Security: KeyPlus managing director Neil Windsor (centre) with Ronnie Lyne (left) and Adeel Shafiq (right), mobile response supervisors A SECURITY firm has marked its 13th year in the business by reshuffling its senior management. KeyPlus, based in Burnley, provides key holding, alarm response and mobile patrol services to businesses all across the region and says that it currently protects 1,100 premises in the North West and has performed 18,000 patrol visits and responded to 5,500 alarms in the last year. The company has now confirmed that operations director Neil Windsor has been promoted to managing director, whilst founder and former managing director, Brian Curran, moves to the role of chief executive.
LegalZoom Files Registration Statement for Proposed Initial Public Offering
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May 17th - May 23rd is Bike to Work Week. Author: Devin Johnson Updated: 7:23 PM EDT May 18, 2021
COLUMBIA, S.C. The City of Columbia is encouraging residents to choose a fun way to get to work by cycling there. It s part of Bike to Work Week. The incredible thing about biking is so much more personal, said Columbia resident Regan Freeman.
The comprehensive planner for planning development, Leigh DeForth, says this week s celebration will be virtual due to the pandemic. In the past, there were routes folks would take from different neighbors and ride in numbers, said DeForth. They would meet at the State House, then ride down Main Street.
Five Sisters Zoo reveals first image of incredibly cute new red panda Rufio
The Five Sisters Zoo in West Calder, near Livingston, welcomed its first red panda into the fold on the 1st of May.
Rufio settles into his new home (Image: Five Sisters Zoo FB)
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215 SOUTH WILTON PLACE, as the historic home looked when sold on March 1, 2021.
There is a disturbance in the atmosphere of the leafy community of Wilton Place. A house has been brutally vandalized.
Tragically, it is a familiar story: 215 S. Wilton Pl., a treasured historic home, built in 1907 and designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1992, and also within the Wilton Place National Historic District, was sold by its devoted owner to a new buyer who, the seller and her real estate agent believed, also loved the home and only planned to add a bathroom and renovate the kitchen.
Well, the reality turned out to be something different, as concerned neighbors in early April began to see demolition activity removing hardwood floors, mahogany details etc. Further investigation revealed that the majority of the historic interior had been brought down to the 100-year-old studs, causing an irreparable loss of historic fabric, a monument plundered.
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