years old because she had her first child at fourteen and she just hadn't had someone give her a chance before in she is killing it and doing an awesome job without that team. I wouldn't be able to do the things that i do. That is like a such an inspiring story. I think what. I love most so far. There is that you're kinda using your parts to make an impact people as right. And i think that's that's the one of the really cool part about being an entrepreneur. Is that you get to see and you get to be a part of the change in a lot of people's lives it's like we hire cleaners in different markets and we pay our cleaners a living wage. Right they're able to kind of be their own entrepreneurs because the funds that we pay them so it's always cool to remember that part of a real estate investor. Part of being an entrepreneur is giving back to the people that work with you so kudos you for being that source for somebody else is interesting that you point that out. Some of my latest projects are really passionate about teaching women to be financially free like we talked about in our world..

"maintenance manager" Discussed on Hey Moms in Business

Hey Moms in Business

05:03 min | 1 year ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on Hey Moms in Business

"Those to what. I think is so cool about you as you took what you've done in new home sales and like you said the relationships that you you bill and you fostered in that in that job and you brought it into your your new business. So how did you do that. Well so when. I was working as a new home. Sales associate Selling over three hundred new build homes. I would have clients. Come in and say well. Gosh you know my friends want to move here but they wanna go look and other parts of the valley. Well when you're a new home sales associate. You're only allowed to sell within that particular community. So i thought well. Gosh if they're coming to me and they have all their friends and family. It should be pretty simple. So in twenty. Fourteen made the switch to the resale side. I was introduced to actually my now. Real estate partner has his name. Is ben leeson and if he was among he would wanna be passed. Foam techs on the way here and he said can i call in. It's not that kinda show so we would've let him call in like you know. What are you're talking about like on the radio when somebody calls to ask the guests a question. That's not a bad idea. Maybe we should implement that. Thank you ben. So i was introduced to ben leeson and he is a rockstar agent. Him and i worked so well together. And you know hit. We're very different He has strengths. That i am not good at and then vice versa. So the two of us work really well together and so i thought to myself why built all these relationships like it is going to be easy for me to switch over. So i made the switch in two thousand fourteen You know in this market when you're up against fires and for sale by owners and discount agents when you're a fulltime agent. You know it easily cost you about one percent to run a business. So it's hard to be the discount agent and when you go into a listing appointment a lot of times the first thing out of a seller's mouth is will what are my fees. What are you gonna charge me will in the end like it's more important of what are you going to net and so that has kind of been our proposition of how we present ourselves and so one thing that we started doing a few years ago as we hired a fulltime maintenance manager. His name is travis and he's on our team we pay him a base salary to be basically on call for inspection items are items anything that a seller just can't handle or doesn't want to do we actually offer that as part of our services. Is he licensed as well. he's not now. Okay yeah he should be though then he thought would be really interesting. Shoot it open up lot boxes for me. Yes we need to talk about that. That's like something you can really expand. Yeah so So it's been a great addition. I mean it adds value in a lot of times. You know sellers. We don't want to show up at a listing. Appoint a listing and say. Okay you're good to go. I mean we roll our sleeves up we stage. We make sure that the home is in great condition and so that is added a ton of value with what our sellers yeah. It's definitely a first class experience when you have that service for people. I think it's awesome. Yeah i think it's ridiculous that real estate agents think that they can just sell homes. Make the money in that spent anything. You're running a business and always has its cost..

ben leeson ben travis
"maintenance manager" Discussed on KFI AM 640

KFI AM 640

04:15 min | 1 year ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on KFI AM 640

"Is a man who is telling a media outlet. That his grandparents live in that tower. Their names are Arnie and Miriam, not kin. His name is Jake Samuelson. And he says he's gotten at least 16 calls from the landline number. Of their building their apartment, Um, after the condo collapsed, not like out of a horror movie, he says. Every time I pick up, it's just static. Every time. Uh, No, he said. We're all sitting there in the living room, my whole family and my mother. We were just shocked. He kind of thought nothing. Of it because we answered and it was static. Um, the grandparents, both in their eighties Live in apartment 302 in Champlain Towers south. Their landline phone usually sits right next to their bed. It could just be some sort of a glitch. But I mean, that would be really sad if that's them. That would be trying to call for help with the only thing that was nearby as the landline, but it can't connect. They just keep dialing the number and so sad. I think it stops so I don't know what's that stories from the weekend? I don't know if it's still Happening, but it could be like the phone is in a position where it's hitting. Read, I'll or or a number in memory. I I don't know getting hit by some sort of debris. A former maintenance manager for this condo tower. Said that he when he worked there, back in the late nineties to the year, 2000. Regularly raised concerns about ocean water, inundating the parking garage. Flooding struck him as just not normal. William Espinosa oversaw the maintenance staff of Champlain Towers south condo in Surfside, he said, we had to use pumps. To get rid of the potentially corrosive CSC water is bad news. You don't want that getting there Anything that's uh, that's important. It'll corroded. He said that any time that we had high tides away from the ordinary, any king tide anything like that we'd have a lot of salt water coming through the bottom of the foundation. Now, a lot of believing as I was talking with the ABC News reporter that they believe this building collapse from the bottom up. And there's a lot of concerns about what looked to be a sinkhole in the pool area that had opened up several people who were actually on their balconies of the tower at the time of the collapse. Saw the sinkhole became alarmed, but it wasn't long after that. That the whole thing the whole building just started to come down. One person by the name of Cassie Stratton told her husband, Mike, on a call that she saw a sinkhole with a pool it been and she felt the building shaking. A moment later, the line went dead, the husband said. I think he was on a on a business trip. Structural engineer, Jason boarded and inspected the tower in 2020. Said that the pool sinkhole definitely could have contributed to the collapse, He said During the inspection, he'd seen cracks in the building facade on the balconies in the garage and applause of the building. He noted that kind of deterioration was normal in his line of work and then actually didn't alarm him. But it could have amounted to a lot more trouble than it seemed. There was also an inspection that was done in 2018, which singled out the garage and also the pool area for a lot of structural damage impact as a report. That the owners Of the, uh, condos faced at least $9 million in planned repairs. They were just days away from a deadline to start making payments. Towards a $9 Million fund for major repairs that were recommended back in 2018. It looks very possible. They did not get on it soon enough, All right, coming up. Next, we'll be at the Newsome Recall desk a couple of developments, including the one where the Legislature today Is apparently going to make up its mind as to whether or not to have this recall election sooner or later, and but I mean sooner. September later late November, coming up on the John and Ken Show on K F I Deborah Mark with news L. A public school superintendent.

Cassie Stratton Jake Samuelson Arnie 2020 Mike 2018 William Espinosa $9 Million Jason Miriam Champlain Towers John September later late November Deborah Mark ABC News today 2000 late nineties both eighties
"maintenance manager" Discussed on JuvoHub - Property Management Podcast

JuvoHub - Property Management Podcast

03:45 min | 1 year ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on JuvoHub - Property Management Podcast

"But maybe it'd be better coming from mute top reasons widely seen consultants from your surveys there at swift money. What they find that that sort of disenchant them and then what they're really looking for and I love it. I love it. You guys are serving the employees in your digging into really finding out what is it. What is that trigger. Point that you're leaving us. Is that the dollar down the street or is it something internal the way. We're treating them. But will you tell me a little bit. That data. Because i i loved it. Yeah good thank you. So that's exactly what we do We work with owners in management companies. And we help them survey their associates and we do this not just annually But we do it constantly so they received surveys throughout the year at important points during the employee life cycle and because it makes sense you know the way people feel about their work in their job that changes from day to day and month to month and asking somebody how satisfied they are once a year really doesn't cut it so we try to get a better picture of how folks are doing by querying them throughout the year and when we do that the whole goal here is to understand what satisfying to them and what is dissatisfying to them. So that the employer and leaders within the organization have an opportunity to make the workplace as satisfying experience as it can be for those associates And when you meet the needs of the associates then they can deliver area so some of the things that we are seeing with leasing particular to your question mark One of the disc satis fires or the opportunities for improvement. Here is leasing folks. Tell us that they are really fuzzy about the opportunities for growth and development within their organization. Is that surprising to you to hear that. No i remembered seeing that. You're right in no. That is not surprising at all. He had they want to know what the promotion path is. That doesn't necessarily mean they think they're going to be promoted tomorrow or that. They deserve that promotion tomorrow. They just wanna know what it's going to take to get there And so that is something that i think. Leaders could really easily address by opening up the lines of communication with their teams But if they don't know what a problem then they don't know they have to fix it. So that's where the importance of surveying team members comes in. So they can. They can understand what it is that associates are struggling and speaking of communication. That is a challenge in every role whether it's leasing maintenance managers And that's probably not surprising to you guys either that that's a challenge because it's something i think we've always struggled with in multifamily part of that i think is because our teams are geographically dispersed. So for example. The regional isn't face to face with those she or he supervises on daily And you know teams are just spread out and that makes communication more challenging But there's a constant sense of the right hand doesn't know what the left is doing or nobody told me that Or management is in on all these meetings but maintenance doesn't know anything so there's kind of that silo effect going on so unclear. Communication is a constant complaints And another one..

tomorrow One once a year
"maintenance manager" Discussed on Talk 1260 KTRC

Talk 1260 KTRC

04:15 min | 2 years ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on Talk 1260 KTRC

"You a job. Money back guarantee if you want to go to work. Emily called Tin Box from the Drug Policy Alliance of 33 30 Today, Dr Eileen Barrett from University of New Mexico. Hospital or I guess, officially the health sciences center. We'll be on the show. Anything we can do for you. Shoot me An email Richard at Santa fe dot com. Alright, according to the Albuquerque Journal over the weekend, the developer of the midtown campus which you know has broken out for the cities. Was us. It was not them something like that. Katie see real estate development out of Dallas. Said in a report to the city that a number of the buildings on the midtown campus needed to be leveled. To be raised horned down. Thailand reporting for the journal North on Saturday. That they determined that at least 13 buildings. Needed to come down. Due to that lack of value on the 64 acre campus, some buildings would likely have to be removed. Ktc Sienna recommended the city demolished to me 17, not $13.17 buildings on the campus. While preserving eight. For future use. Report says quote. Remaining buildings that will not be preserved. We'll need to be demolished to reduce the city's holding cost and liabilities. Among the buildings recommended to be turned down. We're all of the dorms, residence halls. And many of the education the classroom buildings used in years past. Midtown campus, previously served his home of College of Santa Fe until 2009 and University of art design until 2018. Many of the buildings were constructed in the early 19 sixties. And very few had undergone any renovation. 13 buildings were classified as being an either poor or bad condition. And one Luke Hall. Classified as Dangerous. Sam. We're not Sam Burnett's Give me Property maintenance manager for the city said two buildings are currently condemned. He also said poor condition doesn't mean the buildings aren't functional. In some cases, he said, the real bill Tae shin of the buildings makes him The cast would make a not economically feasible. And therefore they're classified as poor. Now, Mr Burnett says everything is perfectly functional and well maintained. Comes down to that cost benefit equation. That the condition of the building doesn't make it viable for rehabilitation. Some buildings such as the residence halls, he said, are difficult to reconfigure for commercial purposes. So it might be considered more advantageous just to turn down. 80 CCN estimated demolition of the buildings to cost a half a million dollars. And remediation. Another $1 million. So that was news to me. I didn't realize have been over there a long time actually did not realize the campus was in such bad condition. You know, we'd heard that you know maintenance was a problem and And that Some of the buildings were in poor condition, but I didn't realize it was quite That bad. 505424 12 60 30 minutes after one o'clock. Well into the 60 days session. Lots to talk about. Talk. 12 61 37, Katie, Years 30 minutes after one. Be right back..

Sam Burnett Albuquerque Journal Dr Eileen Barrett Katie Drug Policy Alliance Ktc Sienna Santa Fe Emily University of New Mexico Luke Hall Thailand Dallas CCN developer Tae shin maintenance manager University of art
"maintenance manager" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

02:39 min | 2 years ago

"maintenance manager" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

"I'm Tom Foodie in Washington Four days before Congress gets the certified election results President Trump spent on our on Saturday. Trying to get the results changed and at least one state on the phone with the Republican secretary of State of Georgia. The hour long call has the president browbeating Georgia's top elections official behind your back bread. What do you know it or not? They're laughing at you. Mr. Trump pressed Brad Rapids Burger to find 12,000 more votes in his favor. There's nothing wrong with saying that, you know. That you've recalculated, Georgia's secretary of state held his ground. We believe what we do have an active election. No, no, you don't know. A senior adviser to President elect Biden says the tape captures Mr Trump's assault on American democracy. Stephen Portnoy. CBS NEWS Washington asked for reactions a lot of outrage and some calls for criminal investigation of Mr Trump, mostly from Democrats scattered defenses, mostly from Republicans, among them, Senator David Perdue, running for re election in a more runoff in Georgia tomorrow. I don't think it's really gonna affect our election. I'm still shocked that a member of the Republican Party would take a sitting president and then leaked that It's disgusting. In my view, he was on Fox, part of a Pittsburgh Avenue was closed while Sunday night is police check The suspicious device bomb squad and the Fire investigation unit are investigating this incendiary device thrown from a moving vehicle. They say a parked vehicle was damaged. Fortunately, There were no injuries. Police say they're searching for a white two tone older model pickup truck. Hey, D K a TV show because Jesse it's also been a busy night for police around Miami as they investigate two separate shootings in which 12 people were wounded in Miami Dade County from Los Angeles. Word that one in every five Angelenos tested is now positive. This as the Army Corps of Engineers is helping some Southern California hospitals fix overwhelmed oxygen delivery systems. As Colonel Julie Bolton explains. We're trying to assess how we can reduce the strain on their facilities. Lack of space and medical professionals is partly to blame for the slow delivery of the vaccine. The Trump Administration promised 20 million doses would be given by the end of 2020. But the CDC says just over four million people have been inoculated. That's correspondent Jonathan Vaguely. Adi. This is Ohio's governor, Mike DeWine on CNN. Every one of us from the governor all the way through. Everybody has to have a sense of urgency in getting these shots out because they're lifesavers, and any time you have the back Seems sitting on a shelf and not out. We have a problem overseas, a retired maintenance manager, the first person in the world to be inoculated with a.

Mr. Trump president Georgia Trump Administration Republican Party Washington Congress Stephen Portnoy Miami Dade County Colonel Julie Bolton Army Corps of Engineers CBS Mike DeWine CNN Senator David Perdue Jonathan Vaguely Ohio Jesse