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Torchmark Moving Corporate HQ to
McKinney
Texas Secretary of State Roger
Williams announced that a $2 million grant from the Texas
Enterprise Fund will lead to 500 new jobs in North Texas.
Torchmark
Moves HQ to McKinney
Texas Secretary of State Roger Williams recently announced
the health insurance firm Torchmark Corp. is moving its corporate
headquarters to McKinney from Alabama, creating 500 new jobs.
A $2 million grant from the Texas Enterprise Fund helped lure
Torchmark to Texas.
"I am honored and pleased by Torchmark's decision to
move their corporate headquarters to the great state of Texas,"
Williams said.
Torchmark is planning a $27 million, 150,000 sq.-ft. facility
at its McKinney location that is the first stage of a major
consolidation program of its subsidiaries' marketing and administrative
functions including a centralized computer processing and
customer service center. The company currently has more than
600 full-time positions in McKinney, and will add at least
500 jobs over the next five years.
"We have found McKinney, the DFW area and the state
of Texas to be conducive to the growth and success of our
businesses," Torchmark chairman and CEO Mark McAndrew
said. "With the business-friendly environment, easy transportation
access and a family-oriented community, it just makes good
business sense to consolidate our administration here. The
Texas Enterprise Fund, along with local incentives, was instrumental
in our decision to relocate to Texas."
To date, the Enterprise Fund has helped Texas close the deal
on projects that will create more than 37,500 new Texas jobs
and add nearly $7 billion in capital investment to the state's
economy.
Williams said the Torchmark announcement is further proof
that the efforts Governor Perry and the state of Texas have
taken with economic development are paying off. Since 2003
Texas has created more than 330,000 new jobs, and Gov. Perry
recently received the Governors' Cup from Site Selection magazine
for the second consecutive year.
BOP Announces Intent to
Issue RFP
Corrections Corp. of America, the nation's largest provider
of corrections management services to government agencies,
recently announced that the Federal Bureau of Prisons, through
a presolicitation notice, intends to issue a request for proposal
for Criminal Alien Requirement 6. The BOP expects to contract
for approximately 7,000 inmates currently located in a number
of facilities in West Texas.
The RFP would include inmates currently housed at the company's
owned and operated 1,225-bed Eden Detention Center in Eden,
as well as inmates housed in facilities operated by other
private correction providers.
The company currently manages approximately 1,400 inmates
on behalf of the BOP at its Eden Detention Center under the
terms of an Inter-Governmental Service Agreement between the
city of Eden and the BOP. The Presolicitation Notice indicates
that the BOP expects to fulfill the RFP requirement through
multiple awards that provide for fixed-price contracts with
a potential term of 10 years, consisting of one four-year
base period with three two-year renewal options.
"CCA has managed the Eden Detention Center under the
current IGA since 1995," said John Ferguson, president
and CEO. "As stated in many BOP requirements, past performance
and experience will be significant factors in the evaluation
process. Based on CCA's long- standing relationship with the
Federal Bureau of Prisons, the quality service we have provided
to the BOP and the limited number of prison beds available
in this region, we believe the company is well positioned
to enter into a direct contract with the BOP for the continued
utilization of the Eden Detention Center."
Walter P Moore Celebrates 75
Nationally recognized engineering and consulting firm Walter
P Moore recently celebrated 75 years of success. Growing from
a one-man firm to a company of more than 350 professionals,
Houston-based Walter P Moore has shaped memorable and lasting
structures while it built critical infrastructure.
"The company has grown because it has been able to attract
professionals who thrive on finding innovative solutions to
the hardest engineering challenges," said Ray Messer,
president and chairman of Walter P Moore since 1993.
Tall buildings, long-span roofs, deep foundations and buildings
that have to withstand high winds and seismic activity are
some of Walter P Moore's specialties. The firm's civil engineers
are acknowledged experts in the solution of infrastructure
challenges in the most complex and congested urban areas,
including flood management and intelligent transportation
systems.
Walter P. Moore Sr. launched his one-person structural engineering
firm during the Great Depression in 1931. Perhaps best known
for the innovative engineering that created the Astrodonme,
the world's first domed stadium, Moore started out designing
foundations for River Oaks mansions.
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