Demolition contract approved for site of new Career Technology Center

By LUKE CREASY lcreasy@hdmediallc.com The Herald Dispatch | October 5, 2021

 

HUNTINGTON — Work will soon start at the former Sears building at the Huntington Mall, beginning with partial demolition of the inside of the building.

The property, which is owned by Cabell County Schools, will be the future site of the Cabell County Career Technology Center, which is one of four planned new schools in the district.

During Tuesday’s regular meeting of the Board of Education, E.P. Leach and Sons was awarded the contract for demolition work for the new Career Technology Center at the mall. The 100-day contract is worth $683,000, paid for through bond monies. Work is expected to begin in the next couple of weeks, officials said.

The demolition work includes the removal of existing lighting fixtures and ceiling separating the two floors, as well as all floor tiles and fixture walls inside the building.

“Once we remove display walls, it opens up the room for other contractors to work,” said Dave Ferguson, of ZMM Architects and Engineers, the lead contractor for the new building.

He added that fixtures such as the escalators and elevator will remain to keep the structural integrity of the building intact.

“We don’t want to do too much structural work until we find out where all the rooms are going to be,” Ferguson said.

The approval of a contract for Casto Technical Services to install an HVAC system in the gymnasium at the district’s Transportation Department headquarters, worth $85,660, was also approved.

In other business, Gibson Davis, a student at Cabell Midland High School, was recognized by the board for his appearance in Bluegrass Today after stepping in for five-time International Bluegrass Music Association Banjo Player of the Year Kristin Scott Benson, of the Rascals, who couldn’t play an event due to a family emergency.

Bluegrass Today is an online forum for bluegrass fans, writers, musicians and industry professionals. It’s the second time Davis has been published by the outlet. He also received a special shoutout from Bill Cody, DJ at WSM-AM in Nashville, the official radio home of the Grand Ole Opry.

Board members also approved the superintendent’s recommendation to ratify an unpaid suspension of professional employee Todd Parks, retroactive from Sept. 17 and continuing until an investigation is complete and a resolution is reached.

Harrison County (West Virginia) Commission awarded $2.6 million EDA grant

Funds will go toward clean energy products manufacturing facility
by Charles Young SENIOR STAFF WRITER Oct 1, 2021


This site drawing, prepared by the Thrasher Group, shows the planned Harrison Regional Industrial Park.
The Thrasher Group

CLARKSBURG,W.Va. (WV News) — The Harrison County Commission is set to receive a $2.6 million federal grant that is expected to help create 200 jobs and generate $4 million in additional private investment, the offices of Sens. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., and Joe Manchin, D-W.Va, announced Friday.

The $2.6 million U.S. Economic Development Administration grant will be matched with $1.3 million in local funds to help build and establish a clean-energy products manufacturing facility, creating jobs while also spurring private investment in the community, according to a press release.

“This announcement is exciting news for Clarksburg and demonstrates the strength of our state’s manufacturing base,” said Capito. “This investment is expected to help create 200 jobs and expand new markets for coal. The EDA’s involvement in West Virginia has increased exponentially since I came to the Senate, and I appreciate their continued support.”

“Every West Virginian continues to be impacted by the changing energy sector, especially our coal communities,” said Manchin. “EDA is investing $2.6 million to create an advanced energy products manufacturing facility in Clarksburg, which will create at least 200 good-paying jobs for West Virginians, generate additional private investment and boost economic growth in hard-hit communities.

The funds will be used to develop a 50,000-square-foot building on an approximately 8.85-acre portion of the planned Harrison Regional Industrial Park.

The Harrison Regional Industrial Park, located near North Central West Virginia Airport, sits on approximately 24 acres purchased by the county commission through the Harrison County Development Authority.

The Harrison County Economic Development Corporation applied for the grant.

“This is huge for this area, and we’re extremely excited,” said HCEDC Executive Director Amy Haberbosch Wilson. “It’s growing the area; it’s growing the jobs; and it’s growing the population. And we’re improving the infrastructure that’s going to be there.”

The company that will occupy the 50,000-square-foot building already has a presence in West Virginia, Wilson said.

“So this will be an expansion, and this will actually be the manufacturing part of it,” she said. “It’s going to be energy storage systems and high-grade electronic inks and coding that will be used for batteries. It’s going to be a world-wide project, from what we’re told. This technology actually needs coal to create this activated hard carbon for the batteries. So it’s an awesome project to have right here in coal country.”

The aim of the project and the Harrison Regional Industrial Park is help rebuild the region’s manufacturing sector, Wilson said.

“It’s really going to be the forefront of green technology,” she said. “I know what a lot of people are talking about is green living and green technology. We’re even looking at possible additional funding for some of this green technology, but this is a start to bringing back some of these manufacturing jobs and rebuilding our manufacturing here.”

In January, the county commission voted unanimously to set aside $1.4 million in county funds to help the HCEDC secure the federal funding for the project.

The grant application required that the applicant show proof the funds are available; the loans couldn’t be approved until the grant was secured, HCEDC board member and Bridgeport Mayor Andy Lang said at the time.

To solve that issue, the HCEDC asked the county to show proof of funds that the money is available for the project.

“If we receive the grant, before we ever draw out any funds or start the construction, we will go borrow the money. If we’re unable to borrow the money, we won’t accept the grant. But we can’t apply for the grant or borrow the money … unless we have proof of matching funds,” Lang said.

Boscov’s Bonanza | Family-owned department store ready to make impact in Valley

RON SELAK JR.
Reporter
rselak@tribtoday.com

NILES — To the best of Anthony Cafaro Jr.’s extensive knowledge of the retail industry, the opening of the Boscov’s department store at the Eastwood Mall will mark the only department store opening in a new market this year in the United States.

A store may have relocated in a community here or there, but for starting fresh in a new market, Boscov’s is probably it.

The store carries another noteworthy distinction: At 180,000 square feet, it is in all likelihood the largest retailer to open in the U.S. this year.

These developments are significant for happening in the Mahoning Valley at the Eastwood Mall, owned and operated by Niles-based Cafaro Company, one of the nation’s largest privately held shopping center developers.

To christen the store, Boscov’s, the Reading, Pa.-based retailer, is planning a lavish three-day grand opening extravaganza that starts Thursday.

A charity day Thursday will raise money for local participating nonprofits, you can do the business that you need to be doing from Day 1. If you don’t do it right, it’s going to take you five years for people to find out who you are,” Boscov’s CEO Jim Boscov said.

THE STORE
It will be the third Boscov’s at a Cafaro Company-owned property and occupy about one-third of the mall’s west concourse, including the former Sears department store. To make even more room for Boscov’s, several stores along that shopping corridor were relocated inside the mall.

Last week, crew members were busy putting on the finishing touches.
The store will feature a wide range of departments from a candy counter to optical and hearing centers with extra value-added customer service features, such as free gift wrapping for any item purchased.

That is what, in part, sets Boscov’s apart from other retailers: “We have departments that other department stores have given up on: candy, toys, petites …” Boscov said, adding others have given up on lower-margin hard goods in favor of apparel, which carries a higher margin.

“But in doing that, they give up reasons for people to come to the store,” he said.

Other sources of pride include a broad range of products within each department that often are priced less than competitors — for example, the retailer carries upward of 20 models of coffee makers — and customer service.

The store will employ at least 250 people.
“The goal is not to just have people who are there, but to have people who are knowledgeable and empowered to help … if they see a shopper schlepping two heavy bags, they need to step in and go, ‘Can I have this taken to your car for you,’ or ‘I’ll take it to customer pick-up for you.’ You can drive right up; we’ll load it into your car.”
And that’s what sticks with people, but it’s not a gimmick.

“You don’t do it because you are marketing; you do it because it’s the right thing to do,” Boscov said.

Cafaro said he sees Boscov’s as a hybrid local / national and regional business.

“Unlike some of the other nationals that maybe give lip service about being part of the community and being a true business neighbor for folks, Boscov’s really, in the communities we have with them now, they continue to give back through charitable contributions (and) just through the way they treat their employees and how they handle their employees more like family,” Cafaro, co-president of Cafaro Company, said.

The large number of employees, Cafaro said, is a good indication of Boscov’s retail intentions.

“The volume that they will do at the store is going to be probably exponentially more than what Sears did. It’s going to be substantially more than what our other apparel anchor stores are doing. They will be the top-performing store … in terms of a true department store, they will be the top-performing in all of Mahoning (County) and Trumbull County,” said Cafaro, who excluded Target, which he classified as a different style store.

Boscov’s was supposed to open in October 2020, but the pandemic caused its delay. Renovation work at the store came to a halt for a while and when it resumed, it started back with smaller crews and at a slower pace.

HISTORY
Founder Solomon Boscov emigrated from Russia to the United States in 1914 at 18 years old.

He settled in Reading, Pa., where residents spoke Pennsylvania Dutch, a form of German that was similar enough to the Yiddish language he spoke that he effectively could communicate in the community.

Before too long, Solomon had made a deal with a dry goods store that staked him with merchandise, and he started off as a peddler, first on foot with a sack on his back and then with a horse and carriage.

His reputation as a fair, honest and kind man grew, and he purchased the dry goods store, establishing the first Boscov’s department store in 1918. His son, Albert, joined a few decades later and became president with Solomon’s death in 1969. Albert’s nephew, Jim Boscov, joined the company in the mid-1970s and became CEO in 2015.
The company has grown to 48 stores in Ohio, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. Store No. 49 is Niles.

CAFARO / BOSCOV RELATIONSHIP
Geography and demographics are among the key reasons why Boscov’s decided to expand into the Valley market. The other was the company’s desire to partner with other family-owned companies, which the Cafaro Company is, and the Cafaro Company’s willingness to invest in and maintain its properties in addition to its contributions to the community.

“Certainly, you look at where the opportunities are because nobody is building malls today, and if there is space available, you certainly want to look at it, but that alone means it’s just a possibility,” Boscov said. “What you really want to do is check out the market, the demographics and make sure it makes sense for who you are, that there is a good population density and its people are going to like you.

“The next part is, is there a deal to be made and in the case of the Cafaros, it’s a family business, we are a family business and we have clicked,” Boscov said.

The relationship between the two companies started in the late 2000s, when Cafaro Company was among a group of private investors that purchased an equity position in Boscov’s during its bankruptcy. The deal was that should Boscov’s emerge from bankruptcy successfully, it would open a store at a Cafaro Company property.
The transaction was fully a business proposition, a way to keep Cafaro Company from becoming overexposed as other large retailers started to slump. But they realized the companies share similar traits that have led to their successes. Among them, both are family-owned and privately held, which makes them loyal to the customer, not stockholders.

The St. Clairsville store, the first to open, and later the store in Erie provided proof to Cafaro Company that Boscov’s knew how to operate in a middle market, especially in Erie, where the mall, like Eastwood, also contains competitors Macy’s and J.C. Penney.

“It gave us a basis to say these guys are going to do great. We also knew that long-term, we felt the Mahoning Valley will continue to recognize what the Eastwood Mall Complex has to offer as that one-stop shopping destination for their shopping and dining and entertainment needs,” Cafaro said.

“We’re no longer a mall just for Trumbull County; we are a destination for Trumbull County (and) we really believe we are destination for the entire Mahoning Valley and the Shenango Valley (Pa.) as well, and that is why we knew that Boscov’s … they will only have one location in this community. It will be the largest store throughout the region (and) we wanted it to be with us.”ts; the official opening is Friday with a day for families that includes music and kids’ activities; and a ribbon-cutting event, parade and fireworks Saturday.