2013年2月20日 星期三

Cumberland Farms pressed on store humidity

Representatives from Cumberland Farms recently came before the Marion Planning Board hoping to rectify increased humidity inside the store with a plan to move some of its heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) system from the roof to the ground, but got an earful about the on-going parking and traffic issues that continue to plague the new site.

Cumberland Farms Senior Project Manager Manny Paiva told members of Marion Planning Board at the Feb. 4 meeting that the new store and other stores like it had begun to have a build-up of condensation inside the building along its front windows, as well as at the cooler and freezer windows, leaving pools of water on the floor. Paiva said the company hired AccuTemp, a mechanical consultant, to investigate the issue. AccuTemp recommended that a HVAC and condenser units be installed on the ground to compliment the ones built on the roof. Paiva asked the Planning Board’s permission to construct a six-foot concrete pad on the side of the building for the units, to be surrounded by arborvitaes trees. Paiva said while the roof top units have worked in the past, the stores have considerably increased its cooler and freezer offerings, which causes the increased condensation. He said his construction crew is ready to go with the work, but wanted to come in front of the Planning Board first before seeking a permit from the town Building Inspector.

Utilizing the opportunity with Cumberland Farms officials in front of the full board for the first time in more than six months, Marion Planning Board member Tom Magauran took a side route to the discussion, and began asking questions about the traffic flow issues that continue to plague the site. Magauran said it was clear that the new site was “extremely successful” but he didn’t appreciate how the company “blew us off” after the planning board sent an Oct. 1 letter requesting help in alleviating some of the new stores issues that not only included traffic flow but parking, as well.

Cumberland Farms attorney Doug Troyer disagreed with Magauran’s assessment, stating that company officials met with Marion Planning Board Chairman Jay Ryder and Planning Board Vice Chairman Patricia McArdle in November in regards to the letter and had wanted to meet a number of other times until they discovered that Ryder had become ill.

Ryder discussed the group’s meeting in November and the consensus decision to add six additional spaces to the site,We offer a wide variety of high-quality standard plasticcard and controllers. but that nothing could be done to paint the new spots until the weather breaks.

Luludja holds up her modest rose bouquet in a French brasserie, moving along from table to table. She’s thinking of her family, the people she’s doing it all for. Most of the money,Features useful information about handsfreeaccess tiles. however, will be banked by a man in her home country, hundreds of kilometres away. She forces a shy smile. Her lips are painted bright red.

Tonight most guests decline. They do not look her in the face and fail to notice the glistening green eye shadow she is wearing. After two hours and stops at various cafes and restaurants, Luludja finally manages to sell a rose for €3 to a young man in horn-rimmed glasses. She also sells her body, for €35.

Luludja works the streets in Frejus, a town on the Mediterranean coast in France. The holiday resort is not too far from Saint-Tropez, where the rich go to have their holidays amidst their yachts. The summer sees hundreds of thousands of tourists flocking into the seaside resort.We maintain a full inventory of all lanyard we manufacture. That is when dozens of Bulgarian Roma prostitute themselves on the streets.

Luludja came to western Europe from Central Bulgaria four years ago. She had seen images of the C?te-d’Azur on TV and pictured herself there leading a better life. She says the flowers bring in about €5 to €8 per night, not enough to pay off the debt she made by coming here. “In the end, the bouquets are just bait for potential clients wanting more than flowers.”

She says she did not see anything wrong in selling her body. But she does not want to give her full name.

“The work I do allows me and my family to survive,” she says. That is the most important thing at this point.For the world leader in solarlight base services and plastic injection products. The morning after her flower tour along the bars in the old town, she is in a muddy meadow in Frejus where she and her husband Daniel live in a trailer between piles of junk and rotting garbage.The term 'glassmosaic control' means the token that identifies a user is read from within a pocket or handbag.

Her mouth contracts and her face tightens when she is asked how exactly she got to France. After a while her husband Daniel – his hair neatly gelled back, polished leather shoes on his feet – starts talking, hesitantly. He says a man in their slum near Plowdiw offered to drive them.

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