Long Island Contractor Arrested For Underpaying Wages On Port Authority Project

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Inspector General Robert E. Van Etten Thursday announced the arraignment of a Long Island construction contractor on two felony and two misdemeanor charges stemming from the underpayment of wages to 13 laborers in excess of $25,000 on a public construction project.

Gerard Ippolito, president of Liberty Tree Service, Inc., and his corporation face numerous charges, including Offering a False Instrument for Filing in the First Degree the a Class E felony – and Failing to Pay Wages, a misdemeanor. The defendants entered not guilty pleas today in Queens County Criminal Court.

According to court papers, between October 18, 2004 and December 31, 2005, employees of Liberty Tree Services, Inc. worked on a Port Authority project involving landscaping for the John F. Kennedy International Airport Van Wyck Corridor Beautification Program, which followed the path of the AirTrain.  The contract was subject to the state’s prevailing wage law, which dictates the hourly rates that must be paid to employees on public work projects.

The weekly certified payroll records submitted by the defendants in the case showed the workers being paid the legal hourly prevailing wage rates of $51.11 per hour.  However, the contractors’ employees were actually paid hourly wages much less then the prescribed hourly rate.  The defendants are charged with filing false certified payroll records in an effort to conceal underpayments of $27,484.72 to 13 employees.

The case was investigated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Inspector General’s Office and then referred to the New York State Attorney General’s Office for prosecution.

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

A Made To Measure Georgian Heritage Home

A newly built Georgian-style house with four bedrooms and seven bathrooms in Toronto’s Rosedale neighbourhood.

Royal LePage Real Estate Services Ltd., Johnson and Daniel Division (James Strathy Warren)

With 11-foot ceilings, the main floor features large principal rooms with dark-stained floors of quarter-sawn white oak. A library is panelled in mahogany, and has a coffered ceiling. A dramatic reverse staircase ascends from a centre hall.

At the rear is an open-concept space comprising the kitchen, family room and eating area, with doors opening to the garden. The countertops in the kitchen, wet bar and pantry are fashioned from Calacutta honed marble.

Some areas of the house feature heated stone floors.

A state-of-the-art system controls temperature, security and lighting. The house also contains Category 5 wiring and structured cable for high-speed internet, television and communication services.

Upstairs, mahogany doors lead into the master suite, where French doors open to a Juliet balcony overlooking the garden. A dressing room is lined with hand-crafted closets and includes a flat-screen TV. The ensuite bathroom has a separate water closet, cast-iron tub and honed marble flooring with in-floor radiant heating.

The two other bedrooms on the second floor have ensuite bathrooms. Located on the third floor are a bedroom and bathroom as well as a games room.

On the lower level, an “infinity” swimming pool is surrounded by limestone and enclosed in glass. A media room has built-in surround sound and a gas fireplace. Adjoining an exercise area is a bathroom with limestone floors and walls, as well as a steam shower.

A climate-controlled wine cellar is constructed of reclaimed brick and lined with Douglas fir wine caskets that accommodate 500 bottles.

Outside, the landscaped property includes a very private stone terrace in the rear garden. A more functional element is an in-ground irrigation system. The exterior features copper trim and a cedar roof.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

A Few Ideas For Presidential Candidates

Al Tompkins of the Poynter Institute puts out a daily e-mail newsletter to help journalists come up with fresh story ideas — something all of us need from time to time.

But a recent offering included a list of ideas for journalists to put to the presidential candidates.

We don’t agree with all of them, but think many of them are worth a public debate. We’re sharing the list here, along with our interpretations of some of the issues.

Let us know what you think:

Five-day-a-week postal delivery. Checks can be delivered by direct deposit, and if you really need an item, other, private services are available. England will probably stop delivering mail on Saturdays in 2011.

A Manhattan Project for energy. If national security depends on energy independence, it’s worth the investment.

Year-round school. We’ve promoted this idea in this space before as well. Kids are no longer needed on the farm, and lose too much learning while they’re out of school. Vacations could be taken year-round, perhaps during the hottest or coldest month of the year in a particular location.

Drought-resistant landscaping plants. It makes no sense to dump scarce, expensive, treated water out on the dirt. For Nebraska, that may mean promoting buffalo grass or xeriscaping, which many of us have already done.

Provide tax credit for blood and organ donations. Many people already want to do the right thing, but many more seem to need an added incentive.

All federally elected officials should hold a news conference at least once per month.

Scrap the electoral system. Replace it with a system that people understand.

Open all courtrooms to cameras. Start with the Supreme Court and appeals courts.

Stop allowing the federal flood insurance program to sell policies to new construction in the worst flood-prone areas. Stop the “flood-rebuild-repeat” cycle.

Stop penalizing workers between 62 and 65 for earning more than $13,560 a year. Give people a reason to stay productive and keep contributing to society for as long as they can.

End special congressional health care coverage. Every member of Congress should be covered by a private health care plan just like the rest of us. Members of the house pay $300 a month and Senators about $600 a month for their own pharmacy, nurses and doctors, and can get a physical, x-ray or electrocardiogram without ever missing work. Taxpayers contribute about $2 million toward the congressional health-care system. Still wonder why we can’t get health care reform.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

??Gcc Landscaping Business Set To Double To Aed 60 Billion By 2010??

Spurred by the boom in the regional construction industry, landscaping projects in the region comprising commercial and residential landscaping design and maintenance are set to double in volume to exceed AED 60 billion by 2010 according to UK’s CMPi, organizers of Gulf Landscaping. The event is scheduled to take place at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre from 17th to 18th November 2008.

Landscaping in the GCC is a competitive business fraught with high competition, shrinking profits and high capital expense. “With the advent of international players, regional landscape designers and builders are realizing that there’s more to growth than sunshine, soil and water,” said CMPi Group Director, Chris Fountain.

Spurred by the boom in the regional construction industry, landscaping projects in the region comprising commercial and residential landscaping design and maintenance are set to double in volume to exceed AED 60 billion by 2010 according to UK’s CMPi, organizers of Gulf Landscaping. The event is scheduled to take place at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre from 17th to 18th November 2008.

Landscaping in the GCC is a competitive business fraught with high competition, shrinking profits and high capital expense. “With the advent of international players, regional landscape designers and builders are realizing that there’s more to growth than sunshine, soil and water,” said CMPi Group Director, Chris Fountain.

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Mr. Fountain noted that the GCC is beginning to value the outdoors and landscaping professionals are now in big demand. “Driven by the construction boom, many households have increasingly turned to landscaping services to design, develop and maintain their investments while landscaping contractors are learning how to grab their share of this high growth market,” he said.

Gulf Landscaping is an exhibition for the booming Middle East outdoor design and landscaping architecture industries. The event is designed to generate business leads for companies in the landscaping business.

The exhibition will serve as a sourcing platform and networking event for the regions landscape architects, developers, contractors and other key buyers, to enable them to select products, services and solutions for the huge number of major developments in the commercial, retail, leisure and residential sectors, as well as city parks and highways.

The event will be co-located with Working Buildings Middle East and Fit-Out Middle East to enable those involved in the development and delivery of this major growth industry to meet their landscaping and outdoor architecture needs in one visit.

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Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Oshkosh Man Retires To Start New Endeavor

He’ll dive into a second career as the boss of his own landscape design business that he’s planned to do for quite some time.

“I’ve been testing the water to do this for about three years. It’s either jump in or don’t go swimming,” said Stieg, who lives in the town of Algoma. “I’m going to enjoy the heck out of this. It’s such a change of pace from being inside a factory.”

Starting his own business, called Seven Oaks Custom Landscape Design, after more than 20 years with Bemis Specialty Films isn’t a short-term endeavor for the 53-year-old Stieg.

He has also worked for Copps Department Store, American Family Insurance and Marc’s Big Boy, where he specialized in cooking breakfast items.

“I would like to work at landscape design until I’m 68 or 69. It’s not out of the realm of possibility,” he said.

Stieg said shift work at Bemis was getting more difficult as he got older.

“I thought about doing my landscape and design business part-time, but it would be difficult to service my customers working every other day at Bemis,” he said. “The advice people told me was ‘Don’t do your landscape design business part-time because you’ll probably get too frustrated.’”

Stieg, who has teamed up for his services through McKay Nursery Company based in Waterloo, is no novice at landscape design.

For years, he’s landscaped the three-acre yard at his house.

“My neighbors said I was pretty good at landscaping,” Stieg said.

He decided to take horticulture classes at Fox Valley Technical College in Appleton.
His first class was landscape design.

“The instructors saw some of my work and thought I was good at it,” Stieg said. “It’s one thing to have your neighbors tell you about your landscape talents, but when my instructors told me that I was good at it, that made me think about doing it as a job.”

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Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Landscape Design Poised To Grow Rapidly In Uae

Abu Dhabi, June 2 (IANS) Driven by a construction boom, the market for landscape designing in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is expected to grow to well over 60 billion UAE dirhams (about $16 billion) in the next two years, WAM news agency reported Monday. The commercial and residential designing projects in the Arab federation are set to exceed 60 billion UAE dirhams by 2010, the news agency quoted Britain’s CMPi, a leading landscaping firm, as saying.

“With the advent of international players in the sector, the local landscape designers and builders realise that there’s more to growth than sunshine, soil and water,” CMPi group director, Chris Fountain, said.

He said the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is beginning to value the outdoors, and landscaping professionals are now in big demand.

“Many households have turned to landscaping services to design, develop and maintain their investments, while landscaping contractors are learning how to grab their share of this high growth market,” he said.

CMPi will organise an exhibition Nov 17-18 on outdoor design and architecture in the Middle East. The event is being organised to generate business ideas for the landscape designing companies.

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Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Urban Landscaping

On the North Shore, however, a wide range of soil and climate conditions can add levels of challenge not experienced elsewhere. We went to the experts to get the lowdown on how to get more out of your yard and have fun doing it.

Martin Wouters of local landscaping firm West Coast Home and Property Services sees some common errors when people set about planning their gardens. Martin and partner Glenn Whitted have built a solid reputation with both residential and commercial customers and have seen a lot of gardens in their career.

“People forget to check to see if the plant or shrub can be grown in their area,” says Wouters. “When buying shrubs, make sure you find out what zone you are in and when selecting plants make sure they are acceptable for growing in your zone. People also tend to buy shrubs without checking to see how big they get and eventually their garden becomes overcrowded. Make sure you check the full size it will be at maturity by checking the tag or asking questions at your local garden centre. When selecting annual bedding plants make sure you check the tags again and plant them where recommended (sun shade). So many people plant bedding plants where they don’t belong and end up with a disappointing garden.”

Enhancing soil and growing conditions also requires more than a little digging.

“People tend to over water or over fertilize their garden,” says Wouters. “Just because the soil on top is dry it does not mean your plants or shrubs need water. Dig down a few inches with your fingers to check for proper moisture levels. Too much water will eventually rot the root system and the plant will not grow fully or bloom properly. People also tend to over fertilize. Plants and shrubs only require feeding every 10 to 14 days.”

If you’re thinking of minimizing maintenance by planting a large lawn, think again.

“Homeowners plant more grass than garden thinking that grass is low maintenance. Grass requires cutting weekly and can become a chore or a large financial expense if you have to have it cut by a local lawn cutting service. People wait too long to remove the weeds from the garden, making it a long and unwanted task. It is recommended that you cultivate your garden weekly because if you keep knocking down the young weeds they eventually will be unable to reproduce and will not return.”

As with most aspects of home decorating, trends change and design ideas evolve over time. Here are some of the latest looks and fashions,

“Rock walls, interlocking walls, stamped concrete, paving stone driveways are all very popular in today’s landscapes. They offer a very rich look to your property and blend in well with your garden landscape. Low voltage garden lighting has become popular in all gardens and new landscapes. It offers a wonderful look to your garden and landscape when illuminated in the evening. The lighting requires a small amount of electricity to operate, so they are very cost effective and easy to install. Perennial gardens have also become popular.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Garden And Landscaping Materials Available From Werribee Sand And Soil

Werribee Sand & Soil  provides distribution services for a range of landscaping and garden materials suitable for residential and commercial applications. Werribee Sand & Soil distributes a wider range of building and construction materials.

Werribee Sand & Soil offers sales and distribution service for a range of landscaping and garden materials including crushed toppings and river pebbles. The crushed toppings supplied by Werribee Sand & Soil are available in a range of varieties. The river pebbles distributed by Werribee Sand & Soil come in standard sizes ranging from 7mm to 120mm. Werribee Sand & Soil supplies a range of crushed and uncrushed quartz. The landscaping and garden materials supplied by Werribee Sand & Soil are available in a range of decorative designs and distinct patterns.

The fine washed sand supplied by Werribee Sand & Soil is suitable for child play areas and paving. Werribee Sand & Soil supplies the following range of garden and landscaping materials; honeycomb garden rocks, pinebarks, bluestones and edging materials.

The railway sleepers supplied by Werribee Sand & Soil are available in a range of flexible sizes. The mulches supplied by Werribee Sand & Soil are available in red, black and dyed finishes.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Bellevilles Garden Spot: Couples Backyard Has The Personal Touch

Steven and Mary Weber didn’t know they had green thumbs until they moved to Garden Boulevard.

Maybe driving by the street sign every day had a psychological effect. Maybe their gingerbread-style brick cottage cried out for an enchanted forest.

Whatever the reason, the Webers have spent the past 13 years planting rose bushes, ivy, ornamental apple trees, hostas, perennial flowers and brilliantly colored impatiens.

Steven also has displayed many of his handmade wooden bird houses and squirrel feeders.

“It’s less housework I’ve got to do,” he joked last week. “No, really, I enjoy it.”

The Weber yard is one of six Belleville properties open to the public from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday for Gardens in Bloom, a self-guided tour sponsored by St. Clair County Extension and Education Foundation. Admission is $8 in advance or $10 that day (maps come with tickets).

University of Illinois Extension master gardeners also will hold a plant sale from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at Union United Methodist Church.

A committee of master gardeners selected properties for this year’s tour. All are residential.

“They’re all in a close geographical area, and we’ve learned that that’s what people prefer,” said Janet Burnett, county director of Madison-St. Clair Extension Unit. “Some are in walking distance of each other.”

Growing hobby

Steven Weber is a retired U.S. Air Force master sergeant who works as a military archivist. Mary is a legal assistant. They have two grown sons.

The Webers moved to Belleville from Georgia in 1995 because they wanted to be closer to family in Galena but also near an Air Force base.

Mary fell in love with the Edison Place neighborhood, which includes Garden Boulevard.

“All the houses are different or unique,” she said. “They’re not all the same like you have in some subdivisions.”

The Webers didn’t start from scratch on landscaping. Their property came with towering oak and elm trees, boxwood shrubs, yew, spirea and azalea bushes, a barberry bush and a non-bearing cherry tree.

Steven was a woodworking enthusiast, but he warmed up to the role of gardener-in-chief.

“He loves to play in the dirt,” Mary said. “He does most of the planting and transplanting. He just comes to me for guidance. He’ll say, ‘What do you think about putting this here?’ or ‘What do you think about putting it there?’”

One of the couple’s first projects was converting a child’s playground into a raised landscaping bed in the back yard. They planted hostas, coral bells, hellebore, sedum, phloxes and mums.

Steven mounted squirrel feeders on the oak tree and centered the bed with a red and black “chew, chew” that’s shaped like a steam locomotive. A large glass “engine” holds ears of corn.

“The neighbors like to harass me because I bring all the squirrels in the summer,” Steven said. “They’re always finding corn cobs in their yards.”

Creative gardening

The Webers increased backyard privacy by installing a wooden fence on one side, but they broke up the monotony with black, metal-grid inserts that serve as trellises for climbing ivy.

Steven hung some of his decorative bird houses on the fence. One is sided with twigs and pebbles. Another is patterned off a stop light with red, yellow and green circles.

The fence is connected to a small arbor over a walkway with round, concrete stepping stones. Eventually, the wooden slats will be covered with clematis vines.

“You have to wait a few years for (ivy on the fence) to grow, but I think it’s worth it,” Mary said. “It’s better than a solid wall.”

More originality can be seen in Steven’s vertical planters along the screened-in patio. He drilled staggered holes in plastic plumbing pipes, painted the pipes brown, installed them upright like fence posts and planted impatiens.

“They look really nice when they’re full,” said Steven, who used the same pipe to make flower boxes for his narrow windowsills.

Mary also has added creative touches to the yard. She turned a cup and saucer into a flower pot and a small potato sack into a hanging planter. She lined a green wagon with gift bags full of impatiens.

Other Weber “yard art” includes a concrete fountain with a boy and girl under an umbrella; a bird “mansion” with several entrances; an old-fashioned street light and four French solar lanterns; a green wrought-iron table and chairs with a matching birdbath; a butterfly box, rain gauge and Dragonfly thermometer; and several ceramic statues and metal sculptures.

Last, but not least, is Steven’s red, white and blue Chicago Cubs flag, which hangs next to the back door. It’s probably about as popular in the neighborhood as his squirrels.

Tickets for Gardens in Bloom are available through May 31 at Sandy’s Back Porch, Eckert’s Country Store and Garden Center, Effinger’s Garden Center and Hometown Ace Hardware in Belleville, University of Illinois Extension offices in Belleville and Edwardsville and Full Circle Services and Supplies in O’Fallon; and on May 31 only at Union United Methodist Church.

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Monday, May 26th, 2008

Its Hot Again This Year Eco Chic Gardening

the average household spent more than $400 for garden-related items. Landscaping grew by 19 percent, water gardening by 49 percent, fruit tree planting by 26 percent and vegetable gardening by 1 percent. Experts watch sales and several other areas to distinguish trends.

Why are they important? Garden and landscape trends shape consumer choices for the next year and years to come.

I mentioned last year after returning from the International Master Gardeners Conference in Little Rock that green gardening was the undertone of many of the speakers. For 2008, the Garden Media Group identified going green as the No. 1 global trend, professional trend-watchers for the gardening industry.

“Environmentally savvy homeowners know that it’s not just good enough to live an environmentally friendly lifestyle; you’ve got to be environmentally responsible ” said Garden Media’s Susan McCoy.

Gardeners want to find ways to conserve water, use locally produced or recycled materials and use environmentally responsible maintenance procedures.

Eco-chic is the buzzword for gardens designed and maintained in an ecology friendly manner. Gardeners are recycling plastic pots, composting and using rain barrels to catch rainwater. To restore balance in nature, they are creating feeding spots for birds and planting flowers so that bees, ladybugs and beneficial insects have fruit and nectar to eat.

Water gardening is still trendy. However, it is not necessary to have a huge water feature. In fact, wasting water is out. New smaller scale fountains and ponds are en vogue. They use less water, require less maintenance and can be more interesting in a home landscape. Pondless waterfalls are an option as are tabletop and recirculating fountains.

Many gardeners are opting for less grass in smart and easy landscapes. They are adding stamped concrete patios, walks and driveways. Turfless landscapes are showing up as gardeners install rocks, shrubs, trees and ground covers rather than traditional grass lawns. More expensive initially, it will save time, money and energy in maintenance, especially if combined with a drip irrigation system. Natives show up frequently in low maintenance gardens as well as ornamental grasses.

Half of this country’s consumers say that a lack of time is a bigger issue than a lack of money. The landscape service industry is exploding as homeowners who have purchased homes with large landscaped lawns just cannot find time to maintain the outdoor aspects. Full-grown plants and trees are hot sellers for homeowners too impatient to wait for smaller ones to naturally mature in the landscape.

Outdoor rooms take center stage in gardening trends. For the past five years, outdoor living and decorating were cited as the top two mega trends. In 2007, $6.2 billion was spent on outdoor furniture, accessories and grills. More than a million outdoor kitchens were constructed, and upscale homeowners opted for construction of gazebos near their outdoor pools. Stylish table lamps, special submersible lighting for fountains and dramatic illumination options are now on the market as a result of interest in outdoor living projects.

Simplicity is in with a new twist on the monochromatic slant. One basic color theme dominates a bed or pot with foliage plants and succulents, many of them variegated, used as accents. Landscaping Services A ratio of 60 percent of a primary color, 30 percent of a secondary color and 10 percent of accent color is attractive for a pot or bed. Big is beautiful these days. Big plants in big containers with big bold color are being used to create stylish pot scapes.

The “slo” food movement is growing, according to Landscape and Garden Consultant Adele Kleine.

“This philosophy reduces dependence on convenience and processed fast food. One of the purposes of gardening is to encourage adults and children to feel better emotionally and to inspire them to take more control over what they consume. That’s what slo food does,” Kleine said.

Farmers markets and organic food stands are part of this movement, as well as home vegetable gardening. Garden sales via the Internet are increasing dramatically. This year, sales are expected to equal or exceed catalog sales, growing from $7 million in 2007 to more than $10 million.

Consumers jump on the bandwagon for products that are new and hot, so growers will continue to introduce hundreds of new plants each year to meet consumer demands. Organic pesticides, fertilizers, eco-friendly products and drought tolerant and/or pest-resistant plants, many of which are container suitable - plus more native options - are expected to be big sellers this year.

Hopefully, these eco-friendly trends are not merely fads that will fade with time Landscaping Services. We all can be responsible caretakers of the environment, but need readily accessible products to help us do so.

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Monday, May 26th, 2008