Quantcast
Channel: Robinson-Solutions Professional Window Cleaning
Viewing all 999 articles
Browse latest View live

Friday Window Cleaning Releases

$
0
0
50? Not a day over 25! Unger keeps it young.
http://www.ungerglobal.com/
Unger celebrates 50th anniversary in style with limited edition work wear range: As part of Unger’s celebrations to mark 50 years of innovation and excellence in cleaning tool design and manufacture, a limited edition, high quality work wear range has been launched. Each item of high quality outdoor work wear features the 50th anniversary commemorative logo. Practical enough to withstand the rigours of day-to-day work, but also smart enough to use when off-duty, the range is available to UK customers now. The work wear collection consists of: - 
  • Softshell jacket – A versatile garment that is both wind resistant and water repellent, with the added bonus of a warm lining for greater comfort. The jacket also features two zipped hand warmer pockets and one zipped chest pocket. 
  • Hoodie – A practical hooded jacket with two front kangaroo pockets, inner headphone pocket and reinforced seams. 
  • Softshell waistcoat – A sleeveless version of the jacket, featuring all the same great benefits. 
  • Beanie – A warm, knitted hat; a must-have for the professional window cleaner and Unger fan! 
These products have been developed as part of a year-long celebration to mark Unger’s 50th anniversary. More activities and special promotions will be launched throughout 2014, to thank customers for their continued loyalty. 

Also check out the Unger limited edition tools here.

http://windowcleaningresource.com/vBulletin/wcr-house-contests-fun/34585-video-mole-jersey-show-ep-13-window-cleaning-pressure-washing-awesomeness.html
http://windowcleaningresource.com/vBulletin/wcr-house-contests-fun/34408-video-mole-jersey-show-ep-12-nola-show.html
More high jinks with Mole & Jersey, episode 13 + a live session from NOLA. Click the pictures above to take you there. That'll keep you busy over the weekend!

The SLX Pole that took the whack!
http://www.windowcleaningmagazine.co.uk/blog/we-had-the-reach-it-shock-now-listen-to-the-gardiner-shock…/
We had the Reach-iT shock now listen to the Gardiner shock… WCM reported within hours of Erwin Sørensen of Odense, Denmark a few months back and his lucky escape when his Reach-iT pole caught overhead power lines carrying hundreds of volts. We report today of another near miss this time in the UK, when Adam Cosway, 26 from Cornwall took a hit when using his Gardiner SLX pole. Adam Cosbay tells how it happened & Alex Gardiner gives his opinion. Read more here

3 Window Cleaning Business Owners

$
0
0
Mark Holt (L) and Jake Edwards are partners in A-One Window Cleaning. They are cleaning windows at Mt. Holyoke College.
http://www.masslive.com/business-news/index.ssf/2014/02/voices_of_the_valley_mark_holt_and_jake.html
Voices of the Valley: Mark Holt and Jake Edwards, owners, A-One Window Cleaning, Inc., Amherst - A-One Window Cleaning, Inc. has been in business since 1984. Jake Edwards is a native of Hatfield and I'm from Holyoke. We took over the business in 2013 after being employees for five years. Between Jake and I, we have over 20 years experience coast to coast ranging from small house window cleaning to 66-story high rise window cleaning.

We are a window cleaning company but, we have a wide variety of services. Besides commercial, and residential window cleaning, we offer building and house washing, pressure washing, roof washing, gutter cleaning, solar panel cleaning, shower door restoration, and small window repairs, basically we detail properties top to bottom.

Our competitive prices, and our wide variety of services have kept us busy. So we really haven't had to change much due to the rocky economy. Not many people realize that keeping your windows clean, and in proper working order can save you quite a bit of money on utility bills. Solar panel cleaning is also a great way of generating more energy.

We really care about the environment. Unlike most companies, we use a completely biodegradable, eco-friendly window cleaning soap for all of the residential properties we clean. It has no phosphates or ammonia. Not only is our soap completely green; it also softens water to reduce overall dirt redeposition. This leaves a longer lasting clean on your glass.

Word of mouth has been the best success for us. Websites like Yelp, and Angie's List have been great as well, but we find that keeping our customers satisfied, and going above and beyond with our work is our secret to success. There are other window cleaners in our area but, with our loyal customers, and our dedication to our work, we normally don't have a problem getting customers and keeping them satisfied. Currently we have six employees, but with the amount of work we have coming up, we are hiring.

Air Force veteran Charles Lewis is the president of Montgomery-based Supreme Cleaning, a facility maintenance company. Founded in 2007, it offers janitorial, pressure washing and window cleaning service up to two stories, and recently expanded into landscape service. Its clients include Alabama Power and Enterprise Rent-A-Car. The company’s employee count varies but is usually between 15 and 18, and all of his employees are veterans. Lewis talked with the Advertiser about his business:
 
How is your approach to the business different than other people who do this?
We’ve been very conservative in our growth strategies. Measured growth is probably the best way to describe it.

How did you go about that?
We started out with state contracts, but eventually we weaned ourselves off of those. We found that we had a number of state contracts but as the fiscal year changed, they would be slow in payments. So we went with (the) private sector. We’re certified now as a service disabled veteran-owned business by (Veterans Affairs), and we’re competing for federal contracts on a regional basis.

What’s ahead for the business at this point?
It’s going to be private sector and federal (business) moving forward. We’re working on a regional basis right now, but it’s measured growth. You don’t take on any more than you can chew unless it’s through strategic alliances with other organizations.

Not your average cleaning lady (Hillsborough) - S&G Cleaning Services is committed to excellence. Cleaning has been an integral part of S&G Cleaning Services owner Shirley Perlinsky’s life for as long as she can remember. The native of Brazil says her grandmother was her inspiration.

“When I was a child, growing up in a very modest neighborhood in Brazil, my grandmother lived with us,” Perlinsky writes on her company website. “Never one to sit idle and watch the world go by, it seemed as though she was always busy and that usually involved cleaning something. Whether it was the floors, the windows or the kitchen counters, no stain or speck of dirt ever escaped her attention. Cleaning was her passion and she made sure to communicate that to the younger members of the family.”

Perlinsky studied marketing and advertising in Brazil and ran a marketing research company for 10 years before moving to the United States, where she took over her mother’s cleaning company. She used her marketing background to expand the business. “She gave me a notebook with all the clients’ names in it, and I was shocked that there was no technology in the cleaning business in this area, or at least at that moment when I was starting out,” Perlinsky said. “That’s when I used my marketing experience to grow the business to a point where I could get the money to put technology into the business. We now have five computers running the business with maid service software. Our cars are equipped with GPS tracking systems to know exactly where the crew is at any given moment.”

S&G is not your typical cleaning lady. Employees are thoroughly screened and trained with videos, manuals and hands-on instruction. They also receive bonuses for exceptional service. Perlinsky said that the happiness of S&G employees is a core value of the business. “We are very focused on our employees,” she said. “When you treat your employees well, they will treat their clients the same way.” S&G also prides itself on its use of environmentally safe cleaning products.

When Hurricane Irene struck in August 2011, the offices of S&G Cleaning Services suffered major damage. As a result, the company moved to its current Hillsborough location. In addition, the storm inspired S&G to become certified in water damage cleanup, in order to help other victims of flooding.

For more than 30 years, Perlinsky said, she has dedicated her business to providing excellent cleaning services and also giving back to the community. S&G Cleaning Services is a major participant in Cleaning for Heroes, a nonprofit organization that provides free cleaning services to disabled and elderly veterans and retirees of local police and fire departments. The company is also involved with a similar group called Cleaning for a Reason, which provides cleaning services to women with cancer.

S&G’s services include home and office cleaning, window cleaning and carpet cleaning. The company serves clients throughout Somerset, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Morris and Union Counties. Perlinsky runs the business with her husband Gary.

Window Cleaning News

$
0
0
Window washers clean the glass on the Bolshoy Ice Dome. Monday at the Sochi Winter Olympic Games, including Team USA vs. Switzerland in women's hockey, the women's supercombined, men's curling, speedskating, and much more.

Window washer rescue near Hopkins.
http://www.wbal.com/article/105389/2/two-rescued-from-loose-scaffolding-at-hopkins
Two Rescued From Loose Scaffolding At Hopkins: City fire department crews used ladders to rescue two workers stuck on a malfunctioning scaffolding at one of the buildings at Johns Hopkins Hospital complex. Ian Brennan of the fire department said that a window washing scaffolding appears to be hanging almost perpendicular to the windows at the Outpatient Building, or a nearby hospital building, off of Broadway and McElderry. Brennan declined to say who owns the building but a photo posted on Twitter appears to be the Outpatient Building at Hopkins. There were no serious injuries reported.

http://www.fresnobee.com/2014/02/07/3756341/water-saving-by-california-government.html
Water saving by California government: Here are some of the actions that California state government is taking to reduce water use by 20 percent.
— Department of Transportation is cutting back irrigation along California roadways.
— New, non-essential landscaping projects will be stopped.
— Washing of many state vehicles is banned, except for health or safety reasons.
— Contracts for water-intensive window washing at state buildings are being canceled.
— Signs in state buildings emphasize smart water use in bathrooms, kitchens.

http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/TV-preview-Payday/story-20594134-detail/story.html
Todays twenty-somethings are a generation blighted by debt and overwhelmed by consumerism. On the plus side, at least they don't have to go down the mines. This documentary delves into the wallets of four such young folk, starting with Ricky, a window cleaner with a seven-year-old son and another child on the way. Cleaning contracts come and go, but Ricky has his heart set on the British welterweight title, finding unwitting sparring partners in those who settle their bills late. Determined to give his kids a better life than his own childhood self, he hopes boxing will provide his payday as he trains hard for the biggest match of his life.

http://www.mortgageintroducer.com/mortgages/248742/248/Loans/Small_businesses_losing_faith_in_banks.htm
Small businesses losing faith in banks: James Benamor, founder of Amigo Loans, said: "Small businesses have now lost all faith and the lifeblood of our economy; the mechanics, the window cleaners, the shop owners are turning to dangerous payday loans.” He added that payday lenders are spending enormous amounts on marketing in comparison to more responsible lenders who lack such a voice. One in 10 microbusinesses believe banks aren’t remotely interested in lending them, with 2.5 million saying they wouldn’t even bother knocking on a bank’s door.
The figures also revealed that small business are looking at alternative options, as 21% of microbusinesses took out an alternative loan last year, while 29% approached an alternative lender. Benamor added: “Payday loan sharks needn’t be the first port of call for microbusinesses seeking funding. It’s essential they are aware of the safer and more cost efficient lending options available, such as credit unions, peer to peer loans and guarantor loans. “We would like to see a not-for-profit, all of market comparison site for loans, which all lenders are forced to promote on their advertising." Small businesses remain pessimistic about the future, with 45% believing that bank lending to small businesses will not increase in the next year.

Members of Regina Fire and Protective Services and the Regina Police Service were at Hill Centre Tower III on Monday to keep watch on a shattered pane of glass on the 20th storey until the glass was safely removed.
http://www.leaderpost.com/Falling+glass+closes+downtown+street/9465412/story.htmlFalling glass closes downtown street: A block of 12th Avenue in downtown Regina was shut down for a couple of hours Monday morning after a piece of a window fell from an upper storey on Hill Centre Tower III. Gerard Kay, deputy chief for Regina Fire and Protective Services, said a call came in at around 10:30 a.m. about glass falling down from a building. He said when crews arrived they discovered a fourby-eight-foot window of the mechanical penthouse located on the 20th floor had shattered and shards of glass had fallen to the street below. "Fire crews worked with police to cordon off the area," said Kay. "We wanted to keep both pedestrian and vehicle traffic out of the area." Kay said as a precaution all the people who were in the tower at the time of the incident were kept inside while workers removed the remaining glass. Four vehicles were also removed from the street below where the glass was falling, for their protection.

Members of the Regina fire dept., and the police service were at Hill Centre Tower III to keep their eye on a shattered pane of glass on a high floor, possibly the 19th of Tower III until it was made safe by window washers.
"A window-washing crew was called in and they rappelled down the side of the building and basically knocked out the remaining glass from that pane, and firefighters backed them up," said Kay. "Our high-angle team was also there just in case someone got stuck." The area was reopened to vehicle and pedestrian traffic at about 12:30 p.m. It took two hours to complete the call because the street needed to be secured and all hazards needed to be removed before work to remove the remaining glass could happen, he said. "There was a fear that a larger piece would go and all of a sudden that acts like a sail so it could end up anywhere (and) that's always our biggest fear," said Kay. "Fortunately, I believe it was tempered glass and it's designed to shatter and not come down in large pieces."
He had no explanation as to why the glass shattered. "We are going to defer that one to the building owner and (let them) look at it from a proper engineering standard, so they can figure out what caused this window to break," he said. This is the second time since the office tower was completed in December 2012 that a piece of glass has fallen from an upper floor. On Aug. 26, a broken window on the 20th storey sent glass into the street. At that time, Roseanne Hill, managing director and vice-president of leasing for Harvard Developments, said the window had been cracked for a while. She said sometimes in new buildings, a small percentage of panes of glass can crack spontaneously due to pressure and natural occlusions in the glass. Hill said the other two towers have also experienced cracked window panes and the normal practice was to tape the window and then replace it.

http://www.resourcenation.com/blog/pagerank-redemption-escaping-the-prison-of-a-low-google-ranking/38245/
PageRank Redemption: Escaping the Prison of a Low Google Ranking - With the most recent Google algorithm update, Hummingbird, the ruling search engine is paying more attention to natural semantic language. This newly refined “search intelligence” focuses on real-life questions that users ask when utilizing the platform and recognizes the “how”, “what”, “why”, “where”, “when” questions to quickly return answers rather than results.
This means you’ll have to ensure your website’s content is actually answering the questions of those seeking your business. If a user searches “Where is the closest bakery to my location?” your newly optimized bakery website better answer that question. Or if potential customers search “How much do commercial window cleaning services cost?”, your price should be displayed in the appropriate context on your site.  Take a moment to research your customers’ top questions through surveys, comments, and internal brainstorming sessions.

Local balloon artist Loni Trude helped Tom Lopac with his window cleaning business.
http://www.boiseweekly.com/boise/loni-trude-makes-balloons-her-business/Content?oid=3050731
Loni Trude Makes Balloons Her Business: "Look! I made something that will picture your business," Trude said. For weeks, Trude had been sending BW email updates on her adventures as a balloon artist. Starting in December, she began twisting balloon sculptures customized for businesses across the Treasure Valley, submitting photographs of them to local newspapers as under-the-radar advertising and charging $50 for the service. She said that she was able to generate $850 worth of advertising for her first client, Tom Lopac of Picture Perfect Windows, based on print advertising costs. "A lot of the newspapers liked the idea. They needed content ... so they pursued publishing a brief story along with a picture of what she's done," Lopac said. The value of exposure marketing has long been ambiguous--it can be difficult to quantify results--but for companies like Picture Perfect Windows (which received a Trude-crafted, window-washing Santa Claus), exposure and word of mouth can be revenue drivers. Lopac said he may never know exactly how much exposure Trude's photos gave his window washing business, but to him, the experience has been beneficial. "It was a very positive image for our company to be represented in that way," he said.

Toby Harnden - Team of window cleaners, K Street NW, Washington DC.

http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/business/new-window-cleaning-franchise-opens-in-xenia/ndKpD/
New window cleaning franchise opens in Xenia: Fish Window Cleaning has opened a new franchise location at 74 North Orange St., Xenia. The location is owned by Shane Hartley. Prior to joining FiSH, Hartley was a police officer/investigator for nearly 13 years and has been in the Army for the past 27 years. He was mobilized for Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003. He returned from Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan in 2012, earning a bronze star for working with the Afghan National Army, according to a company release. “Our franchise owners get to draw on FISH’s thirty-five years of knowledge and experience. FISH offers proven methods, training, a nationally recognizable business name, and uniformity,” said Nathan Merrick, vice president of franchise development. “Shane’s vast business experience partnered with his passion and enthusiasm is sure to make his business successful.”

OxBox was formed from former members of Witney TV– a community TV project – and has spread across the county. As the group looks to celebrate its third birthday on March 18, it will launch a new online radio station for Oxfordshire. But all of its 50 contributors work on the project in their spare time, balancing full-time jobs with the demands of an ever-growing website. OxBox can now boast an audience of 30,000 people, which in part could be put down to its match highlights of Oxford City FC matches and its promotion of upcoming county bands. Adie Gargan (pictured) will host one of the new shows on the radio station. Mr Gargan, 42, of Madley Park, Witney, is a window cleaner by day and soon-to-be ‘Steve Wright’-style co-presenter on OxBox radio. The father-of-two said: “I do quite a bit of acting and I have experience in filming and I started doing this about 18 months ago. “I really like the community side of things and am really looking forward to the radio show. It will be a bit of banter and getting people to phone in and stuff like that."

JLG’s 1500SJ has three steering modes including conventional front two-wheel, crab and four-wheel coordinated. The oscillating axle moves 12 inches for better traction and to keep all four wheels on the ground.
http://www.liftandaccess.com/content/trico-lift-adds-four-more-jlg1500-sjp-telescopic-booms-its-fleet-powered-access
Trico Lift Adds Four More JLG1500 SJP Telescopic Booms to Its Fleet: Trico Lift recently announced the availability of four additional JLG1500SJP telescopic boom lifts in its rental fleet; the JLG1500SJP with its 150-ft. elevated platform height is suited for applications including window cleaning and cellular tower construction. “Trico Lift serves the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest, which are areas of this country that have resumed and/or maintained large contracting projects where these machines are critical - but perhaps too costly to own,” said Trico Lift President and CEO Chris Carmolingo. “We are pleased to be able to provide accessibility to these additional machines and are confident that we can put them to work immediately where they are needed.”

http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/news/10989543.Father_of_three_found_hanged_at_Pendle_farm/?ref=var_6
Father-of-three found hanged at Pendle farm - A father of three was found hanged at his remote farm amid a raft of money and personal worries, an inquest heard. Stephen Haigh was concerned about a tax bill, a looming family court case and even a speeding course he was due to attend, Burnley Coroner’s Court was told. The 51-year-old, who ran his own contract window-cleaning business, was discovered by his estranged wife Katie at Thorny Bank Farm, off Jinny Lane, Barley, on October 31. An investigation by police indicated there was no third-party involvement.
His wife Katie Haigh said her husband was ‘eccentric’ and kept problems to himself, never giving any indication of wanting to take his own life. But he had left a series of small notes, including a line echoing the late comic Spike Milligan which read: ‘I told you I was poorly’. Mrs Haigh said he had discussed wanting the line as the epitaph on his headstone, convincing her that he had intended to harm himself. She told the inquest he was worried at paying a tax bill and the prospect of attending a court hearing over maintenance issues with an ex-partner. “Stephen struggled with expressing himself and he didn’t cope well in social situations,” she said.
“He would have hated the thought of having to go through this process. He couldn’t have coped with it and he was very worried and he asked me if I would come with him.” East Lancashire assistant coroner Mark Williams said he was satisified, after the note had been explained, that with the financial and personal issues he faced, Mr Haigh had taken his own life.

Police launched probe after finding body of man who had lay dead for nine days in Hartlepool house - A dad of six lay dead in his blood-stained flat for nine days, an inquest heard. Mystery surrounded the circumstances in which James Wallace, 54, was found at his home in Wensleydale Street, Hartlepool, and police launched an extensive probe. There had been a suggestion he had told police he was being harrassed for money, and there was also a 999 call made from his mobile phone which was abandoned two weeks before his death. But after a major investigation involving tracing Mr Wallace’s last movements, house-to-house inquiries, CCTV and mobile phone analysis, an inquest into his death ruled out any foul play.
Hartlepool Coroner’s Court heard concerned neighbours contacted Mr Wallace’s landlord, Endeavour Housing, on August 22 last year, having not seen him for a week. Endeavour Housing then contacted police and uniformed officers had to force entry. Mr Wallace, a window cleaner, was found face down near his settee and blood was found in various places, including the settee and on internal doors. Officers from CID were drafted in and the scene was secured as a potential crime scene. Town coroner Malcolm Donnelly told the inquest there was no sign of forced entry or a disturbance, and suggested Mr Wallace had injured himself in a fall in his house. He said: “It could be interpreted as consistent with a person staggering around the room.” Mr Donnelly said inquiries were made into Mr Wallace’s lifestyle and it appeared he had a “drink issue”.
Detective Sergeant Joanne Wright added: “I’m more than satisfied that nothing suspicious happened and there was no third party involvement.” Forensic pathologist Mark Egan said there was a large number of injuries including cuts to the head, and some injuries suggested Mr Wallace had been moving around on his hands and knees. He added that Mr Wallace had moderate coronary artery disease and this could have made him more susceptible to the effects of blood loss.
Forensic scientist Sammy Warner, who specialises in analysis of blood patterns, said there were no obvious signs of an assault at the flat. Mr Donnelly added: “I think he banged his head as a result of an accident, we don’t know precisely where, we never will.” He recorded a verdict of accidental death. After the hearing, Mr Wallace’s family said they were satisfied with the ruling. Michael Wallace said: “There were doubts, but the experts couldn’t have done any better.” Mr Wallace’s daughter Caroline said: “I feel lots better now that we know.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/10619347/BT-launches-home-smartphone-to-block-nuisance-calls.html
BT launches home smartphone to block nuisance calls - Following the success of its first landland nuisance call blocking phone, BT has launched a smartphone for use in the home. Calls from companies offering claims against banks which have mis-sold Payment Protection Insurance or services like window cleaning can be filtered out, alongside international, withheld numbers or calls from unknown numbers.

Sisters secret fundraising for Atherton parents' wedding: Weddings can be dauntingly expensive but for one remarkable schoolgirl it is a fundraising challenge worth taking on to see her parents walk down the aisle. Nine-year-old Melissa Todd stunned her parents by announcing that she wanted to help them pay for their special day by selling bracelets and necklaces she has made with her six-year-old sister Courtney and cousin MacKenzie Hartley-Neal, aged 10. The girls have been busy making the jewellery out of wool in the hope of selling them to help pay for the wedding which their parents John Todd, a window cleaner, and Lyndsey Neal have always wanted but not been able to afford. Melissa, of Seaforth Avenue, Atherton, said: "My parents have been engaged for a really long time, since before I was born I think. "I would probably faint to actually see them walk down the aisle." The Atherton St George's Primary School pupil had begun secretly planning the day and wrote to the Journal in a bid to gain more publicity for her fundraising appeal before finally spilling the beans to her mum on Sunday. Lyndsey said: "It is such an amazing thing for her to have wanted to do but I think there are much needier people out there than us, so Melissa is going to carry on fundraising among our friends and family.

Gate fans remember Alan 'best ever header of a ball' - Fans from Margate FC have paid tribute to club star Alan Blackburn who died this month. A striker, Mr Blackburn who played for the club in the 1960s, also played for West Ham United and Halifax Town. One Gate supporter Rich Garner said: "He was the best header of a ball that I ever saw anywhere and a nice man to boot. When playing with the lads up the rec we used to try to imitate his heading ability."
On the club's forum, Harvey Lockwood wrote: "Was in awe of him in my younger days. LEGEND!"
During his time with Margate – from the 1961/62 season to the 1964/5 season – Mr Blackburn scored 121 goals in 211 appearances making him Gate's second highest post-war scorer. The Margate FC history website says of Mr Blackburn: "Alan was a Barnardo's boy who started his career at West Ham, having been spotted playing in Hertfordshire junior football. He signed professional forms for the Hammers aged 17. Mr Blackburn, who had his own window-cleaning business, left Margate at the end of the 1964/65 for family reasons. He died in January 2014 at the age of 78.

http://www.thecourier.co.uk/news/local/fife/police-issue-bogus-caller-warning-in-south-west-fife-1.204454
Police issue bogus caller warning in south-west Fife: Police in South West Fife are urging householders to be on their guard when dealing with people knocking on their door and claiming to be collecting money.  “I would also like to take the chance to remind all householders that when people come to the door collecting milk money, window cleaning money or where they claim to be collecting on behalf of charity, that they make sure they are paying the right person. “We have seen a couple of instances recently where householders have parted with money, only to receive a call from the genuine collector and the initial caller was bogus. Again, it is the elderly and vulnerable who are favoured by these unscrupulous individuals and my best advice would be to ask any collector for ID or some other form of proof, such as a business card, to prove that the caller is genuine.”

http://www.maidenhead-advertiser.co.uk/News/Areas/Marlow-Bourne-End-Flackwell/Bogus-window-cleaner-stole-cash-from-Flackwell-Heath-pensioner-06022014.htm
Bogus window cleaner stole cash from Flackwell Heath pensioner: A bogus window cleaner stole 'a considerable amount' of cash from a Flackwell Heath pensioner. A white male with short brown hair visited the property in St Hildas Way on Thursday, January 23 and asked for money for a cleaning job he had not carried out. The occupant, a man in his 80s, gave him the money despite never having requested the service. Between 3.30pm and 4.30pm on Saturday, January 25 the 'window cleaner' returned to the house and requested change. Whilst the victim was looking for change, the man entered the living room and took a cash box containing money. The burglar was wearing a black raincoat down to his knees and a light coloured jacket underneath. A 36-year-old man from Hazlemere, Buckinghamshire has been arrested on suspicion of burglary and bailed until March 5.

Prisoner caught with drugs in buttocks: A driver who caused the death of a 12-year-old boy has been jailed for three months after prison officers found cannabis in his cell. Lisburn Magistrates' Court heard on Monday how prison officers searched 35-year-old Andrew Paul Morrow's cell when they smelled cannabis smoke coming from it on 16 October last year. A prosecution lawyer described how officers conducted a "full body search" and uncovered the small amount of cannabis hidden between the cheeks of his bottom. Appearing in court via videolink from Maghaberry Prison, Morrow, originally from Vara Drive in north Belfast, pleaded guilty to possessing class B cannabis. Window cleaner Morrow is currently serving eight years behind bars after he admitted causing the death of 12-year-old Daniel Mooney by dangerous driving.

A Co' Window Cleaning Internet Address

$
0
0
They use a .co domain name, and to make it clear to readers that it’s .co and not .com, they put an / through an “m” next to it.
http://domainnamewire.com/2014/02/11/check-out-what-this-company-did-with-its-co-domain-name/
Check out what this company did with its .Co domain name - (It’s not .com). By Andrew Allemann: -Every once in a while I see a .co domain name around town. One of my favorites is mow.co, which is used by a local lawn mowing service. I was flipping through the Angie’s List magazine last night and saw an ad for a local window washing company. Something about the domain name looked funny.

I’ve never seen that before. They use a .co domain name, and to make it clear to readers that it’s .co and not .com, they put an / through an “m” next to it.

http://www.go.co/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.co
.co is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) assigned to Colombia. It is administered by .CO Internet S.A.S. As of July 10, 2010, there are no registration restrictions on second-level .co domains; any individual or entity in the world can register a .co domain.

.co has become increasingly popular among tech innovators, entrepreneurs and startups in Silicon Valley and worldwide, including AngelList, 500 Startups, VINE, Jelly, Brit + co among others. The .co domain is also used by many big brand innovators for social and mobile media, such as Twitter (t.co), Google Inc. (g.co), Amazon.com (a.co), American Express (amex.co) and Starbucks (sbux.co). .co domain names are available for registration globally through accredited registrars.

Fireball Window Cleaning Hero Takes Award

$
0
0
Gareth Salmon, who was hailed as an 'outstanding hero' at the Hounslow Community Safety Heroes Awards for rescuing a woman from a fire. He was joined on stage by Hounslow Council leader Jagdish Sharma and Hounslow borough fire commander Stuart Low.
http://www.getwestlondon.co.uk/news/local-news/window-cleaner-who-saved-woman-6705054
Window cleaner who saved woman from Chiswick fireball is hailed a hero: Gareth Salmon pulled an elderly woman from a burning flat, moments before a huge explosion which would almost certainly have killed her ripped through the building. Gareth Salmon was working in Edensor Road, Chiswick, on New Year's Eve last year when he noticed smoke pouring from a neighbouring block. After alerting other residents the 37-year-old father-of-two made three attempts to rescue an elderly woman who was trapped in her flat. After the power of one explosion sent him flying out of the window he bravely went back in and carried her to safety moments before a huge blast, which would almost certainly have killed her, tore through the property.

Mr Salmon was one of three 'outstanding heroes' honoured at the annual Hounslow Community Safety Heroes awards ceremony, held at Hounslow Civic Centre, last night (Wednesday, February 12). "My initial thought was 'if I don't do anything I don't think I could live with myself'," he modestly said. "I was so caught up in the urgency of getting her out I didn't have time to be scared. It was only afterwards I realised I probably should have been." His proud wife Lois was more blunt. "I didn't know whether to hug him or strangle him for risking his life," she said. Luckily she chose the former, adding that their elder daughter Aimee is now convinced her dad's a superhero.

The aftermath of the fire in Edensor Road, Chiswick, from which hero window cleaner Gareth Salmon pulled an elderly woman to safety.
Mr Salmon, who lives in Ruislip, but works mostly in Chiswick and Ealing, had first kicked down the woman's door and crawled along the carpet under a choking blanket of smoke. He used a wet cloth, one of the tools of his trade, to stop him breathing in the thick fumes but couldn't find her. Eventually he was alerted by a faint cry from the kitchen and went round the back of the property, smashing in the back door and climbing in, only to be thrown back onto the balcony by the force of an explosion.

He thought she must be dead but fearlessly returned after hearing a noise from inside. The smoke was so thick he still couldn't see the woman, only finding her when he stumbled into her by chance. "I got my arms underneath her and dragged her to the back door where a couple of guys helped me get her over the balcony," he said. "Moments later, the second big explosion happened, sending a 20-foot fireball bursting out of the windows."

Presenting Mr Salmon with his award, Brendon Walsh, Hounslow Council's director of regeneration, said: "Our colleagues in the fire service have commented that it is without any doubt Gareth's actions had saved a life that day. He has rightly been recognised as a true hero by locals as well as by the emergency services as a result of his selfless actions."

Window Cleaning The World’s Tallest Building

$
0
0
Daring window washers clean world's tallest building.
http://www.cbs12.com/news/top-stories/stories/vid_13221.shtml
Window-cleaning the world’s tallest building: Dubai, United Arab Emirates — It’s hard work cleaning the windows of the world’s tallest building, but somebody has to do it. The Burj Khalifa in Dubai is covered in 24,000 panes of glass. The workers who clean them start at the 160th floor and work their way down. That’s more than 2,700 feet. Before they start their work, they check and double-check their harnesses and ropes. They also measure wind speed because a gust of wind could be dangerous. It takes three months to clean every window, and then crews start all over again.



Meanwhile in China..

Climbing duo Vadim Makhorov and Vitaliy Raskalov scaled the 632 metre building without any ropes.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/shanghai-tower-skywalkers-climb-second-tallest-building-in-world-without-safety-equipment-9125395.html
Shanghai Tower skywalkers climb second tallest building in world without safety equipment: Two Russian climbers filmed themselves defying gravity (and death) by climbing the world’s second tallest building without any ropes or climbing gear. Vadim Makhorov and Vitaliy Raskalov used head cameras to film themselves breaking into and climbing the still unfinished Shanghai Tower in China, as they scaled the 632m structure without any safety gear.

Their cameras show vertigo-inducing panoramas of Shanghai hundreds of metres below throughout their ascent. The pair even passed clouds on their journey to the top. The Tower will be one of the tallest buildings in the world upon its completion, second only to the 830 metre Burj Khalifa in the UAE, the tallest man-made structure in the world. When both climbers reach the top, their head-cams show them peering down into the abyss below. Makhorov told Yahoo! News: "We had to wait for hours for the clouds to part but it was well worth the wait, the view was like something from an aircraft window. "As soon as we saw a gap in the clouds were climbed right to the top of the crane and were able to get some great shots of the city below."


Don't look down! Vadim Makhorov sits in a cage above the Shanghai Tower, with the city sprawled more than 2,000 feet beneath him.
Vadim Makhorov and Vitaly Raskalov captured these shots from a height that would make most people sick.

Woman Leaves Fortune To Window Cleaner

$
0
0
Julie Spalding, who died in September 2008, cut out her relative Cecil Bray in favour of the window cleaner Albert Pearce (pictured) who she named as her soul heir.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/10644255/Woman-98-leaves-fortune-to-window-cleaner-not-nephew.html
Woman, 98, leaves fortune to window cleaner, not nephew: Julie Spalding, who died in September 2008, cut out her relative Cecil Bray in favour of her window cleaner Albert Pearce. A 98-year-old woman left her entire £300,000 fortune to a window cleaner, sparking a legal challenge by her “favourite nephew”, the High Court has heard. Julie Spalding, who died in September 2008, cut out her relative Cecil Bray in favour of the labourer Albert Pearce, who she named as her soul heir. Mrs Spalding, who was described as "spirited but stubborn", had drawn up previous wills that left the bulk of her estate to Mr Bray, 82, his barrister Constance McDonnell told the court.
 
The pair had a long-established understanding that he would inherit her fortune, the lawyer said, as Mr Bray had sacrificed much of his free time to "devote himself to her needs". However, in 2005, Mrs Spalding suffered a major personality change after a fall, and "excommunicated Mr Bray from her life" leaving him with no option but to stay away, Miss McDonnell said.

The court heard Mr Bray was given his "marching orders" during a visit to his aunt's home in Hendon, north London, during which he met Mr Pearce for the first and only time. Later that year Mrs Spalding "radically changed her testamentary instructions" by telling her solicitors that she wished to leave her home to Mr Pearce, who she said she had known for 30 years. The court heard Mrs Spalding, who was twice married but childless, was notoriously "obsessed" with her will, and signed three successive documents between 2005 and December 2007 - with Mr Pearce named as
"sole beneficiary" in the final one.

The case reached court with Mr Bray challenging the validity of his aunt's last three wills on the grounds that she either lacked legal "capacity" to make them - or that Mr Pearce "procured each of the disputed wills by undue influence". Mrs Spalding's estate consisted of about £60,000 in cash, plus a bungalow in Great North Way, Hendon. Outside court Mr Pearce said he had always done his best to care for Mrs Spalding, who he described as "cantankerous but fun". "I was never interested in her money," he added.
 
Mr Pearce insisted he had stepped into the breach after Mrs Spalding's family failed to keep in touch with her between 2005 and her death. But Mr Bray said he had visited his aunt up to four times a week before she turned him out in 2005 and had wrongly assumed she would apologise for her outburst. Miss McDonnell said Mrs Spalding was becoming increasingly frail and vulnerable by 2007, with medics having diagnosed a possible "paranoid" condition. 

She also said there was "circumstantial evidence" supporting the undue influence claim against Mr Pearce. "He appears to have been the only person who had any kind of regular contact with Mrs Spalding from mid-2005 onwards - to the exclusion of any carers", she argued. "He exhibited a controlling attitude and a desire to exclude external assessment of Mrs Spalding." Judge Murray Rosen QC reserved his ruling at the end of the two-day case.

Annealed Glass As A Health Hazard

$
0
0
Annealed glass breaks in to shards.
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/02/17/2-investigators-older-glass-windows-are-potentially-deadly/
Older Glass Windows Are Potentially Deadly: Lean against or touch certain glass windows and doors and you can actually be putting yourself in danger. CBS 2′s Dave Savini shows how the danger lies with how the glass is made. “This is a deadly weapon,” says glass safety expert Mark Meshulam as he shows a sharp, jagged broken piece of glass from a window. “This is just crazy.”

The type of glass he is talking about is called annealed glass. It is found in windows in older homes, schools and storefronts exempt from more current rules requiring safer, tempered glass windows. Tempered glass breaks into small pieces, while annealed breaks into large, jagged ones that can cause greater injury. There have even been deaths.

Fifty-two-year-old Michael Racky lost his life after falling through a glass window. His adult children, Meghan and Sean Racky, say their dad leaned against an annealed plate glass window in Oak Lawn, and it shattered, nearly amputating his leg. “It hurts a lot,” Meghan Racky says. “I have to wake up every day realizing, I’ll never see him again.” They say a BB-gun hole compromised the window three years earlier. “It’s actually a very big problem that many people aren’t even aware of,” Sean Racky says.

Tape was used to hold it together, says the Racky’s attorney Tom Paris. “Packing tape is not an answer for compromised glass,” he says. CBS 2 found that tape is being used on other annealed glass windows in Chicago, including at a Laundromat and a daycare. Meshulam says they are dangerous. The 2 Investigators found 6,069 city citations were issued for window code violations between 2010 and 2013. “Somebody, sometime, is going to go into that glass,” Meshulam warns outside one building.

Maria Elena Gonzalez was standing outside of a South Side apartment building in 2006 when she was struck by a falling window. “The pain was unbelievable,” says Gonzalez, who had never thought about the danger a window could pose. The 2 Investigators went back to the building where Gonzalez was hit by the window and found five more broken windows.

Annealed glass windows and doors are being blamed for deaths around the country, including a Pennsylvania art professor who fell through a glass door at a restaurant and bled to death. The solution, Meshulam says, is simple, and he demonstrated. He struck a tempered glass window with a special weight bag; initially, the glass failed to even break. It did break on the next test, but broke into tiny pieces instead of the jagged shards of annealed glass.

Building codes can vary by community, when it comes to the type of glass required in homes and businesses. Safety glass is pretty much mandatory in doors, but not all windows are required to have it. Houses and other buildings built before 1977 were not even required to have safety glass. If you are not sure what type of glass you have, look at the corners. Safer tempered glass typically has the manufacturer’s logo etched into it. Attempts to reach the business and building owners were unsuccessful.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annealing_%28glass%29
Annealing is a process of slowly cooling glass to relieve internal stresses after it was formed. The process may be carried out in a temperature-controlled kiln known as a lehr. Glass which has not been annealed is liable to crack or shatter when subjected to a relatively small temperature change or mechanical shock. Annealing glass is critical to its durability. If glass is not annealed, it will retain many of the thermal stresses caused by quenching and significantly decrease the overall strength of the glass. The glass is heated until the temperature reaches a stress relief point, that is, the annealing temperature (also called annealing point) at a viscosity, η, of 1013Poise = 1012 Pa·s, at which the glass is still too hard to deform, but is soft enough for the stresses to relax. The piece is then allowed to heat-soak until its temperature is even throughout. The time necessary for this step varies depending on the type of glass and its maximum thickness. The glass is then slowly cooled at a predetermined rate until its temperature is below the strain point (η = 1014.5 Poise). Following this, the temperature can safely be dropped to room temperature at a rate limited by the heat capacity, thickness, thermal conductivity, and thermal expansion coefficient of the glass. After the annealing process the material can be cut to size, drilled or polished.

Tempered Glass links here.

Lifetime Achievement Award For Henry Unger

$
0
0
Henry Unger
http://www.ungerglobal.com/
Unger News Release: Unger founder honored with posthumous Lifetime Achievement Award Henry Unger, founder of the global company that has been producing innovative and trusted professional cleaning tools for over 50 years, has received the ultimate accolade – a posthumous Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Window Cleaning Association (IWCA).

The story began back in 1964 when a young window cleaner decided to take a chance. It was in that year that Henry Unger took the latest window cleaning innovations from the United States and introduced them to German window cleaners. His discerning eye for quality products, tireless pursuit of new and better ways to clean, and his practical experience of knowing the issues that window cleaners faced, proved to be a recipe for success.

The company started from humble beginnings, the attic of Henry’s wife’s grandmother in Hamburg, but soon grew to become the global concern it is today. Unger now has business partners in 80 countries across the world. Passionate about improving the lives of window cleaners, he strived to design products that achieved the best results while making jobs safer, quicker and easier for the professional.


He was an active member of the IWCA from the start, strongly supporting its mission to develop professionalism, ethics and standards of safety. The IWCA Lifetime Achievement Award was established to honor a current or former individual member of the IWCA who has made major life-long contribution to the window cleaning industry as a practicing window cleaner, supplier, promoter or leader. It is above and beyond honorary membership.

The Lifetime Achievement Award is extremely elite and not intended to be awarded each year. Mark Unger, Henry’s son, still helps to guide the company today, together with his two brothers, reaffirming their father’s core values of quality, innovation and customer service. “This award comes at a time of great significance for Unger as we celebrate our 50th anniversary this year. The fact that the IWCA are also celebrating an important milestone – their 25th anniversary – makes this even more special,” says Mark Unger. “

Although Henry is no longer with us, having passed away in 1996, his legacy lives on. His greatest wish was to be remembered as someone who helped to make the industry more professional, developing equipment that enables window cleaners to accomplish their tasks in the easiest, quickest and safest ways possible. The IWCA Lifetime Achievement Award recognises his incredible achievements, and is a fitting tribute to a great man who was proud to be a window cleaner.”

Unger was founded in 1964 by Henry and Barbara Unger in the attic of the home of Barbara’s grandmother in Hamburg, Germany. While the original intent was to manufacture window cleaning products, the company soon expanded its product line in order to become the market leader in the sanitary supply and retail cleaning fields. Adopting this as the company’s mission, Unger strives to produce high quality, innovative tools that help professionals clean more productively and safely, as well as offer superior customer service to both end users and distributors. Today, Unger is an international company and has been manufacturing professional cleaning tools for more than 50 years. It has offices and manufacturing facilities in the United States and Germany, and sales offices in the United Kingdom and France. Unger now provides innovative cleaning solutions to more than 80 countries worldwide. 

Window Cleaners Among WWI Bravest

$
0
0
Window cleaners 'among WWI bravest'
http://news.uk.msn.com/window-cleaners-among-wwi-bravest
Window cleaners 'among WWI bravest'- Teachers, window cleaners and cotton workers have been identified as among the "bravest" professions during the First World War, according to a study. Online history website Ancestry.co.uk said an analysis of 2.8 million service records from 1914-20 highlighted how ordinary workers with barely any military training risked their lives on the front line. Most medal winners were miners or agricultural labourers, but professions such as teaching and window cleaning featured strongly, said the report.

Fishermen, doctors, barbers and policemen were also named among the top 10 professions for medal winners, said Ancestry. Content manager Miriam Silverman said: "While teachers, doctors or policemen may have had skills or leadership qualities that could have prepared them better for the front line, what this data really tells us is that it was the ordinary men with everyday professions that made some of the most extraordinary heroes."


http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/teachers-window-cleaners-braver-bankers-says-study-1437266
Teachers and Window Cleaners Braver Than Bankers, Says Study - Teachers and window cleaners were braver than bankers, according to a study of wartime records. Studies showed school masters received the most military medals per head for their role on the war.

Window cleaners, cotton mill workers and fishermen also ranked in the top 10 for the bravest professions, according to family history website Ancestry, which studied 2.8 million services records to compile the list. Ancestry tallied the number of Military Cross, Distinguished Conduct Medal, Victoria Cross and Meritorious Service Medal winners against the number of people in work in 1911.

Ancestry's Miriam Silverman said: "While teachers, doctors and policemen may have had the skills or leadership qualities that could have prepared them better for the frontline, what this data really tells us is that it was the ordinary men with everyday professions that made some of the most extraordinary heroes." While teachers today might be used to battling students sat at the back row, they were at their most formidable and bravest on the front line during World War One.

Top 10 bravest professions:
1. Teacher 2. Window cleaner 3. Cotton mill worker 4. Fisherman 5. Doctor
6. Servant 7. Barber 8. Merchant 9. Police officer 10. Banker

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/10649262/Window-cleaners-and-teachers-the-bravest-professions-of-WW1.html
Window cleaners and teachers - the 'bravest' professions of WW1 - Window cleaners and teachers were more likely than those of any other profession serving in the British armed forces in the First World War to be decorated for bravery, research finds.

Window Cleaning News

$
0
0
Click to enlarge.
http://www.mediabistro.com/fishbowlny/mad-men-saturday-evening-post-sharif-tarabay_b204070
Saturday Evening Post Goes Retro for Mad Men Cover: Sharif Tarabay, the artist responsible for the March/April 2014 cover of The Saturday Evening Post, is thrilled. Because while he has in the past done Norman Rockwell-inspired work, this is the first time such an illustration has adorned the latter’s eponymous publication: “I’ve done many illustrations inspired by Rockwell’s classic covers throughout my career,” says the painter. “To illustrate a cover for The Saturday Evening Post based on one of Rockwell’s paintings - Window Washer – is a thrill and a highlight of my career.” That original Rockwell illustration, which appeared in the September 17, 1960 issue and below the great Tarabay treatment, with a certain familiar face very cleverly transposed into the window washer position. More Norman Rockwell window cleaning blogs here.

 
The Mole & Jersey Show Episode 14: We have an interview with Wagga from WCM TV, and Window Cleaning Magazine. We talk about consistancy and of course our FAIL of the week is awesome! Watch and Share the show, and hey...Subscribe would you?
The Segments:
4:05 Marketing Madness...Professional or not? 
11:34 The Chop Chop...Wagga
18:05 Fail of the Week
22:41 Top 5....Employee Problems

‘I get food and I get a shower. . . but it’s very hard to find a bed for the night’ - There are meals for homeless people in Dublin, but getting a bed is more difficult. At five minutes to four on a rain-sodden afternoon, Tomas’s search for a bed begins. There’s a freephone number to call to get your name down on the list for an emergency bed. The operators come on only from about 4.30pm, he says, but it’s best to call early. The automated voice tells him he is 18th in the queue. He waits, holding the mobile phone by his ear. And waits. After an hour and 17 minutes the line goes dead. There’s no sound. Maybe there was a problem with his phone?
He walks across the city to go to his English class, just off Bolton Street. It’s a free programme run in an adult education centre twice a week. When he came to Ireland from Slovakia seven years ago he couldn’t believe so many foreigners didn’t bother to learn the language. Being able to communicate is important if he’s going to get a job, he says. Back home he worked as a professional window cleaner and got all the necessary qualifications for using safety harnesses on tall buildings. Then his friend in Naas told him the wages in Ireland were many times better. It seemed like a good idea. His relationship with his long-term girlfriend had broken up. She was living with another man. The hardest part was leaving his three-year-old son behind, not knowing when he would see him again.
Social insurance stamps - He doesn’t get social welfare, because the officials say he’s not entitled to it. Tomas says he worked for about 2½ years in Dublin doing painting, plastering and window cleaning. It was mostly for cash, so he wasn’t getting social insurance stamps. At 10.30pm he tries the number again. He get through quickly this time. But the voice at the end of the line says all the emergency beds are full. There is a sleeping bag available, he’s told, if he wants to keep warm on the street, But it’s not so much the cold as the wet that’s the problem. The rain is now hurtling down in sheets. Flood warnings are in operation in parts of the city.
He puts his backpack on and walks in the direction of St James’s Hospital. Why doesn’t he go home? It’s complicated, he says.  He doesn’t want to have to answer all the intrusive questions. He also feels ashamed of where he is now. Once he gets a job and is back on his feet he might return. At the hospital’s accident and emergency unit he sits in the corner, watching the television. His wet clothes are sticking to him.
Tomas doesn’t take drugs. He drinks sometimes but only to help catch some sleep if he doesn’t have a bed. Most nights he generally gets a bed but increasingly there are too few to go around. He’s about to nod off when a nurse asks him if he’s here to see a doctor. When he says he isn’t, he’s asked to leave. It’s just after three in the morning. After about four years on the streets you begin to see the city differently. You recognise all the other homeless people. You see the city is a place where men and women struggle to survive. He lists off names and where he used to see the people. Sixteen in all. One had epilepsy, another was a heavy drinker. The list goes on.
The rain has eased off by now. He heads down towards Merchant’s Quay, where Merchant’s Quay Ireland serves breakfast to homeless people in three or four hours’ time.  Then he’ll head on to Trust, located in a basement near the Iveagh Buildings,where’ll he have a shower and hopefully get some fresh runners. It’s one good thing about being a homeless person in Dublin, Tomas says. You don’t go hungry. There’s always somewhere to eat. But getting a bed is another matter. Tomas’s name has been changed, at his request

The Snowden Files by Luke Harding – review: We live in a new world, and a scary one: this is a riveting read that unravels the mysteries behind the Snowden revelationsHarding writes that in the immediate aftermath of Snowden's revelations, construction crews appeared during the night outside the offices of the Guardian and the homes of its reporters, "taxi drivers" got mysteriously lost, "window cleaners" began loitering outside meeting rooms. Those trying to report the story found their lives inconvenienced – and occasionally they got a little scared – but it hardly put them off what they were doing.

Well-known Winslow singer, window cleaner and retained firefighter Paul French is one half of the tribute act, along with Mike Gethin. The evening is being organised by the WinslowAnglo-French Twinning Association (WAFTA) to raise money for the next visit by their counterparts from Cours La Ville in 2015. The two towns take it in turns to host each other, and this year it is Winslow’s turn to go to France. Seating for the tribute night will be cabaret style, on tables of six to eight people. There will also be a disco. The £12 ticket price includes a fish and chip supper freshly cooked on the premises by Little Horwood company Howe and Co.

http://www.southwestbusiness.co.uk/news/20022014082237-lone-wolf-management-secures-rising-star-award-from-the-cheltenham-branch-of-the-federation-of-small-businesses-only-18-months-after-formation/
Lone Wolf Management secures Rising Star Award from the Cheltenham branch of the Federation of Small Businesses only 18 months after formation: A company which now has five divisions only 18 months after starting up has been presented with a special business award. Lone Wolf Management received the Rising Star Award from the Cheltenham branch of the Federation of Small Businesses. Managing director Gil Collins, whose Cheltenham based company’s activities include security, window cleaning and catering, was presented with the accolade by Cheltenham MP Martin Horwood. Gil said: It is marvellous to receive this award, my staff and I are very proud to be honoured in this way.”
His aim was to support Gloucestershire businesses by purchasing locally and employing local people wherever possible. FSB branch chairman Tim Calway said he was delighted with Lone Wolf’s success and its support for local businesses. Martin Horwood said: “Economists and planners at national level are always telling us that small businesses are the ones that drive economic growth but it’s great to see the FSB celebrating this here on the ground in Cheltenham. “They’re taking practical steps to raise the profile of rising stars like Lone Wolf Management and encouraging their success.” The Gloucester Citizen and Gloucestershire Echo together with Harrison Clark Rickerbys solicitors are promoting county products and services through the Made in Gloucestershire campaign.

Linda cleans up with her first business: Linda Richardson is all set to clean up with her local business - despite starting up in 2009 at the heart of the banking crash. Since Linda, a 45 year old mother of one child, launched Connect Cleaning Services in Melling she has steadily built up her company and now she is planning to expand and take on more staff. She said: “This is my first business - I’d never run a business before. In fact, before I started up I was a housewife. ”But my circumstances changed very suddenly and I thought I didn’t want just to sit back - so I thought I’d give it a go.“
Her business now includes house-cleaning and maid service, commercial and office cleaning and window, upholstery and carpet cleaning services. ”My business partner, Dean Boyle, and I did the preparatory work and we launched Connect Cleaning Services at the height of the recession. But we had a good business idea, we had a good work ethic and we’ve built up the business’ reputation over time.“ She pointed out that word of mouth is crucially important to the business. ”I have to be patient - it hasn’t all happened at once. “We have built up the business, built up our reputation and now I’m ready to go further and build on what we have achieved so far. ”It’s a lot about building up a good reputation - which is exactly what we have done. “We are getting calls for new business all the time. We are very ambitious for this business. We are working hard and we are making it work.”
Linda added: “We now want to provide employment opportunities for more local people. Currently we employ four and we will be taking more on. We really want to build this business and take on more people and boost the local economy.” Sefton Central MP Bill Esterson met Linda and explained how impressed he was with her business. He said: “Linda really is an inspiration. ”She set up her business and is really making it a success. “We know how small local businesses are struggling to survive and compete so it is good to hear about a small local business, set up by first-time entrepreneurs, who have managed not just to make a go of it, but to make it a local success story.”

Walmart launches eco-friendly household cleaners: Walmart has introduced a four-product line of all-natural household cleaning products under its private-label Great Value brand. The line, Great Value Naturals, was introduced in late 2013 in 2,000 Walmart stores across the U.S., and includes a liquid laundry detergent, a multi-surface cleaner, a glass and window cleaner, and an automatic dishwasher gel, packaged in recyclable materials.
“The launch of Great Value Naturals is an important step in making green cleaning habits an affordable option for millions of consumers,” says Alberto Dominguez, Walmart Vice President and Divisional Merchandise Manager. “Many consumers have the perception that all-natural cleaners are more expensive and don’t work as well as traditional cleaning products. Great Value Naturals addresses those concerns by combining affordability, performance, and care for the environment.”
The products are made from plant-based, all-natural Evolve cleaning technology from Agaia, Inc. and are 100-percent chemical- and toxin-free, biodegradable, and non-allergenic. The technology is said to effectively capture and break down soils, grease, grime, and odor-causing bacteria without leaving harmful residues or irritants behind on the skin, surfaces, or the environment. 

Concerns over toxic substances — the new term seems to be "chemicals of concern" - in our everyday lives have been around since Rachel Carson penned "Silent Spring" more than a half-century ago. But getting the most problematic chemicals out of products and supply chains has been slow-going, especially as government regulation of such chemicals has been timid. Regulation by the marketplace is another matter. Over the past year, big retailers such as Wal-Mart and Target have approached the issue head-on, pushing suppliers to disclose ingredients or simply vowing to phase out use of some chemicals in the products they sell.
Wal-Mart announced a policy to require manufacturers of cosmetics and cleaning products to disclose ingredients in their products and remove priority hazardous chemicals. The company said it would start with 10 priority chemicals, although it isn't yet disclosing which ones, and some critics both praised the policy and pointed to its flaws. Target, for its part, announced a partnership with UL's GoodGuide to establish sustainability standards for some 7,500 products, focusing on personal care and household cleaning products — "direct-exposure chemical products" with a strong focus on toxic or otherwise problematic ingredients. 

XENIA— Remember the old joke about the housekeeper who always says “I don’t do windows…” You don’t have to worry about that when you contact one of the newest businesses in Xenia. “We’re dependable and reliable,” Shane Hartley, owner of the local Fish Window Cleaning location, said. “And, we’re year round.” Hartley, a former police officer in Athens, Ohio, and an US Army vet with 27 years under his belt, said that when he returned from Afghanistan in 2012, he began looking for a business he could own and operate. “I was looking for a different franchise,” he added. “I worked through FranChoice and they matched me up with three potential franchises. “Fish looked to be the best of the three because of three things: the simplicity of its system, the low overhead, and a very needed service.” “The franchises are independently owned and operated,” Hartley said. “We’re licensed, bonded and fully insured. We’re glad to give free estimates for both commercial and residential customers.”
Along with the window cleaning, the Roseville, Ohio native said Fish also cleans gutters and performs light power-washing on soffits and siding. “And, really, we can clean anything glass,” Hartley continued. “We’ve done chandeliers, not to mention other light fixtures.” To prepare for the new business, Hartley completed multiple weeks of training in the Xenia area and at Fish Window Cleaning headquarters in St. Louis, Mo. He is currently hiring and accepting applications. “I am committed to providing quality service and 100 percent satisfaction that FISH customers have come to expect,” said Hartley. “I look forward to meeting my residential and commercial neighbors and becoming the top, reliable provider for window cleaning needs. “So far, I’ve found everyone extremely friendly and I’ve met some great people,” he continued. “I have not had a single business turn me away and not let me write a free estimate.” Hartley is providing his services for commercial and residential customers in East Dayton, Beavercreek, Fairborn, Kettering and Xenia. “My region is pretty much from I-75 east, to Fairborn in the north and south almost to where I-75 and I-675 come together,” he said. Hartley said he currently has a staff of two and is looking to expand. “I am hiring,” he said. “I’ve posted all over. I need two additional employees for going on runs, and I also need a salesperson.”

http://www.eagletribune.com/business/x1262680352/Business-briefs
MANCHESTER — Peter Thurston, owner of the local Fish Window Cleaning, was presented with the Soaring Eagle Award at the annual Fish Window Cleaning Convention in St. Louis, Mo. Thurston received the award for his success in taking over an existing franchise and increasing the franchise’s performance in sales, profitability and operational excellence. Thurston took over the business in 2011, and his office provides service to commercial and residential customers in Manchester, Nashua, Salem, Bedford, Derry, Londonderry, Merrimack, Windham, and Hudson, N.H.

http://www.bristolpost.co.uk/20mph-limit-city-s-new-zones-making-difference/story-20673340-detail/story.html
20mph limits: Are Bristol's new zones making a difference? Between condolences, one resident says: "The hill is treated like a drag race going up and people do not appreciate their speed going down". Another adds: "Sadly, most cars travelling up or down Ashley Hill do not adhere to the 20 mph speed limit." Jason Hook, 46, from Southmead who runs a window cleaning business agrees. His job sees him travel around the city all day. He said: "It is just ridiculous. It makes my day longer, adds time and adds cost to everything. It's wasting my time and causing congestion. And I can't put my prices up because people are still suffering from the recession."

Mouldy: Why won't council do anything about our damp homes? Mrs Shepherd is not the only one with damp problems on the small estate. About 25 of the 70 homes have all suffered from them for more than a decade. They are portable homes which bolt together in two halves and which can be transported on the back of a lorry. They are slightly smaller than the popular old pre-fabs in which most of the residents used to live. Retired window cleaner John Emery (pictured left) and his wife Janet have had a catalogue of problems. Their problems began when they discovered a gas pipe in their front bedroom wardrobe was mouldy and dripping with condensation.

http://www.erietvnews.com/story/24767669/erie-heat-wave-48-degrees
Erie Heat Wave 48 Degrees: The big change in temperatures seemed to change the collective mood of Erie residents. While you wouldn't normally think of 48 degrees as a heat wave, after the February weather Erie has experienced, that's exactly what people were calling it. The average high and low temperature for the month, according to the National Weather Service is 16.7 degrees that's nearly 11 degrees below normal.  Erie has seen three sub zero temperature days including -7 degrees on Monday morning, and collected nearly two feet of new snow for the month. And we saw a couple of window washers out too.  They normally have to use an anti-freeze in their window washing water, but not today. "Yeah, yeah...everybody's been calling it a heat wave, I'm not from here, they say Erie weather is so funny, but it's a great day," said Mark Hodge of Candia Window Washers.

Chasing his dream: The lack of support for independent filmmakers in Qatar is an obstacle, according to Klim. Five years back, Alex Klim moved to Doha from Vienna to pursue an exciting proposition in the telecommunications field. Like most Western expats in Qatar, the Austrian enjoyed a well-heeled lifestyle and comforts that could silence all complaints. Living on the 22nd floor of a West Bay high-rise has helped Klim with his next project — The Doha Spiderman. It’s an action documentary that looks into a day in the life of a rope access technician, or a window cleaner. “When I saw them cleaning glasses of my apartment from the outside using suction mounts, I was worried for them. I tracked them for a day and mounted GoPro cameras on their helmets,” he says. It’s finding and telling such stories that has made Klim fall in love with Qatar.

Russians and their vodka: In 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev attempted to curb drinking with a number of reforms, including reducing the supply of vodka, increasing its price, and prosecuting people who showed up to work inebriated. This was well intentioned, but like other attempts at prohibition, it did more harm than good. People turned instead to drugs and unregulated alcohols like cologne, antiseptics, and samogon — a homemade concoction made by distilling anything from sugar, window-cleaners, and even stolen aircraft de-icing fluids. As can be expected with de-icing fluid, drinkers of the poison would often hallucinate, go blind, or die. The anti-alcohol campaign was officially abandoned in 1988.

In her brightly painted studio, composer Elena Kats-Chernin is all too aware of the importance of beginnings. Over the years she has come to trust that divine intervention - or the mysterious workings of the subconscious - will come to her rescue in the process of creating. Sitting at her piano, scribbling away, she has had many moments of frustration with pages ripped and discarded as she works away through all that is wrong to discover what feels right. ''Composing is like cleaning a window,'' she says. ''You have to remove all the dirt and grease before you can see.''

“Window walls have already been around in their current form for 20 to 30 years and we expect that they will have a 30- to 35-year lifespan.” Click to enlarge.
http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2014/02/19/degrading_condo_windows_expected_to_trigger_major_wave_of_replacements.html
Degrading condo windows expected to trigger major wave of replacements: University of Waterloo professor John Straube says buyers of glass condos should consider cost lifespan of window walls and cost to replace. That million-dollar condo view comes with a hidden price tag as degrading windows in older buildings are expected to trigger a major wave of replacements which could cost owners upwards of $100,000, a university professor says.
“Window walls have already been around in their current form for 20 to 30 years and we expect that they will have a 30- to 35-year lifespan,” says University of Waterloo professor John Straube, who divides his time between the civil engineering and architecture departments. “Over the entire face of a large condo, they could cost $100,000 (a unit)” to replace, said Straube, noting the figure is a projection because “we don’t actually have that much experience. “What we do know is that’s what it has cost to replace glass in limited buildings to date.”
The adhesive, gaskets and sealants used to install window walls eventually degrade due to temperature changes and exposure to the sun, allowing moisture and water to get in. The glass wall’s aluminum frame becomes pitted and disfigured over time due to corrosion.

Girl who fell to her death from window of Bradford house named as Amrita Kaur - A 22-month-old girl who died after falling from the window of a house with her mother has been named by police. Amrita Kaur died on Tuesday morning after she was found unconscious outside a house in Delamere Street, Bradford, West Yorkshire Police said. Her 36-year-old mother was also injured in the incident and was later arrested on suspicion of her daughter's murder. Amrita and her mother were discovered in the back garden of the end-terrace house by a neighbour who called police and paramedics.
They appeared to have fallen from a first-floor window. Both were taken to hospital but Amrita died soon afterwards. People living in the quiet, residential street described their shock at what happened in the house many thought was empty. According to reports, neighbour Mohammed Yaseen raised the alarm after he was alerted by the woman banging on a bin before he and a local window cleaner tried to help with first aid.

Josefat "Joe" Gawron passed away at his home in Monroe on Saturday, February 15, 2014. He was 88. Son of the late Maria Szubala Gawron and Petro Gawron, he was born in Trembowla, Ternopil, Ukraine on May 26, 1925. 
Joe was a retired Window Cleaner for Arcade Window Cleaners in New York, NY. He was the widower of Maria Tychan Gawron. He is survived by his sons, Dmytro Gawron and his wife, Olga of Monroe and Wasyl Gawron and his wife, Pat of the Bronx; three grandchildren, Marc Gawron, Adrienne Fil and William Gawron; and two great grandchildren, Markian Fil and Maksym Fil.

Australian fathers who murder their sons and daughters: The children had presents for Robert Farquharson on the fateful 2005 day. Saucepans, as well as a framed photo of the three boys. It was Father’s Day and it had been a big afternoon for Farquharson, a window cleaner, and his three boys, Jai, 10, Tyler, 7, and Bailey, 2. According to a detailed account in The Australian Book of Family Murders, they had visited Geelong, 35 minutes away from their home in Winchelsea, where he had purchased presents for the boys. They dropped in on their aunt and ate KFC for dinner before they headed home. Farquharson has always claimed he does not remember what happened next, except that he had a coughing fit and blacked out.
But courts have convicted him twice, in 2007 and 2010, for murdering his children that evening. He steered his car off the Princes Highway into a dark, deep dam. All of his children drowned. He survived. The smoking gun in the Farquharson case was a witness who said he told him he resented his ex-wife and had said he wanted to take the most important thing away from her — the children. “You wiped out your entire family in one act,” ruled Justice Philip Cummins in the first trial. “Only the two parents remained: you, because you had always intended to save yourself, and their mother, because you intended her to live a life of suffering.” Farquharson has also lost a High Court appeal bid. He is serving a minimum sentence of 33 years behind bars.

http://www.blackpoolgazette.co.uk/news/crime/window-cleaner-gave-false-details-1-6440262
Window cleaner gave false details: A window cleaner lied to police and gave a false name when he was caught behind the wheel while banned on New Year’s Eve. Christopher Johnstone, 32, of Wilton Parade, North Shore, pleaded guilty to driving while disqualified and without insurance. He was sentenced to do 180 hours unpaid work for the community, banned from the road for 16 months and ordered to pay £60 victims’ surcharge by District Judge Sam Goozee sitting at Blackpool Magistrates’ Court. Harold Smith, prosecuting, said police stopped Johnstone as he drove a Peugeot on Park Road, Blackpool on December 31 at 11.25pm. Robert Castle, defending, said Johnstone had been impulsive and stupid because he wanted to assist his sister.

Frozen Tinting & Ideas To Work In The Cold

$
0
0

http://www.windowfilmmag.com/index.php/archives/5247
Too Cold to Tint – Winter Weather Preventing Window Film Installations - If you live east of the Mississippi, chances are you’ve been impacted by the recent onslaught of winter weather. From snow and sleet to freezing rain, schools and businesses in the East and Midwest have been closed multiple times since the start of the New Year. For window film companies, the consistently frigid climate is preventing many installations.

“Because of the cold weather and the cold temperatures we were prohibited to install film,” says Ed Golda (pictured), president of Michigan Glass Coatings in Auburn Hills, Mich. “When we sprayed the glass it froze and you can’t install film over ice. It was challenging. With the weather conditions and snow days, residential customers had their minds on kids and trying to get to work. The last thing on their mind was window film … Everyone is just in survival mode. It’s been a brutal winter.” “We’ve had two days where all of the installers were off. We’ve gotten shut down other days when the glass was frozen,” adds Steve Pesce, president of New York Window Film Co. in Farmingdale, N.Y.

Even south of the Mason-Dixon line, typically warm-weather companies are feeling the chill. Matthew Erbrick, owner of United Home Solutions in Alpharetta, Ga., says his shop has had to close and reschedule work as a result of the weather. “People were very cooperative. We did have to work on Saturday and Sunday which we don’t typically do this time of year,” he says. “It was only a day-and-a-half we had to make up because of the snow. It did affect us—minimally fortunately.”

In the Midwest, Northeast and South, snowy weather is continuing to promise slow working conditions for window film companies. “They’re talking like it’s an apocalypse,” says Erbrick. “We got a little snow, but now they’re talking ice. We’ll probably have to reschedule and work to catch up.” As far as the weather goes, Erbrick says it’s relatively unpredictable. “In Georgia, you just never know until March, but in 1992 we got hit in April with 10 inches of snow, so you just can never tell,” he notes.

Some dealers have a brighter outlook when it comes to improving conditions. “It’s the same as every other year, so it’s nothing new around here,” adds Pesce. “I’m expecting this whole thing to blow over by next week and get warmer. This is one of the few times I can remember where it’s consistently snowing … that’s the only difference.”

For Golda, though, the hits his company has felt since the start of the year have been some relatively tough blows. “I had to let one of our installers go on unemployment. It’s tough. Thank God we diversified into graphics and security films … the air temperatures are just brutal. This has been an extraordinary winter, as we all know,” he says. “The problem is once January is gone, that’s it. There’s no way to get it back. Only the tough will survive. “You keep a positive attitude and keep trucking and hope for a decent February, but the cold just won’t go away,” Golda adds. “When the sun is shining, it does help, at least it starts warming up the glass. But a cloudy overcast day, it’s very difficult.”

To try and maintain business during this time, Golda says his company works in a variety of creative ways. “We’re trying to book out in advance as well as work with the sun when it’s on the East side, then follow it to the West,” he states. “We also try to do a lot of graphics job inside buildings. If we’re in the hallways putting up graphics it’s a little easier because the interior temperatures are 60-70 degrees Fahrenheit. We also try to make introductions and set up business for later on down the year. It’s tough but you have to do what you have to do.”

Left Out in the Cold – Dealers List Their Top Cold-Weather Selling Strategies  January 22nd, 2014 | Category: Industry News   When the temperatures dip, sales for window film companies have a tendency to follow. So just what can your company do to maintain sales during colder weather? According to several dealers in winter weather-prone states, falling back on traditional marketing strategies helps.  “For me a lot of it is referral and repeat business,” says Dave Mow, sales manager for Advanced Solar Solutions in Clawson, Mich. “I keep in contact with all of my customers. Our main source of advertising is the Internet.”  “Work on Sundays,” adds Mark Fravel, owner of Columbus, Ohio-based Quality Window Tint, “which helps because most people in the winter time will wait until they’re off on Saturdays. You can always work on Saturday or Sunday and take Monday off.”  “The main thing we continue to use is word-of-mouth. We have longstanding relationships with construction companies that still need to have work done,” states Jennifer Shepherd, inside sales for flat glass at Absolute Perfection in Sykesville, Md. “We don’t cold-call, but we do rely on repeat customers coming back to us. We also do email promotions … such as $100 off.”  Setting yourself apart from the competition is another area in which dealers say they reel in winter time business.  “Security films are always a big request,” says Mow. “The new low-E coated films are starting to get more requests, especially in our climate.  “We also have [film] which offers summer and winter [heat control] benefits,” he adds. Mow, whose company serves the commercial market, primarily recommends architectural film dealers “go to glaziers unions, architects and glass companies” to try and find additional work.  You really just have to take the initiative,” adds Shepherd. “We have really great customer service; if someone contacts us we get back to them immediately.”
Left Out in the Cold – Dealers List Their Top Cold-Weather Selling Strategies: When the temperatures dip, sales for window film companies have a tendency to follow. So just what can your company do to maintain sales during colder weather? According to several dealers in winter weather-prone states, falling back on traditional marketing strategies helps. “For me a lot of it is referral and repeat business,” says Dave Mow, sales manager for Advanced Solar Solutions in Clawson, Mich. “I keep in contact with all of my customers. Our main source of advertising is the Internet.”

“Work on Sundays,” adds Mark Fravel, owner of Columbus, Ohio-based Quality Window Tint, “which helps because most people in the winter time will wait until they’re off on Saturdays. You can always work on Saturday or Sunday and take Monday off.” “The main thing we continue to use is word-of-mouth. We have longstanding relationships with construction companies that still need to have work done,” states Jennifer Shepherd, inside sales for flat glass at Absolute Perfection in Sykesville, Md. “We don’t cold-call, but we do rely on repeat customers coming back to us. We also do email promotions … such as $100 off.”

Setting yourself apart from the competition is another area in which dealers say they reel in winter time business. “Security films are always a big request,” says Mow. “The new low-E coated films are starting to get more requests, especially in our climate. “We also have [film] which offers summer and winter [heat control] benefits,” he adds. Mow, whose company serves the commercial market, primarily recommends architectural film dealers “go to glaziers unions, architects and glass companies” to try and find additional work. You really just have to take the initiative,” adds Shepherd. “We have really great customer service; if someone contacts us we get back to them immediately.”

30 Foot Ladder Fall For Window Cleaner

$
0
0
The Wiltshire air ambulance landed on Marlborough Common to airlift Robin Salkeld to Frenchay.
http://www.thisiswiltshire.co.uk/news/11035642.Malborough_window_cleaner_airlifted_after_fall/
Malborough window cleaner airlifted after fall: Window cleaner Robin Salkeld was airlifted to hospital on Monday lunchtime after he fell from a ladder and through a conservatory roof of a house at The Green, Marlborough. Mr Salkeld, of Church Street, Great Bedwyn, was taken to Frenchay Hospital, Bristol with severe lacerations. He was cleaning an upstairs window of a house belonging to Trevor and Sally Brown when the accident happened at around 12.30pm.
 
Sgt Barry Reed of Marlborough police said officers were called to Marlborough Common to clear the area so the air ambulance could land. Steve Pascall, who lives opposite the house in Oxford Street, saw the ambulance arrive. He said: “I don’t think anyone was home because Tony was called and arrived home at the same time as the police.” Mr Pascall who knows Mr Salkeld as he is their window cleaner said: “We feel sorry for him because Robin is such a super guy, so helpful.
 
“It’s so sad when this happens to anybody, but when it happens to someone like him, who is so helpful, it is an absolute tragedy.” Mrs Reed said today: “I do not want to say anything without checking with his wife first.” A spokesman for Wiltshire Air Ambulance said: “A patient who fell 30ft from a ladder and through a conservatory roof was airlifted to a major trauma centre.”

Window Cleaning Franchise Owners

$
0
0
FOLLOWING HIS DREAM: Former Ford worker Mark McDonald.
http://www.dailyecho.co.uk/news/11034503.Perfect_franchise_for_former_Ford_worker/
Perfect franchise is window of opportunity for former Ford worker: He worked at Southampton’s famous Ford plant for nearly a quarter of a century before the factory doors slammed shut last year. Now Mark McDonald is striking out on his own after buying a franchise in a city-based window cleaning company. Having been made redundant when the Swaythling Ford factory closed down, he is venturing out into the business world with Perfect Windows. 

The 50-year-old, from Regents Park in Southampton, had spent 23 years with Ford before deciding to set up on his own following redundancy. He said: “Following a long career at Ford, I viewed redundancy as an opportunity to chase my dream of working for myself. “I was introduced to Perfect Windows at a job fair organised by Ford and was really impressed with how professional and busy they are.
Launched at the end of 2013, Mark’s business covers most of Southampton. He added: “Most people struggle to find a reputable and reliable window cleaning company; I certainly have over the years. "What attracted me to running my own business with them is that providing first-rate customer service is just as important to the company as delivering a quality cleaning service. “It’s an ethos that’s built a loyal and growing customer base for them and I’m looking forward now to getting started and building my own business off the back of their success. 

Vin Kennedy, who owns Perfect Windows, said: “We are delighted to welcome Mark to the team. “Having Mark on board means that we can continue to deliver a great service for our growing number of customers and surge ahead with our expansion plans around the region.”

http://centraljersey.com/articles/2014/02/26/newswire/doc530d0eca6b295785556692.txt
New business owner says layoff was a blessing, I have my life back: Robin McKenna, owner of Window Genie of Belle Mead, says business ownership has given her the freedom to create her own schedule, be in control of her success and have the work-life balance she missed in her previous career. Window Genie announces the grand opening of their newest location in Princeton, NJ on Monday March 10th. Robin McKenna is the owner/operator. Window Genie is a nationally ranked home services franchise offering window cleaning, window tinting, pressure washing, gutter cleaning and much more. Window Genie of Princeton will service the surrounding Princeton, NJ areas as well as Bucks County, PA.

Before joining the Window Genie team, McKenna spent 20 years at a medical device company in sales and marketing, more recently in global marketing to develop and commercialize products worldwide. In July 2011 her position was eliminated. McKenna said, “I did what most people do after a layoff. I looked for a similar job because it’s what I was used to. I knew in my heart that I could not go back and feel secure or happy, though.” After some time off, McKenna realized the “blessing in disguise” she was granted by being unemployed. “I had always wanted to be home more while my children were in high school and my daughter is a sophomore this year. Also, unfortunately my parents weren’t doing very well at the time. I was granted this wish I had always had in the back of my mind to be home spending time with family. I was able to take my dad to my children’s swim meets and other functions; it was truly a blessing to spend the precious time together as I decided what to do next.”

McKenna was able to take away a piece of advice from her father before he passed away. He told her, “Take your passions and put them to work for yourself.” McKenna said, “His words and support really meant something to me. It helped me realize that it’s all about family, quality of life and working for you because the return is based on your efforts and decisions. ”

McKenna stopped looking for another corporate job in June 2012 and began focusing solely on business ownership when she met her franchise coach, Bill McGuire of The Entrepreneur’s Source. “I began looking around online at business opportunities and must have left a cookie crumb somewhere because I was approached by Bill. If he hadn’t contacted me, I don’t know where I would be now. His guidance was so essential to getting me where I am today at Window Genie.” They discussed McKenna’s strengths, weaknesses, goals and interests to determine which business models would fit her best. Window Genie was one of them and, “shined amongst all others from the get-go,” says McKenna.
What stood out to McKenna about the Window Genie business was the ability to offer multiple services to repeat customers. She said, “This would give me an opportunity to build relationships in the community and continue to serve that customer for years. Also, with the many different services Window Genie offers, there’s something for every home and every budget; I like that.”

Also, Window Genie’s strong culture and give-back program, Windows 4 Wishes stood out to McKenna. She said, “The corporate team has such a strong, well defined culture. It’s something I’ll be sure I reflect in my business. When I hire a technician I’ll let them know that we work hard and we play hard, we contribute to our community and take pride in our work. These were values so clearly embedded in the Window Genie culture and I felt it just even talking to existing franchise partners during my discovery process that had such fantastic things to say about the business and the corporate team. It feels good to invest in team Genie; it’s an extended family that not only cares about the success of my business but the happiness and fulfillment it brings me.”

Window Genie of Princeton officially opens for business on Monday March 10th. McKenna is excited, saying, “I can’t wait to get back to work and be able to provide people with things they really need and help improve the homes in my area. I’m providing jobs to people in my community and helping them build skills they can use in the future. I’m a planner and organizer so I feel prepared to take on the spring cleaning season and also being very customer oriented I’m excited to just get out there and start building relationships based on professionalism and quality. Two years ago I was unhappy and felt stuck in the corporate world. Being laid off was a blessing that led me to Window Genie. I have my life back.”

"This is a great territory," Bradley said. "It made sense from a business standpoint to bring this service to this area."
http://www.the-news-leader.com/news%20local/2014/02/26/glass-guru-opens-macedonia-franchise-to-restore-replace-windows
Glass Guru opens Macedonia franchise to restore, replace windows (Macedonia) - The Glass Guru, a California-based window restoration and replacement business, opened a new local franchise in Macedonia on Feb. 11. Franchise owner Chad Bradley said the company, founded in 2003, is a unique twist to window replacement companies because it also offers restoration services. "People have been dealing with foggy windows or condensation in windows for years," he said. "For years, the only thing to do is replace that glass. What makes us a little different is that we can restore that window at about half the cost without ever removing the glass."

Bradley said seals on windows typically fail within 15 years, and once the seal breaks, condensation or moisture forms between the window panes. To restore the glass, workers drill holes in the glass and put rinsing, cleaning and drying agents into the window to get the moisture out. They put patented micro-vents in the window to finish the process.

"The one thing I truly like about the business is that its green. We're not taking glass and just throwing it away into dumpsters and landfills, we're restoring it," he said. "The other thing is its really a cost saving thing for the customer. Sometimes they could have a beautiful window frame and they just have a bad piece of glass."

Bradley said it costs about half as much to restore a window versus replacing it, adding his firm can replace windows that cannot be restored. The business also provides free home window inspections and scratch and stain removal. The company has 80 locations in the country, with the Macedonia location serving much of northeast Ohio including Akron, Cuyahoga Falls, Mayfield, Aurora, Streetsboro, Hudson, Seven Hills and Independence. "This is a great territory," Bradley said. "It made sense from a business standpoint to bring this service to this area."


http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/power-pitch/men-kilts-want-clean-windows-115908784.html
Men in kilts want to clean your windows - Some guys in kilts want to help with the household chores—and they do windows. Yes, such a business is being built, and it hopes its kilt-clad lads will “stick out”—though of course not literally. "That's what the premise of the kilt is,” Men In Kilts founder Nicholas Brand told CNBC. “It's to have fun with it, but also to stick out. If somebody stops and takes a picture with us, they won't forget about us."

Brand and CEO Tressa Woods (she actually wears the pants in the company) believe the kilt is their secret weapon and hope to build an empire on it. CNBC gave them just 60 seconds to prove their case. Is the kilt a cheesy gimmick or the ticket to a booming enterprise? Watch the video and see how the Power Pitch panel votes and decide for yourself.

The Men In Kilts business plan is pretty simple: The company offers to do household chores such as window and pressure washing, and gives clients something to gawk at, namely guys in skirts. “We've had screaming—you know, we get a lot of pictures taken whether we're on a job site,” Brand said. “Sometimes you just get out of your truck and you open that door and people can't believe you’re in that kilt.”

The franchise operation serves residential and commercial clients, and the kilt cleaners will do buildings of up to four stories. And Men in Kilts is tackling an industry that’s far from washed out. According to the International Window Cleaning Association window washing is a $7 billion industry. "Our commercial business is 50 percent of our total revenue," Woods said. "I don't think the kilt appeals to the commercial market in the same way it does residentially, but the service is really how we compete."

Woods has experience with franchise businesses. Before joining Men In Kilts in 2010, she was vice president of operations at 1-800-Got-Junk. She told CNBC she was instrumental in growing the rubbish removal company from 40 franchises to 350 in three countries. Since her arrival, Woods said, the company has focused on operations and preparing for growth. "Right now we have nine franchises," Woods said. "We should be at about 15 by the end of this year, and we're hoping to sell about 20 to 30 next year. … From there, the sky's the limit." The company is on target to achieve sales of $5.2 million this year, she added.

The Power Pitch panel included CNBC media and entertainment reporter Julia Boorstin, who’s also a homeowner who hates washing windows. She raised concerns about the kilts. "When you Google window washing, you don't necessarily think that you're going to be searching for someone wearing a kilt," Boorstin said. Brand countered that with the importance of differentiating your business from the competition. “If I started this company 11 years ago and named it Nick's Window Cleaning or AAA Window Cleaning or Bubbly Clean Window Cleaning, we wouldn't be talking today," he said. Power Pitch panelist and real estate entrepreneur Don Peebles had reservations about how Men In Kilts would attract male workers willing to adhere to the unusual dress code.

"It's sort of a self-screening process,” Woods said. “Nobody applies for the job unless they have personality and confidence to wear the kilt." While Power Pitch host Mandy Drury wondered if Men in Kilts hires women (Wo-Men in Kilts?). "We've had some of our best employees actually be women, yeah, so absolutely no rejection of women at all," Brand said. Woods and Brand envision their company in every major North American metropolitan area by 2017. But their goal doesn't end with window washers in traditional Scottish garb. "The nature of the brand lends itself to different franchise services ... like carpet-cleaning, painting and lawn service—whatever is really in demand," said Woods.

XENIA— Remember the old joke about the housekeeper who always says “I don’t do windows…” You don’t have to worry about that when you contact one of the newest businesses in Xenia. “We’re dependable and reliable,” Shane Hartley, owner of the local Fish Window Cleaning location, said. “And, we’re year round.” Hartley, a former police officer in Athens, Ohio, and an US Army vet with 27 years under his belt, said that when he returned from Afghanistan in 2012, he began looking for a business he could own and operate. “I was looking for a different franchise,” he added. “I worked through FranChoice and they matched me up with three potential franchises. “Fish looked to be the best of the three because of three things: the simplicity of its system, the low overhead, and a very needed service.” “The franchises are independently owned and operated,” Hartley said. “We’re licensed, bonded and fully insured. We’re glad to give free estimates for both commercial and residential customers.”

Along with the window cleaning, the Roseville, Ohio native said Fish also cleans gutters and performs light power-washing on soffits and siding. “And, really, we can clean anything glass,” Hartley continued. “We’ve done chandeliers, not to mention other light fixtures.” To prepare for the new business, Hartley completed multiple weeks of training in the Xenia area and at Fish Window Cleaning headquarters in St. Louis, Mo. He is currently hiring and accepting applications. “I am committed to providing quality service and 100 percent satisfaction that FISH customers have come to expect,” said Hartley. “I look forward to meeting my residential and commercial neighbors and becoming the top, reliable provider for window cleaning needs. “So far, I’ve found everyone extremely friendly and I’ve met some great people,” he continued. “I have not had a single business turn me away and not let me write a free estimate.” Hartley is providing his services for commercial and residential customers in East Dayton, Beavercreek, Fairborn, Kettering and Xenia. “My region is pretty much from I-75 east, to Fairborn in the north and south almost to where I-75 and I-675 come together,” he said. Hartley said he currently has a staff of two and is looking to expand. “I am hiring,” he said. “I’ve posted all over. I need two additional employees for going on runs, and I also need a salesperson.”

More Window Cleaning Fails

$
0
0
“Despite our alerting the mall management, these cleaning staff continued to work in the same way. They walked on the small edges to clean."“These floors are the empty blocks in the tower, and hot and rainy weather could have weakened the exterior tiles. So the tiles could break and they might slip and fall. Click to enlarge.
http://www.thenational.ae/uae/abu-dhabi-window-cleaners-without-safety-harness-spark-concerns
Abu Dhabi window cleaners without safety harness spark concerns: It was enough to send shivers up the spines of witnesses – two window cleaners disconnecting their safety cables and walking along the thin ledge of a tower on the 13th floor of Abu Dhabi Mall. It was also enough for the mall’s management to cancel its contract with the cleaning company. “The process had been going on for more than half an hour,” said Ramesh Menon, who watched from a nearby building on Monday. “Despite our alerting the mall management, these cleaning staff continued to work in the same way. They walked on the small edges to clean. “These floors are the empty blocks in the tower, and hot and rainy weather could have weakened the exterior tiles. So the tiles could break and they might slip and fall. “These cleaners had not connected their cleaning equipment, such as a brush or bucket, so if these tools slipped from their hands they could fall down and harm others.”

Pradeep Kumar, a window cleaner with MBM Caring for Environment, said workers continued to defy rules stating that safety equipment must be used at all times. “Window cleaners on high-rise buildings still risk their lives,” said Mr Kumar, whose company was not involved in the mall incident. “In fact, they are trained to take the job and asked to wear all safety gear but they still take risks. We are trained for three to four months and assigned jobs in smaller buildings first. “During my two years as a window cleaner I knew a few people who fell from the top and died due to a lack of safety measures.”

Abu Dhabi Municipality regulations state window cleaners must use either a cradle, or two ropes attached to their safety harnesses and the roof of the building. “In comparison to cradles, ropes are very safe and comfortable where one can sit and clean,” Mr Kumar said. “Ropes are tied on top very tightly and you can slide down smoothly, whereas cradles are controlled by machines and sometimes they stop working, get jammed, or fail and suddenly fall. “We call them a single rope but there are two ropes that support the person. Both are hooked with a person’s safety gear.”

The cleaners also use a device called a window keeper, which can be attached to a window like a suction cup. Mr Menon said he alerted the mall management when he saw the cleaners on the ledge. “I called the senior manager of the mall who alerted security of Abu Dhabi Mall, who intervened and immediately stopped them,” he said. “But within half an hour they had cleaned the windows on three levels. Think how fast they work and how dangerous that is.”

Abu Dhabi Mall said it enforced tough rules on cleaning companies and had cancelled the contract of the company for which the two cleaners worked. “On receiving the complaints we immediately stopped them and terminated their contracts with the mall as they were not following safety rules,” said Shri Kumar, security site manager at Abu Dhabi Mall. “They had a safety rope but detached it while cleaning, which is against safety rules. Now we will hire another company for the job.” Abu Dhabi Municipality said it had taken a number of strict measures to enforce building safety. Companies who break the rules face fines of between Dh10,000 and Dh20,000. “Scaffolds, cradles, rope access, cranes and platforms used must conform to the local and international safety standards,” the municipality said.

Window cleaner who fell from balcony airlifted to hospital.
http://www.westsussextoday.co.uk/news/county-news/latest-news/video-man-who-fell-from-balcony-airlifted-to-hospital-1-5904318
Man who fell from balcony airlifted to hospital: A man believed to have fallen from a first-floor balcony while cleaning windows has been airlifted to hospital (Thursday, February 27). Paramedics were called to Liverpool Terrace, in Worthing town centre, at around 12pm this afternoon, following reports a man had fallen. The air ambulance landed on Worthing beach and transferred the casualty to hospital at 1pm. Marc Jeffery, 23, who was at the scene shortly after the incident, said: “It appears it was a window cleaner who was working up there, when the railings gave way. “I saw the paramedics and then the helicopter land.” Another eyewitness, who would not be named, added: “I was working nearby and heard a scream. I turned round and somebody had fallen from the balcony.”

http://press.hse.gov.uk/2014/window-cleaning-firms-boss-fined-for-insurance-failings/
Window cleaning firm’s boss fined for insurance failings: The boss of a County Durham window cleaning firm has been fined for failing to prove he held statutory insurance that enables employees to claim compensation should they be injured at work. Darlington Magistrates’ Court heard today (27 February) that Jason Mawson owned and operated a window cleaning business and traded as We-aredale Cleaning. As an employer he was required to insure against liability for injury or disease sustained by his employees resulting from their work.

An inspector from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) invited Mr Mawson to voluntarily produce his insurance certificate on a number of occasions but he failed to do so. He also failed to respond to a formal Notice to Produce on 3 September 2013. Jason Mawson, 44, of Grey Street, Crook, was fined £100 and ordered to pay £755.05 in costs after pleading guilty to breaching the Employers’ Liability (Compulsory Insurance) Act 1969.

After the hearing, HSE Inspector Victoria Wise said: “During 2012/13 148 workers were killed at work, two in the North East, and thousands more were seriously injured or suffered ill-health through the work they did for their employer. “As well as being a legal requirement, Employers’ Liability Compulsory Insurance offers important protection for employers and employees alike. “Without it, if a worker becomes ill or is injured at work, they will not be able to claim compensation from the employer. For employers, insurance covers the cost of legal fees and compensation payouts in the event of a claim by a worker.

“Mr Mawson failed to produce a certificate of insurance and that in itself is a criminal offence. The failure of employers to insure is seen as a serious matter and HSE will continue to take legal action where appropriate.”

1. The Health and Safety Executive is Britain’s national regulator for workplace health and safety. It aims to reduce work-related death, injury and ill health. It does so through research, information and advice, promoting training, new or revised regulations and codes of practice, and working with local authority partners by inspection, investigation and enforcement. www.hse.gov.uk. HSE is also the regulator for Employers’ Liability Compulsory Insurance.

2. Section 4(2)(b) of the Employers’ Liability (Compulsory Insurance) Act 1969 states: Where a certificate of insurance is required to be issued to an employer in accordance with regulations, the employer (subject to any provision made by the regulations as to the surrender of the certificate) shall during the currency of the insurance and such further period (if any) as may be provided by regulations – produce the certificate of insurance or a copy thereof on demand to any inspector duly authorised by the Secretary of State for the purposes of this Act and produce or send the certificate or a copy thereof to such other persons, at such place and in such circumstances as may be prescribed by regulations.

Customers wish window cleaner speedy recovery after fall in Marlborough: Customers of popular window cleaner Robin Salkeld have been wishing him well following his fall from a ladder on Monday. Mr Salkeld was cleaning the upstairs windows of Trevor and Sally Brown’s house in Oxford Street, near the Green in Marlborough, when he fell 30ft through a plastic conservatory roof and on to the stone floor below. He was airlifted by the Wiltshire Air Ambulance to Frenchay Hospital, in Bristol, suffering from servere lacerations, and was discharged from hospital to his home in Great Bedwyn yesterday.

Steve Pascall, who lives opposite the Browns’ house in Oxford Street, knows Mr Salkeld as he is their window cleaner. Speaking on Tuesday, Mr Pascall said: “We feel sorry for him because Robin is such a super guy, so helpful. “It’s so sad when this happens to anybody, but when it happens to someone like him, who is so helpful, it is an absolute tragedy.” Another neighbour, who did not want to be named, said yesterday she heard a terrible crash and thought two cars had collided. She sent her best wishes to Mr Salkeld, and said: “Robin is such a super guy, he's always pleasant and happy. The residents of The Green are very concerned about what has happened and wish him a speedy recovery.  “Anyone you talk to about Robin will say what we have said, he’s such a friendly, happy guy.”
 
Paramedic Ross Culligan was on the Wiltshire Air Ambulance and he added: “The patient, a gentleman in his sixties, was cleaning the windows of a property. “He fell from the top of a 30-foot high ladder through a plastic roofed conservatory and on to a stone floor below. We don’t know what caused him to fall. “He did sustain serious injuries and the decision was made to take him to a major trauma centre to see a plastic surgeon specialist. “He was conscious throughout and was in very good spirits but in considerable pain.” The air ambulance took four minutes to fly to Marlborough, where it landed on The Common. The flight to Frenchay Hospital took 14 minutes.

A Window Washing Service On Two Wheels

$
0
0
Phil Prado, who owns a one-person window-washing service business, said he likes working outside because he gets to talk with clients and people on the street. Click to enlarge.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/02/nyregion/a-window-washing-service-on-two-wheels.html?_r=0
A Window-Washing Service on Two Wheels: “Dirty windows are bad for business,” said Phil Prado, 50, giving the rationale for his own business: a one-man, two-wheeled window-washing service that has him pedaling around downtown and Midtown Manhattan.
Mr. Prado uses a bicycle because his customers are often only a few blocks apart in areas where the traffic is as bad as the parking. Because he lives on Staten Island near the ferry terminal, he said, it’s a snap to bring the bike over three mornings a week — he typically works only on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays.

He is a familiar sight on the street as he rides with a five-gallon bucket of soapy water hanging from his handlebars and an extendable pole under his seat, tied to the crossbar with his chamois window rag. “I like what I do because I have no boss, I’m working outside and I get to conversate with clients and everyone on the street,” Mr. Prado said as he pedaled along Hudson Street one recent weekday, wearing a blue windbreaker bearing his company name, Squeaky Clean Windows Inc., and his cellphone number.

He stopped at Puffy’s Tavern, extended the pole all 18 feet and affixed the spongelike wand soaked with soapy water. Pointing to some smudges on the windows, he said, “Wherever you have sports on TV, you have people leaning up against the glass outside to watch — that’s why sports bars have the dirtiest windows.” After whisking the windows into a lather, he replaced the wand with a 30-inch-wide squeegee and wiped it all dry and clean. “Here’s my overhead, right here,” Mr. Prado said, gripping a bottle of Dawn dishwashing liquid he squirts into the water.

His competitors tend to stay home in the winter, he said, leaving windows to cloud up with dust from the rock salt. “So the winter is when I pick up the bulk of my customers,” said Mr. Prado, who uses waterproof, insulated rubber gloves, and sometimes wears a battery-powered heated jumpsuit under “up to 10 layers” of clothing, which he peels off as he and the day warm up. “The other window-washers get cold because they don’t understand layering,” said Mr. Prado, who was born in New Jersey and began washing windows in Manhattan at age 17, first at the Waldorf-Astoria and then for a business in Brooklyn. He is unmarried but has a girlfriend.

After holding several other jobs, he started his own route on Staten Island 14 years ago, then moved into Manhattan nine years ago to make more money. Mr. Prado said he can handle up to 50 storefronts a day. He cleans each customer’s windows weekly, and charges a monthly fee, starting at $40 for the smallest stores. On Tuesdays, his route takes him from Water Street up to Canal Street. Wednesdays, he roams up to Union Square, hitting SoHo and Greenwich Village. Thursdays, he hits larger storefronts all the way up to West 54th Street to serve the Maserati dealership there.

At night, he lies on a heating pad to soothe his back. His health regimen includes tea with honey, vitamins and an early bedtime. “I haven’t missed a week in 10 years,” he said. “I can’t afford to get sick and leave my windows dirty so Joe Schmo can come in and take my clients.”

While taking care of some high-end shops on Spring Street in SoHo, Mr. Prado said he serviced well over 100 storefronts, but always carries a pile of business cards to attract new customers. “If I see dirty windows, I’m going in with a card and a price,” he said. On West Broadway, he walked past the MaxStudio clothing store and saw streaks on the windows. “Oh, what a shame, I can’t even walk past this place,” he said, and he strode inside. The woman behind the counter said the shop had a window-washer. “If your guy has your windows looking like that, he’s not showing up every week,” Mr. Prado said. He offered her “the best price in New York” and his “first month free” offer.

Jousting for customers can get fierce, he said, like the time when he was in a shop wooing the owner and the washer who held the account showed up. “He threw my tools in the street,” Mr. Prado said. “But I got the client.” Window-washers see a lot through the windows they clean, he said, but “we also see behind us, in the reflection.” Which is why he never needs to lock his bicycle. “Even when my back is turned, I’m watching it all the time,” he said. “Now you know all my secrets.”

More Window Cleaners On Bicycles

People Who Live In Glass Houses - Don't Look Out The Windows

$
0
0
A new study finds most people pull the shades on their expansive (and expensive) views.
http://www.fastcodesign.com/3023447/people-who-live-in-glass-housesdont-look-out-the-windows
People Who Live In Glass Houses... Don't Look Out The Windows: A new study finds most people pull the shades on their expansive (and expensive) views. In the architecture world, glass is in. The skyscraper of the future is transparent. From the Burj Khalifa to the soon-to-be-completed Freedom Tower to the so-called "Invisible Tower" to the latest and greatest condos in New York City, the towering glass facade has become the norm. People must be loving all those views, right?

Well, not exactly. According to a study from the Urban Green Council, practically no one looks out the windows. The group surveyed 55 glassy buildings around New York City and found that across the board, most of the occupants had drawn the shades. Regardless of the time of day, the direction the windows faced, or whether the space was an office or a home, buildings across the city covered an average of 59% of their window area. More than 75% of buildings had shades drawn on more than half their window space. The report notes that this analysis "isn’t conclusive since our sample size was relatively small, but the consistency of the results strongly suggests common patterns of tenant behavior."


So why aren't those who've shelled out what's presumably serious dough for views taking advantage? Lack of privacy, for one. The Standard Hotel's expansive windows allow pedestrians walking below to see into one of the hotel's restrooms, and developers of other glassy buildings near the popular High Line park have struggled to figure out a way to give residents views without letting tourists peek in. There's also comfort. Depending on the type of glazing used on the glass, sky-high windows can become unbearably hot as the sun beats down during the summer, and they can leach warmth in the winter.


As the Urban Green Council notes, this is a design issue as much as it is about people being unprepared to live in glass boxes, and it's something to take into account before breaking ground on the next shiny new building. Lovely as natural light may be, no one wants to hang out in a building that feels like a terrarium under a heat lamp.

Flexible Metallic Glass Is Coming Soon

$
0
0
The opportunities will be endless, with solar electric installed in your flexible metal glass.
http://inhabitat.com/doe-develops-flexible-glass-material-that-is-stronger-than-steel/Flexible Glass Material That Is Stronger Than Steel: Researchers are constantly striving to develop building materials that are not only more durable and flexible, but also more sustainable. With that in mind, the Department of Energy Office of Science recently collaborated with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the California Institute of Technology (Cal-Tech) to develop a resilient yet malleable new type of glass that is stronger than steel. The material can also be molded, and it bends when subjected to stress instead of shattering.

The glass is actually a microalloy and features metallic elements such as palladium. This metal has a high “bulk-to-shear” stiffness ratio that counteracts the intrinsic brittleness of glassy materials. The team that developed the material believes that by changing various ratios, they could make it even stronger. “These results mark the first use of a new strategy for metallic glass fabrication and we believe we can use it to make glass that will be even stronger and more tough,” says Robert Ritchie, a materials scientist who led the Berkeley contribution to the research. “Because of the high bulk-to-shear modulus ratio of palladium-containing material, the energy needed to form shear bands is much lower than the energy required to turn these shear bands into cracks. The result is that glass undergoes extensive plasticity in response to stress, allowing it to bend rather than crack.”

Glass is made up of a non-crystalline, amorphous structure that makes it strong, but brittle. In comparison, metals provide microstructural obstacles that prevent cracks from forming. The new metallic glass feautures a unique chemical composition that features extensive plasticity thanks to the formation of multiple shear bands before the bands turn into cracks. “Our game now is to try and extend this approach of inducing extensive plasticity prior to fracture to other metallic glasses through changes in composition,” Ritchie says. “The addition of the palladium provides our amorphous material with an unusual capacity for extensive plastic shielding ahead of an opening crack. This promotes a fracture toughness comparable to those of the toughest materials known. The rare combination of toughness and strength, or damage tolerance, extends beyond the benchmark ranges established by the toughest and strongest materials known.”

If that’s true, it could soon be the case that people who live in glass houses have nothing to fear at all.

A piece of metallic glass that has been bent around onto itself with a 1mm radius and glued into place. It would spring back to a flat piece if the glue were removed.
http://www.rdmag.com/news/2014/03/recent-advances-mean-wider-use-flexible-metallic-glass-coming
Recent advances mean wider use of flexible metallic glass is coming: What do some high-end golf clubs and your living room window have in common? The answer is glass, but in the golf clubs’ case it’s a specialized glass product, called metallic glass, with the ability to be bent considerably and spring back into its original form. Your windows, as you know, aren’t quite as forgiving of a sudden impact, and they shatter—they are brittle, as opposed to ductile, or more flexible products. For the golf clubs, however, a new generation of flexible metallic glass puts more bounce back into a golf ball, from the metallic glass’ high elasticity. They’re not unbreakable, but close. And scientists are working toward even stronger and more elastic glass types which would fail in a ductile fashion instead of shattering.

“In glass, localized plastic deformation usually leads to immediate failure,” said Seth Imhoff, a Los Alamos National Laboratory materials scientist. “Normally, metal alloys freeze into a collection of crystals in which the atoms line up into very specific patterns. In specially designed metal alloys an amorphous, or random atom arrangement, can be retained in the solid, which can allow us to tailor a wide range of properties such as the ability to be bent severely and spring back into place.” And for scientists, tweaking the shearing characteristics of materials such as glass has important applications well beyond the sporting world, it’s a matter of broader impact, aiding such fields as space science, electrical transformers, cell phone cases, and yes, golf clubs, because their mechanical and magnetic properties are highly adjustable.

An international team of scientists from the Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona in Spain, and Tohoku University in Japan are hoping their discoveries will lead to glass that can be both stronger and more ductile. The way that metallic glass deforms plastically is by the formation of what are called shear bands. Shear banding can occur on a macroscopic scale in granular materials, like during an avalanche or landslide, but in glass the bands are generally 10 to 20 nm wide (~3000 times thinner than a human hair!).

In their paper “Nucleation of Shear Bands in Amorphous Alloys” published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, these researchers are looking at the initiation of shear-banding events in order to better understand how to control the mechanical properties of these materials.

Once a shear band is formed it travels very quickly across the material and can lead to failure. Therefore the strength is ultimately controlled by how and when they form; so shear banding is termed a “nucleation controlled event.” The end goal is to understand this shear band nucleation, or initial formation, behavior so that better properties can be designed. “We’ve used an experimental technique called nanoindentation to repeatedly sample the initial formation of shear bands,” said Imhoff. “Nanoindentation essentially uses a tiny needle with a very precise shape to push on the surface of a sample in a very controlled way. Even though the force is very small, the tiny tip of the needle concentrates the stress in a very small region until a single shear band is generated in order to relieve some of that stress.”

By repeating this process many times scientists sample many local atomic arrangements and their specific critical stress levels. The new experimental evidence provided in this work challenges the current assumption of only a single type of initiation site, or STZ (shear transformation zone). Identification of multiple types of STZs could lead to new opportunities for controlling the strength and ductility of bulk metallic glasses… oh, and of course this means more durable high-performance golf clubs.

Window Cleaning News

$
0
0
Jeremy Lamb, of Excelsior Springs, uses high-pressure hot water to clean the exterior of the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Kansas City on Wednesday, Jan. 25. Lamb, a 20-year- veteran of high-rise window washing, uses a main line and a safety line to dangle from the center. Lamb, a supervisor with Shawnee Mission-based MTB Services, has been working on cleaning the interior and the exterior of the building for about a month.
MTB window washers Lucino Zurita of Grandview (left) and Juan Lopez of Olathe braved Monday's heat to clean the panes of the Performing Arts Center in 2012.
The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts: Jeremy Lamb and Paul Stann, from MTB Services, clean the stainless steel roofs of the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts on Thursday, January 30, 2014 in Kansas City, Mo. The project is expected to take several days to complete half of the complex's roofs. A second visit to finish the rest of the roofs is expected in the spring.

The latest landslip on the Old Beer Road. A quick-thinking window cleaner has been praised for his actions when the Beer coast path crumbled beneath the feet of an elderly man.
http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/news/window_cleaner_helps_save_88_year_old_landslip_victim_1_3339326
Window cleaner helps save 88-year-old landslip victim: A quick-thinking window cleaner has been praised for his actions when the Beer coast path crumbled beneath the feet of an elderly man. The stricken pensioner fell three metres from the ‘notoriously unstable’ Old Beer Road, but his rescuer managed to secure him with a rope until emergency crews arrived.
Helicopter, coastguard and ambulance teams recovered the unharmed 88-year-old with the aid of the window cleaner’s ladder at around 4.40pm last Monday. “It’s lucky he didn’t fall any further down – he was a very lucky gentleman,” said Beer Coastguard Terry Hoare. “It must’ve been quite scary but he was fine.” He said the man, who lived close by and had been looking out to sea, was checked over by a paramedic and taken home. The coastguard has advised everybody to stay away from the area as it is ‘obviously a very unstable area of cliff’.
Police have fenced off the scene, and also on the Chine and at Seaton Hole to prevent members of the public walking on the beach below. Old Beer Road was closed after a land slip during heavy rainfall in July 2012 and the South West Coast Path was subsequently diverted. The route is fenced off, but Terry said even when they were there a man had climbed over the fence to take the shortcut.



The Mole and Jersey Show Episode 16: The window cleaning and pressure washing industry's only web series. Sit back, waste some time! Do want to improve your window washing business? Do you have a pressure washing company or maybe you do roof cleaning? Well theyl talk shop and you may be able to pick up a thing or two. The Segments:
3:53 Jerseys Junk.....Wagtail Hip Dipper
8:48 Marketing madness.....Problem Customers
16:27 Fail of the week.......Jenga Fail
19:02 The Top 5.....Worst things being married to a small business owner.

http://www.macombdaily.com/business/20140305/macomb-county-business-briefs
Lynne Fiscelli, owner of Pane View Window Cleaning LLC in Shelby Township was elected to the International Window Cleaning Association Board of Directors. Pane View Window Cleaning has been in business for 20 years and Fiscelli is excited to be able to continue to serve and help others succeed and make positive changes in the industry.

Greenpeace satirises P&G ads over palm oil deforestation: Protesters ordered held on $50k bond each -Broxterman said the protesters broke window locks to get outside, then braced the windows shut so police couldn't get outside to reach them. The protesters tied off their repelling gear on window washing stanchions attached to the buildings. The protesters' 60-foot banners were on the sides of both buildings for more than an hour before they surrendered to police. They were charged with burglary, vandalism, trespassing and inducing panic. Greenpeace states that Indonesia’s forests are disappearing at a rate of “more than nine Olympic swimming pools each minute, with palm oil being the biggest driver of forest destruction” – a pretty bleak picture, by anyone’s standards.

http://cronkitenewsonline.com/2014/03/phoenix-firm-doing-banner-business-making-flags-flagpoles/PHOENIX – When Joseph Cicero began climbing high-rise buildings to wash windows in 1983, it was a day job to supplement his dreams of being a rock star. The owner of American Flag & Pole Co., a small business near downtown Phoenix, actually knew nothing about flags and flagpoles when he was asked to fix a flag atop a building he was cleaning. The owner was coming to town, and the flag was becoming unstrung. And employees were scrambling to fix it. “Someone said, ‘What about him?’” he said. Cicero hired a helicopter to hover over the flagpole while he rappelled down and restrung the flag.
Then, like many entrepreneurs before him, Cicero saw a niche. He launched American Flag and Pole Co. in 1985. By 1988, the company was also manufacturing flags at its facility rather than buying from wholesalers. “I kinda put all the different skill sets together and just attacked this flagpole industry,” Cicero said. “Through the years, it evolved: manufacturing flags, manufacturing poles, putting them up, taking them down, climbing them, servicing them.”
Today, the company has 14 employees manufacturing American and state flags and steel flagpoles. American flags range from 2 feet by 3 feet to 40 feet by 80 feet. The nine state flags range from 2 feet by 3 feet to 20 feet by 38 feet. All flags are sewn on commercial grade nylon with reinforced corners, a the design developed after Cicero and his employees noticed the life of flags getting shorter and shorter. The flags are appliqued instead of screen-printed, so it limits the complexity of the design the company’s five seamstresses can produce. “These girls can go through miles of stripes. We go through a lot,” Cicero said.
Steel delivered from the docks in Long Beach, Calif., becomes poles that can reach 150 feet, a size costing almost $23,000. Despite his long-term success in a niche market, Cicero doesn’t consider himself an entrepreneur. “I feel blessed. I was at the right place at the right time and I worked hard, created a good product,” he said. “We never wanted to cut any corners. Even when I was in the window-cleaning business, I wanted to do everything right.”
It’s that attitude that has kept 10 employees working alongside him for 30 years, including Fran Truesdell, the company’s accountant for two decades. “It’s a good atmosphere. We all know our jobs and we do it,” Truesdell said. “There’s no, ‘It’s not my job’ here. It’s about teamwork.” Terry Lopez is going on 12 years as contracts manager, handling permits and contracts and coordinating installations and blue-staking, or marking underground facilities such as electric, gas and water that could be damaged during digging. “It’s a simple flow here, even down to (taking care of) the dog,” she said. “Everyone’s dedicated. Maybe it’s a matter of respect.” More than 30 years later, Cicero is still out there climbing. In mid-February, he was up a pole in Gilbert for a homebuilder “for the love of it.” “I liked the challenge of the climb, and I knew it was something no one else wanted to do,” he said.

http://www.emirates247.com/news/emirates/revealed-riskiest-job-in-the-world-2014-02-22-1.539055
Revealed: Riskiest job in the world?...And what do you get paid for it: Burj Khalifa has been in the news ever since the project was announced. The latest coverage given to the iconic tower was by the US channel Cable News Network (CNN) revealing few interesting facts… for instance how many cleaners take on Dubai’s – if not the world’s – riskiest job of cleaning Burj Khalifa, how much time it takes them to clean the tower and – interestingly – how much salary is paid to them.
The report said that covered in 24,000 separate panes of glass, it takes around 60 people from Philippines, India and Nepal three months to clean each and every pane. And then they start all over again. Dipak Ghal, a window cleaner, says: “The work is interesting and the view is beautiful. Dipak had not seen building half the size of Burj Khalifa in his life let alone climb one. But his brother said he should leave Kathmandu and give it a try.” The cleaners start from the very top, says CNN correspondent. But if it’s windy the cleaners take rest as the gusts could swing them metres away. CNN says as a new recruit Dipak can make $600 (Dh2,200) a month.
Burj Khalifa was earlier in the new when Paramount Pictures shot Tom Cruise film 'Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol' at the tower. Apart from Burj Khalifa, another iconic tower China’s Shanghai Tower – the world’s second tallest – was also in the news last week when two Russian daredevils climbed the under-construction high-rise without permission. They also posted a stomach-turning video on YouTube which attracted over a million hits in just two days.

Cricket: Umpire Lee Sockett handed Abu Dhai opportunity - Window cleaner Lee Sockett is used to heights ... and now he's also climbing the ladder in the umpiring world. The 33-year-old, from Berry Hill, has been selected to officiate in game involving first-class and international sides in pre-season friendlies in Abu Dhabi. New Zealand, Ireland and the Netherlands are all warming up for next month's Twenty20 World Cup in Bangladesh with games in the Gulf state. And county sides Worcestershire and Derbyshire are also fine-tuning their preparations for the new domestic season, which starts in April in Abu Dhabi.
Sockett, who has been umpiring in the North Staffs and South Cheshire League since 2009, will stand in seven matches in the United Arab Emirates. Star international names such as New Zealand's Brendon McCullum and Ireland's William Porterfield will now be at the mercy of Sockett's finger of fate. The ECB ACO (umpires' association) were asking for umpires who were willing to put their name forward," said Sockett, who is part of a four-man panel in Abu Dhabi. "I had to send a portfolio of matches and the standard I'd officiated at. I didn't expect to be picked, but they said I matched the criteria. "It's an opportunity I can't believe has come my way and it's too good not to take." He flies out next Thursday and stands in his first match the following day when Worcestershire take on the Netherlands in a Twenty20 contest.
"Running my own business gives me the flexibility to juggle my commitments in the summer. "I want to take my umpiring as far as I can." A trip to Abu Dhabi represents a new high for Sockett, who admits his biggest game to date was last year's under-17s county cup final between Kent and Warwickshire at Kibworth. But he says he will just concentrate on his job, and not be star-struck by the international players he's in charge of. "I'm going to be umpiring players who we'll be seeing on television in the World Cup. It's unreal because last year I was doing pre-season friendlies at Wood Lane and Cheadle," he said. "There'll be a few nerves, but once I get out there, it's just a game of cricket. "It doesn't matter to me whoever is batting or bowling. They're still sending a ball down and I have to make a decision."

http://www.europeancleaningjournal.com/blog/2014/02/25/how-cleaning-is-helping-shape-the-sustainability-agenda
How cleaning is helping shape the sustainability agenda (Article by Torsten Deutzmann) - Torsten Deutzmann - strategic business unit director of Unger Professional Worldwide and managing director of Unger Europe - writes his latest exclusive blog for ECJ. The words ‘clean' and ‘green' go together perfectly he says - and not just because they rhyme! The sustainability agenda is informing and driving legislation, product design, service provision and trends in so many areas of our lives - and the cleaning and maintenance of our buildings is no exception.
From political circles to public on-line forums, the environment is a hot topic for debate that shows no signs of moving from the top of the agenda. With the UK recently being ravaged by floods and parts of America suffering from the worst snow storms in years, we are all too aware of our changing climate. The result is that organisations are now expected to find ‘greener' ways to run their businesses, and limit the effect their activities have on the wider world. On January 22 this year the European Commission presented the new EU framework on climate and energy for 2030. The main pillars of the new framework are:

• A reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 40 per cent below the 1990 level
• An EU-wide binding target for renewable energy of at least 27 per cent
• Renewed ambitions for energy efficient policies
• A new governance system
• A set of new indicators to ensure a competitive and secure energy system.

It's clear that committing to sustainability is essential for businesses who want not only to survive, but also to thrive, in the 21st century. Renewable energy sources provide a win-win situation for businesses keen to achieve two important aims. The most obvious is to cut energy costs; the other is to demonstrate a commitment to sustainability and lessen the impact of a firm's activities on the environment. The cleaning and maintenance of public buildings, offices and work spaces is an area where companies can start to take the first steps on their sustainability journey. The cleaning industry is rising to the challenge and using technology to find more sustainable ways to clean.
This has seen a rise in machines that need less energy to operate, or incorporate batteries that have a longer run time between faster charges; together with equipment that needs less water and chemicals, but still provide the required hygienic results. Water-fed pole systems that use pure water don't need chemicals, saving both money and helping companies with their ‘green' agendas; plus re-usable, washable pads for cleaning equipment such as mops, mean less waste and more sustainability.
As companies and organisations have become more environmentally aware, an increase in the use of solar panels has created opportunities for innovation, particularly in the window cleaning sector. Installing solar panels represents a big investment in both time and money, so businesses need to ensure that they are kept in top condition to reap the expected rewards. Soiling that is left on the panels stops sunlight from getting through, meaning that less energy is produced, in some cases resulting in a decrease in efficiency of 30 per cent. This is obviously not acceptable, so regular cleaning has to be in place to ensure you protect your investment.
Water-fed poles have adapted and now also lend themselves perfectly to cleaning solar panels, dispensing with the need for ladders or cranes but still cleaning safely and efficiently to help boost solar output. Cleaning with chemicals also runs the risk of leaving a film on the panels that can prevent the sun's rays from getting through, so the most effective way to clean is to use pure water. To get to this state the water is processed to remove the minerals and impurities that would otherwise dry and lead to spots and streaks.
I fully expect even more innovations to emerge in the coming months and years as the cleaning and sustainability agenda continues to gather pace. Tools and systems that provide the cleanest, greenest results, are on the rise - and society, and the cleaning industry, are all the better for it.

Amazing glass that tints on demand is now solar powered: One of the most exciting products from this year's Greenbuild expo is SageGlass' solar-powered windows. Sage's electrocromic windows can be darkened and lightened to filter the sun's heat and light according to a room's needs and the inhabitant's desires. See a full explanation of the technology here.
That takes a small amount of energy, which until now, could only come from plugging into a building's existing power supply. The new product is powered with a slim strip of photovoltaic panels. It's not only sustainable that the glass can power itself, but it's also opens up the product's design possibilities because it's cordless.
SageGlass has currently been installed in 250 projects, including both residential and commercial buildings. This glass is often used to fix a design problem. Philadelphia's Kimmel Center is an example of a space where a window dressing isn't feasible, but the space was overheated. Bryan Green of Sage says he hope that architects and designers can start using the glass more creatively.
Another new feature for SageGlass is the introduction of different control zones within the same pane of glass. These different zones can be independently controlled. So, imagine you have a Eastward-facing pane of SageGlass next to your breakfast table. You want lots of light in the room, but you don't want glare on you iPad. You can darken the lower zones to cut down on glare, while keeping the zones more clear to light the room, creating a kind of ombre effect. The zones can be either manually controlled, or automated with timers.
Like the original product, the solar-powered glass remains somewhat clear even at its darkest tint. "If it weren't for people's desire for natural sunlight and a connection to the outdoors, people wouldn't put windows in buildings," said John Van Dine, founder of Sage. In some ways, windows are a the weak point in our structures, at times letting too much heat and light. Shutters and curtains solve the problem of too much light, but they still absorb heat. You might still want a curtain for privacy's sake, but both these methods block the view to the outdoors. "You defeat the purpose of windows in the first place." 

http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20140226/sports/140228595/
The N-word insults my sensibilities because of the black people I associated with during my formative years in the 1950s and 1960s, a different time in a different place with a different perspective. First I think of the older black man who washed storefront windows when I was 5 or 6 years old in Logan Square. When he finished up, we sat on the steps down to my father’s grocery store and he educated me on the great black boxers of the day like Joe Louis, Jersey Joe Wolcott, Sandy Saddler and Sugar Ray Robinson.
I cringe at the N-word all these years later because he probably wouldn’t appreciate its increasing use. Then there was the young black man nicknamed Pork Chop who was my work partner in a paperback book warehouse at 26th and Pulaski. I was a kid who just finished my freshman year of college and Pork Chop could have messed with me in what was his space. Instead he taught me the tricks of surviving on that job. I cringe at the N-word because Pork Chop probably wouldn’t appreciate hearing it so much now.
The window-washing boxing aficionado entered and exited my life shortly before Brown v. Board of Education, Pork Chop right around the time the Voting Rights Act was passed, and Charlie about when urban unrest began to explode. Maybe it’s good that younger blacks and whites today are unencumbered enough by the past to use the N-word in NFL locker rooms, on the street, anywhere. Hopefully they’ll understand why an older white guy still is encumbered enough by the past to cringe at some of the things that people of all races call each other these days. Some of us still can remember the 1950s and ’60s.

Shropshire artists upcycle for new exhibition: Upcycling junk into art is the focus of a new exhibition by ten Shropshire artists. Items such as pop cans, old spoons and electrical cable have been transformed into paintings, sculpture and jewellery by the artists. Among the exhibitors is debut artist Mark Carruthers who has been creating a sensation with his models of vintage motorbikes and Camper vans made out of aluminium drink cans. 
It is the first exhibition for 46-year-old Mark, of Oswestry, who only discovered his artistic talent after being made redundant from a factory job. “It started off a year ago as something to do on a rainy day. My aunt brought back an aeroplane made out of a tin can from Australia. I thought it was a great idea, so I started experimenting,” he said. “I look through magazines for ideas, cut out photographs and use them to make cardboard templates.” 
In his reportoire are VW Camper vans, vespa scooters, Harley Davidson motorbikes, tractors and planes, all made out of pop, cider or beer cans. Until now he’s been making them as gifts for family and friends. “I can usually rustle up a vespa in around three hours. I haven’t got a lot of patience, but doing these has done me good because you have to have a lot of patience to make them,” said Mark, now a self-employed window cleaner and gardener.

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2014/02/21/4714134/charlotte-based-passportparking.html#.UxdtmX6cC3Z
Charlotte entrepreneurs bringing Bitcoin to the parking meter - Charlotte-based PassportParking Inc. is bringing a new form of currency to the parking meter: Bitcoin. The South End based company offers a one-stop, cloud-based command center for cities, universities and private operators to oversee parking, ticketing enforcement and event management. Passport has high-profile clients across the country, including the cities of Chicago, Detroit, Omaha, Neb., and Asheville and California’s Parks and Recreation Department. Now, the company says, it’s the first of its kind to facilitate the use of Bitcoin to pay for parking in lots and metered spaces using its mobile-pay service.
Bitcoin is a digital currency that’s been around since 2009 but began gaining widespread attention in 2013.  Here’s how it works: anyone can download a program on their computer and use certain online exchanges to convert dollars to bitcoins. The bitcoins can then be transferred directly – and anonymously – between two users anywhere in the world, without credit card fees. Bitcoin is just one of many different means of payment in addition to credit cards that Passport wants to make available to parkers and parking lot operators, says managing partner Bob Youakim. They’re also exploring ways to use Google Wallet, PayPal and even gold, he said.
“You see the Targets of the world get hacked,” Youakim said, and the anonymity of Bitcoin is more attractive.  Passport is not the first Charlotte-area business to embrace Bitcoin. Cornelius-based Waterbean Coffee did its first Bitcoin transaction on Dec. 8, barely more than a month after the shop opened.  Owner Tony Vo says he was the first in the area to accept the new currency, and has since been approached by a window-cleaner and a sandwich shop owner, both interested in setting up Bitcoin payments for their customers. Now other coffee shops are accepting it, too, he said.

http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/business/just-opened-local-educator-cleans-windows-and-more/article_10f0f9b7-0d4d-51d1-bed1-e9dcf43071c4.html
Just Opened: Local educator cleans windows and more: Business: Coastal Cape Window Wash LLC -
Location: Braden Drive, Upper Township - Owner: Jonathan Olek, of Palermo - Employees: Owner operated, with occasional help
Coastal Cape Window Wash offers residential and small-business window cleaning - interior and exterior washing. We clean screens, window sills, the window tracks ... that's all included. We also clean glass doors, sliders, chandeliers, mirrors and fans. We scrape and scrub the windows clean. A lot of windows get pretty bad over the winter and they need a little elbow grease put into them. It's a job that no one wants to do. I've been in so many houses where my client says thank God I found you, I hate doing windows.
A lot of my customers are senior citizens and they just can't reach them or they're too high. We go up to three stories and if they don't tilt in, we climb ladders to get to them. I use a basic washing solution of just water and Simple Green cleaning solution. I clean them the old-fashioned way with squeegees, towels and a chamois. We do all sizes of windows, from the smallest to huge bay picture windows on the beachfronts.
In the fall, I recommend we take the screens out and store them for the winter. If you leave them in, it takes a toll on the windows. The wind blows particles from the screen and embeds them in the glass. For a standard size window inside and out - the window washing, washing and cleaning the screens, wiping down the window sill and track - it's about $8. The price runs a little higher for larger windows and a little less for smaller.
We also wear little protective booties on our shoes. We make sure we leave the homes cleaner than when we got there. Entry: I'm in charge of discipline management at Jordan Road School in Somers Point, prior to that I was a teacher for 13 years. I worked for a buddy washing windows for seven years prior to opening up my own company. The future: The goal is to build the business to the point where I have a few crews working for me. Right now I serve from Ventnor to Stone Harbor, and I envision covering more of the coast.

http://www.bordermail.com.au/story/2106094/vline-keen-to-clean-up-its-act/?cs=11V/LINE can’t do much about the reliability of its Albury - Melbourne service any time soon, but it’s enthusiastic — literally — to do some window dressing. The train service’s chief Theo Taifalos said after this week’s first meeting of its customer reference group at Benalla that cleaner train windows and better platform announcements would top the to-do list. “Giving customers cleaner trains and better communication is something we can get on to straight away,” he said. But Albury’s customer representative Bill Traill said he feared tackling lesser issues would lead to work on more substantial issues being delayed and he would like equal stress on punctuality.
“I have no problem with those being the first ones addressed but I hope it doesn’t delay other things,” he said. “I believe works on all issues can be implemented at once. “Windows need cleaning because dirty windows degrade the service, but it is minor problem when matched with delayed and unreliable services. “We need to get on to the more substantial things. “We have informed V/Line about many problems and we were assured they would be acted upon quickly.”

http://www.wsoctv.com/news/news/local/superheroes-scale-levine-childrens-hospital/ndbzc/
Superheroes scale Levine Children's Hospital (CHARLOTTE): Levine Children’s Hospital had some special visitors Tuesday - superheroes! Window washers in the form of Mr. Incredible, Spiderman, Batman, the Hulk, Captain America, and Superman scaled Levine Children’s Hospital Tuesday morning. The window washers are from Joffie. “They choose to do this for us because they know it makes the kids happy and they want to do something extra for them,” said Lauren Moskowitz, a representative for Levine Children’s Hospital.
Patients were able to watch out their windows as the superheroes slowly made their way down, cleaning windows and brightening the days of sick children. The patients, and even adults, were excited to meet real-life superheroes. “We’re so appreciative of Joffie for being so kind and compassionate and going above and beyond to do this for our patients,” Moskowitz said.

http://www.carlow-nationalist.ie/2014/02/26/todays-tv-tips-15/
SCIENCE: The Fantastical World of Hormones with Professor John Wass (BBC FOUR, 9pm - 10pm) What do window cleaners, slow motion commuters, doughnuts, and relationships have in common? Well, according to this self-explanatory film, they are all tied together with hormones, that biological phenomena which turns children into adults, governs our appetites, and affects our passions. "They are fundamental to making us who we are", explains Dr John Wass.

http://www.taxassist.co.uk/resources/show-news/title/HMRC-reminds-small-enterprises-of-cash-basis/id/900000339
HM Revenue and Customs has urged small businesses such as cab drivers, window cleaners and hairdressers to make the most of a simpler system of recording income and outgoings throughout the tax year. Small enterprises with annual incomes of £79,000 or less can take advantage of the cash basis of accounting for money that is transferred in and out of the business, as opposed to using the traditional practice based on accruals. HMRC has distributed reminders to all unincorporated businesses, prompting them to consider simplified expenses, using flat rates as opposed to having to calculate actual business expenses.
The cash basis of accounting can be used for costs such as vehicles, business usage of residential space and private use of a business premises as a home. Anita Monteith, technical manager of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) Tax Faculty, believes HMRC is raising the profile of the cash basis system following its relatively low take-up since launch in April 2013. “Very few outside the tax profession know about it, and most of those within will not be using it for many clients because it is not appropriate,” said Monteith. “The only way HMRC will know how many people choose to use the cash basis is by how many tick the box on the 2014 tax return to say they have. “This is likely to raise problems. For example, how many taxpayers will say they have used the cash basis because they have no idea about accruals but were, in effect, previously doing it that way?”

Next of kin sought for unclaimed bodies: Among those buried was George Williams, a free-spirited window-washer known to business owners and residents along the White and Black Horse pikes. The 69-year-old man lived in an abandoned Audubon house and got around by bike. Several friends attended his burial and collected funds for a grave marker. McDonald recalled it was heartwarming to see people acknowledge the value of Williams’ life.
Gloucester County pays roughly $1,500 each to bury the unclaimed in donated plots. The county spends another $500 if land needs to be purchased, according to Jones. Costs at the potter’s field are less. Camden County pays between $50 and $60 for cardboard caskets there, according to county spokesman Ron Tomasello. Burial records are maintained indefinitely — even for the nameless. “Unidentified individuals are buried with grave markers,” Tomasello said. “If they are identified later, then they can be exhumed and moved where the family wishes.”

Looking back at our past brings not only memories of the late Huell Howser, but of his cameraman, Luis Fuerte. Huell and Luis began working together back in 1987, shooting little short fillers called Videologs. Another famous place he did the camera work at, was a "Visiting" episode about window washers. That show brought him to the top of the Tallest Building west of the Rockies, the (then) First Interstate Bank Building. It was a windy day and the window washer had some trouble with the controls, but Luis kept his cool by shooting through the camera lens and not looking down. Huell was not as lucky and he had a few dicey moments hovering 1,000 feet up on that scaffolding. It was reality TV before it became popular. As time went on, Luis got older and carrying that heavy camera around finally got to him. He left the show and shortly thereafter retired from KCET in 2004. Once in a while he turns up at our station. The last time he visited us was the day after Huell passed away. He's grayer and obviously older, but Luis is still Luis, with his good looks and kind personality. It is always a pleasure to get see him and catch up a bit.

http://hudsonreporter.com/bookmark/24651021-MEEHAN-JAMES
Funeral services were held Feb. 21 for James Meehan, known to everyone as Buddy, a lifelong Hoboken resident. He passed away Feb. 19 at Hoboken University Medical Center. Buddy was a retired window cleaner with Union Local 2 at the World Trade Center for 43 years. He was a most fourth degree member of the Hoboken Knights of Columbus Council Number 159 for some 30 years. He also held the post of chairmen of that council for many years.

http://www.thescarboroughnews.co.uk/news/crime/villagers-urged-to-be-vigilant-after-suspicious-men-spotted-1-6469535
Villagers urged to be vigilant after “suspicious” men spotted: Residents in Staxton and the surrounding villages are urged to be vigilant after two men were seen acting suspiciously in the area. Police say the men were spotted on Kiln Field in a small white van with a pair of ladders on the rood on Wednesday, February 26, at around 8.15am. A short time later, a villager noticed one of the men climbing a ladder up to a first floor winder of one of the properties on the street, When challenged by the resident, the man claimed he had just started a window cleaning business. She thought the incident suspicious and reported it to the police. The man was described as white, in his 30s, with a medium build and balding head.
Although no criminal intent can be confirmed, officers are asking householders in the Ryedale area to be extra vigilant and look out for this van and its occupants in case they are engaged in criminal activity. North Yorkshire Police are also keen to establish the registration number of the vehicle and identity of the occupants. Anyone with information that could assist the investigation should contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for PC Mark Rees or Ryedale police.

http://www.expressandstar.com/news/crime/2014/03/03/knifeman-is-jailed-over-cannock-street-attack/
Knifeman is jailed over Cannock street attack - A knife attacker who slashed his victim across the face in a street attack has been jailed for seven-and-a-half years. Window cleaner Shane Gittings stabbed Ben Scott without warning after an exchange of words, Stafford Crown Court heard. The victim was walking in Cannock with his friend Michael Bolton when Gittings pushed between them, said Mr Mark Rees, prosecuting. After an exchange of words, the defendant said to Mr Scott ‘what’s your problem?’ He seemed to be fiddling with something in his hand – a lock knife with a three-inch blade. Gittings took a large swipe with the knife, connecting with the left side of Mr Scott’s face. He was later taken to hospital to have a two centimetre wound stitched. The court heard that at the time of the knifing in Pennine Way, on 17 August last year, Gittings was on bail for a ‘cowardly’ assault on his partner, Kay Frith.

3 Videos To Get You Window Cleaning Faster

$
0
0
Marks Window Cleaning Store in Toronto.
Euro to Acme Thread Adapter - Easily convert your euro threaded waterfed pole over to an acme threaded pole. Great for adding third-party maintenance tools. Expand the range of tools you can use with your waterfed poles.Available at the Window Cleaning Store.



Squeegee Quick Release Modification For Ledger & Unger 0° - Available at the Window Cleaning Store.



Smartphone Camera Mount On A Pole - Attach your iPhone, Samsung, Blackberry etc. to a telescopic extension pole with the camera mount system. Works with most window cleaner poles or painters pole with acme thread. Plus a version available for use with waterfed poles that have a euro thread. Available at the Window Cleaning Store



Check out more of Marks stuff on the blog here.
Viewing all 999 articles
Browse latest View live