Posts Tagged ‘jobs’
Wednesday, July 1st, 2009 by TCPalm.com
MARTIN COUNTY — A $4 million federal grant announced Tuesday should mean restored oyster beds, cleaner water and about 100 jobs in Martin County.
The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration has allocated $4,024,969 to the Martin County Commission. At their meeting Tuesday, commissioners are scheduled to award a contract to build about 200 acres of oyster bed reefs in the St. Lucie River between the Roosevelt and Evans Crary bridges and in the Northwest Fork of the Loxahatchee River near Tequesta.
The money for the project comes from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, part President Barack Obama’s economic stimulus package. More than 800 applications for grants were made and 50 approved. Of the four projects funded in Florida, Martin County’s was the largest.
To qualify for the stimulus money, said Kathy FitzPatrick, a Martin County coastal engineer, the project had to be “shovel-ready.”
FitzPatrick said bids from contractors are expected Wednesday.
“If the commissioners award the bid on July 7,” she, “we’ll be out on July 7, 8 or 9 doing surveys on the St. Lucie and Loxahatchee rivers to see exactly where to put the oyster beds.”
Work could be completed in about a year.
FitzPatrick said “seven or eight” sites in the St. Lucie have already been permitted for beds. Patch reefs 30 feet in diameter and made of old oyster shells will be placed in the water near Martin Memorial Medical Center and Rio.
Closer to the Crary bridge, smaller reefs made of oyster shells in mesh bags will be placed in the water both as oyster habitat and to protect shorelines from erosion by boat wakes. Several landowners have signed on for mangrove plantings along their shorelines, FitzPatrick said.
County officials have identified 106 jobs that will be involved in the project, “everybody from marine contractors, barge operators, quarrymen for the huge amount of shells we’ll need, to nurserymen, scientists and ecologists,” FitzPatrick said. “There will be a lot of people employed by this over the course of the year, and almost all of them local.”
Oysters once thrived in the St. Lucie River, said Vincent Encomio, an oyster research specialist at the Stuart-based Florida Oceanographic Society.
“But over the years the St. Lucie has lost about 75 percent of its living oyster bed acreage,” Encomio said. “Creating more habitat for oysters will improve the habitat for all the other organisms that depend on the reefs to live.”
Oysters filter water at a rate of 40 gallons per oyster per day. With about 600,000 oysters per acre of reef, that’s 24 million gallons of water a day.
FitzPatrick said the bivalves will be able “to filter the entire volume of the river every month. That improvement to the water quality is very substantial.”
By Tyler Treadway
Tags: application, boat, boating, bridge, commissioners, contract, federal, Florida, grants, jobs, medical, money, national, Obama, restoration, Shell, stimulus, Tequesta, water
Posted in Economy, Martin County | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
FORT PIERCE — St. Lucie County has set its sights on landing an unnamed eyeglass lens research firm that could bring 200 high-paying jobs to the Treasure Coast and create a curriculum at Indian River State College focused on training people to work for the company.
The county is awaiting Enterprise Florida, the state’s economic development arm, to approve its share of an incentive package that would require the local government to provide about $550,500 as its part of a state and local package that includes a job growth incentive grant and property tax breaks.
“This is a serious competition for us,” said Larry Pelton, president of the Economic Development Council of St. Lucie County. “I can’t give you more until we see how this all turns out.”
(more…)
Tags: business, cash, college, commissioners, development, Florida, government, grants, jobs, money, name, property, Stuart, taxes, train
Posted in Economy, St. Lucie County, State, Treasure Coast business | No Comments »
Thursday, June 18th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
Since March, Leroy Stennett has spent more than 10 hours talking to seven people in five departments at Bank of America about getting his mortgage modified.
In 2006, Stennett and his wife purchased a house in Port St. Lucie for $285,000, putting $95,000 down and adding another $5,000 in closing costs from the sale of their previous home.
“My house is worth $120,000 now, so, I’ve basically paid it off, but they don’t want to cut me a break,” Stennett said about his lender, Bank of America. “Every time I call, I talk to a different person, so I can’t get any real answers.”
Like thousands on the Treasure Coast, Stennett hoped President Barack Obama’s Making Home Affordable plan would help adjust his house payments after applying for a mortgage modification. But frustrated homeowners, who remain current on mortgage payments despite economic setbacks, say they are confused about the modification process and aren’t getting support or cooperation from their lenders. (more…)
Tags: application, bank, beach, ceo, chief, club, critical, cuts, employment, Florida, housing, informant, jobs, lender, loan, money, nurse, nursing, Obama, sale, sales, search, trial, value, wife
Posted in Stuart | 12 Comments »
Wednesday, June 17th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
When Andre Frechette’s physician advised him to exercise, he contracted Vero Beach-based Coral Pools Inc. to build a $21,000 pool at his Port St. Lucie home.
Tuesday morning, Frechette said he got a call from Coral Pools owner Shawn Riley telling him work on the pool, that was mostly paid for, would not be completed.
“He told me that they were filing for bankruptcy on Thursday,” said Frechette, 83. “My pool is only 85 percent complete.”
(more…)
Tags: bankruptcy, beach, contract, court, Florida, informant, jobs, lawsuit, physician, police, pool, property, roads, Tradition, UPS
Posted in Courts, Economy, Indian River County, Martin County, St. Lucie County, Treasure Coast business | 24 Comments »
Wednesday, June 17th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
The White House is reviewing the merits of the proposed Indian Street Bridge as a response to a U.S. senator who included the span in his list of 100 questionable federal stimulus projects.
The review is being conducted only because it was raised by U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., not because it is a concern of the White House.
The review could be quickly wrapped up as the White House has already determined that one-third of the items highlighted by Coburn in a report released Tuesday are not stimulus projects or are misleading characterizations of stimulus projects.
(more…)
Tags: bridge, contract, critical, federal, Florida, housing, hurricanes, jobs, lawsuit, money, Obama, property, raise, raises, stimulus, Stuart, Traffic
Posted in Economy, Palm City, Stuart, Traffic | No Comments »
Thursday, June 11th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
PORT ST. LUCIE — Shirley Littlefield’s eyes filled with tears as she picked up her daughter, third-grader Elizabeth, from what was truly her last day of school at Port St. Lucie Elementary.
“It’s heartbreaking,” Littlefield said. “We’re getting split up, and it hurts.”
The 34-year-old building closed its doors to students, teachers and staff on Wednesday as part of a plan to deal with St. Lucie County School District budget constraints.
Closing the school, as well as Southbend K-8 and Anglewood Center, which taught pregnant teens, is expected to save $30 million next year. (more…)
Tags: budget, children, church, coach, communication, crack, education, elementary, housing, jobs, kids, kindergartner, parents, reading, Schools, students, teacher, teachers, teen, teens
Posted in Port St. Lucie | No Comments »
Friday, May 29th, 2009 by Eve Samples
STUART — It just doesn’t make sense to Bill Wallace.
Why would Chrysler close a profitable dealership in a growing area?
Why would the beleaguered automaker allow a franchise in out-of-the-way Okeechobee to remain open, while closing several on the more populated Treasure Coast?
He’s selling cars. He bought more of them than he needed from Chrysler this year, at the urging of the company’s top brass, he says.
But his Wallace Chrysler Jeep in Fort Pierce is still slated to shut down after June 9, along with 788 other dealerships that Chrysler decided to close as part of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition.
“We weathered this tsunami, and in America, you should be rewarded for that, not punished,” said Wallace, a third-generation dealer whose grandfather opened a Chevrolet dealership in West Palm Beach in the 1930s.
Wallace is among more than 300 dealers across the country who have joined forces to fight Chrysler’s decision. The group, called the Committee of Chrysler Affected Dealers, wants more time. More time to prove it would be a mistake to ax them.
But if Chrysler gets its way in bankruptcy court - as many industry watchers believe it will - five Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge dealers between Indiantown Road in Jupiter and Vero Beach will be among those that close next month. (more…)
Tags: bankruptcy, Bill Wallace, car, Chrysler, court, jeep, jobs, judge, layoffs, Napleton, Stuart
Posted in Economy, Fort Pierce, Hobe Sound, Martin County, Okeechobee, Palm Beach County, St. Lucie County, Stuart, Treasure Coast business | 3 Comments »
Monday, May 25th, 2009 by Eve Samples
The odds are better than picking all six Powerball numbers — but still pretty slim.
Of the 8,000 or so job-hunters that flooded tiny Indiantown last month with hopes of landing work building a solar-power plant, about 50 to 100 could get offers in July.
That’s when Lauren Engineers & Constructors — the contractor overseeing construction of Florida Power & Light Co.’s solar-thermal plant — expects to need the first batch of employees, mostly concrete helpers and finishers. (more…)
Tags: Florida, FPL, Indiantown, jobs, Lauren, solar
Posted in Economy, Indiantown, Martin County, Treasure Coast business | No Comments »
Friday, May 22nd, 2009 by TCPalm.com
PORT ST. LUCIE — Thousands of jobs will come to the Treasure Coast if Port St. Lucie gets the chance to live up to its first name.
The Port of Palm Beach in Riveria Beach is looking for a site in South Florida to build an inland port, or an Intermodal Logistics Center, that uses roadways and railways rather than congested waterways to increase transport efficiency.
Studies commissioned by the Florida Department of Transportation found that an inland port would bring at least 25,000 jobs to a community.
(more…)
Tags: appeals, beach, communication, degrees, Florida, government, jobs, name, property, roads, Traffic, unemployment, water
Posted in Economy, Palm Beach County, Port St. Lucie, Treasure Coast business | 3 Comments »
Wednesday, May 20th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
FORT PIERCE — A 51-year-old associate pastor accused of backing his car up at a school into a sheriff’s deputy is facing charges, according to recently released records.
St. Lucie County sheriff’s investigators arrested Ronald J. Reeves on May 14 on felony charges including aggravated battery on an officer and resisting an officer with violence, and a misdemeanor count of disorderly conduct following the events at Dale Cassens School.
Reeves reportedly arrived with an 11th-grade student and his grandmother. Reeves said he’s a mentor for the student and is an associate pastor at Mount Olive Missionary Baptist Church.
(more…)
Tags: arrest, battery, car, cell, church, deputies, deputy, dispute, felony, grandmother, jobs, man, misdemeanor, pastor, Schools, sheriff, students
Posted in Crime, Fort Pierce, Schools | No Comments »