Commercial construction industry veteran Lora Markem has joined Crain Construction as a project engineer.
A Dickson County native, Markem (pictured) has 26 years of experience in construction project management and design development in Middle Tennessee. She holds a degree in architectural engineering technology from Nashville State Technical Institute (now known as Nashville State Community College).
Markemâs experience includes design development, project management, preconstruction, property due diligence, permitting, subcontractor coordination, value engineering and owner/developer risk assessment and management.
âLora knows what it takes to get a project from conception to closeout,â Michael Rankin, president and CEO of Crain Construction, said in a release. âShe brings vast and valuable experience to Crain, having worked on commercial and industrial projects on both the development and construction sides. Weâre delighted to have her on our team.â�
Letters to the editor: April 9: Offer second doses to elderly folks now Vaccine supply and unfilled appointments, plus other letters to the editor
theglobeandmail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theglobeandmail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Oklahomans fresh off a massive electrical outage in late October caused by an unseasonably early ice storm face the potential for additional outages this next week.
But if outages happen during this current storm, they much likely will be more localized and the result of unfortunate encounters between out-of-control vehicles and power poles that support transformers and electrical distribution lines.
Oklahoma Gas & Electric is prepared to respond to those types of situations as this latest event evolves.
Earlier this week, it activated an incident command system to monitor the services it provides to its 858,000 customers.
below. the octopus gets mimicked. how one clever creature goes undercover on the ocean floor. and leapin lizards. scientists unlock secrets to the reptile s tail that can change our world. we don t need robots. we can just use lizards. it s time to get our show started and our first story comes to us out of montana. take a look at this. this is actually the aftermath of an avalanche that happened around 2:00 p.m. on new year s eve. a couple, david and keri gaillard, married about a year were cross country skiing when this avalanche hit. dave gaillard was swept away in the avalanche and killed. this video was shot by doug. he works for the gnfac, which is the after lav center. that s where he was buried, two, three feet under. this is path that went down. see all the snow on the side of that tree down into the gully. a frightening sight. you would think it would be difficult to survive something like this. here is the bittersweet part of the story. this is ollie