Midlands Business Journal June 28, 2019 Vol. 45 No. 26 issue

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• JUNE 28, 2019 • Midlands Business Journal

TRANSPORTATION, DISTRIBUTION & WAREHOUSING A section prepared by the staff of the Midlands Business Journal

June 28, 2019

Transportation partnerships seize opportunities for development by Michelle Leach

Traction and resistance alike are represented by public-private partnerships and tariffs. The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association is also bringing what Nebraska Trucking Association President Kent Grisham called “desperate infrastructure needs” to Congress, while taking a hard look at the regulatory environment; notably, Grisham said the intention behind “hours of service” (driving vs. resting hours) is good (“you don’t want tired and fatigued drivers on the road”). But Grisham said regulations are difficult to meet with mandatory electronic logging. “As soon as you’ve gone a matter of seconds over, it will kick out a violation notice,” he said, noting traffic jam- or bad weather-related delays aren’t accounted for, all this when member-companies are challenged to recruit new drivers who

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are required to have more classroom time before they can take a test. Grisham is optimistic about a federal government pilot program for younger drivers that may have experience driving large military equipment, yet regulations dictate they can’t cross state lines. Companies end up trying to catch mid-20-somethings when they’re in other careers, versus offering the prospect of a bright career early. Additional classrooms, instructors, trucking equipment, and testers are also required. Overall, Grisham’s encouraged by the state’s active, supportive industry. “We have an environment of cooperation and collaboration, not just in the trucking industry, and it comes from our deep roots in ag,” he said. During recent floods, Grisham said mem-

Branch Owner - Omaha Terry McMullen of AIT Worldwide. bers donated time and fuel to haul emergency Web-based e-Builder has helped track prorepair, relief and ag supplies. gram financials and other functions for these HDR’s Matt Selinger said the Dual, Divided projects since 2014. Freeway program within the Iowa Department “Drivers should pay attention to signs as of Transportation’s Transportation Improvement traffic shifts will occur more frequently,” he said. Program project, the Council Bluffs Interstate The Council Bluffs Airport Authority is System improvements, strategically focusing opened this spring on development opporamid flooding. tunities, as Executive The DDF creates Director Andy Biller Interstate 80 express noted there is room to and I-80/I-29 local include businesses that lanes. A first for Iowa don’t necessarily need and the region, the to be on the airport or DDF opening includaccess taxiways. ed complex overnight “It’s not uncomclosures (to install mon for airports to signs, shift traffic), and have businesses of a Grisham Selinger signs with emergency ‘business park’ nature,” flood response messages were used as planned he said; for instance, Chicago Rockford Interdetour routes were flooded. Iowa DOT dis- national Airport secured a large employer due trict and contractor teams worked together to its onsite property, and Biller noted interest to keep the program on schedule and lead from an out-of-state manufacturing company. recovery efforts. It’s leveraging the airport’s relationship with “Construction crews are expected to open Iowa Western Community College (its aviation another eastbound portion in late summer, maintenance training program has a physical depending on weather and field conditions,” presence at the airport) and the University he said. of Nebraska at Omaha Aviation Institute (to Other milestone CBIS projects include develop professionals in face of the industry’s reconstruction of the Nebraska Avenue Inter- labor shortage). change set for this fall and the completion of “Employers in close proximity to aviation I-29/I-480/West Broadway Interchange Right maintenance training programs have a more Continued on next page. of Way acquisition and final design.

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Transportation, Distribution & Warehousing — inside JUNE 28, 2019

THE BUSINESS NEWSPAPER OF GREATER OMAHA, LINCOLN AND COUNCIL BLUFFS

THIS WEEK 'S ISSUE:

$2.00

VOL. 45 NO. 26

Don Peterson & Associates benefits from diverse expertise by Michelle Leach

Sapahn gains following by putting Thai artisans, artistry first. – Page 2

40 er d Un 40 Leadership, problem-solving skills accelerate Glassman at Proxibid. – Page 3

& ng nti phics i r P ra G

Printing and marketing campaigns increasingly personalized, datadriven. – Page 4

As a fiber in the fabric of Fremont, 63-year-old Don Peterson & Associates has grown to four offices in three markets, with an edge in agriculture and auctions that blankets the state. The firm is adding to affordable housing during a time when stock is in short supply and as its home community rebounds from historic floods. “Flooding affected the community in general, whether it directly impacts our agents or not,” said President Jennifer Bixby. “Our agents were filling sandbags and working in shelters. We had agents who couldn’t get into their homes for days. And, with the real estate market, it’s taken some properties out of commission when we’re already in a shortage.” Leadership with the locally owned and independent real estate brokerage firm founded by the late Don Peterson (and a partner) in 1956, referenced the long-term effects of the flood, and also its involvement with close community partners, Continued on page 6.

President Jennifer Bixby at the downtown Fremont office … SunRidge Place subdivision adds to much-needed affordable development in Fremont as real estate firm benefits from diverse expertise across state. (Photo by MBJ / Becky McCarville)

Encompas targets partnerships with custom furniture solutions by Savannah Behrends

Stemming from the idea that commercial furniture can solve problems, encompas has found its niche partnering with architecture and interior design firms to create custom spaces, from moveable walls down to cushion buttons. “Furniture has become so specialized that no architecture or interior design firm can know everything about it like we do,” said Lisa Miller,

who founded the firm in 1999 with longtime colleague Herman Weist. The firm, with locations in Kansas City, Missouri and Wichita, Kansas, opened the Omaha office five years ago and recently moved in to a 10,000-square-foot space at 1425 Jones Street. Weist, an architect by trade, was drawn to the building’s 75-foot trusses that span the building without Continued on page 6. Account Manager Bob Bally … Seeking aggressive growth opportunities with tech solutions for businesses.

Aureon eyes software-defined wide area network tech for Nebraska growth plans by Richard D. Brown

From left, Vice President Herman Weist and President Lisa Miller … The Kansas City, Missouri-based firm has moved its Omaha office into new showroom that triples its space.

Aureon, a 30-year-old Midwestern-based technology support firm for small-to-medium-sized firms, has announced an aggressive growth program for its Omaha location. The office has been open for six years and has grown to employ 10 employees that serve about 35 clients in eastern Nebraska and western Iowa. “We’re a larger company with

an Omaha presence, which is giving us a big back-end advantage — and with an Omaha flavor,” said Account Manager Bob Bally. Bally, a Ralston native, joined Aureon five and a half years ago after a lengthy early-career stop with DIT Computers in Omaha, a chain that grew with multiple locations throughout the city. “In Omaha our growth has Continued on page 22.


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