Pittsfield-based GE Advanced Materials has renewed as an associate sponsor of 2003 Winston Cup Champion, Matt Kenseth
There was a little bit of Pittsfield in the NASCAR Winston Cup Championship winner's circle in 2003. General Electric is hoping for a repeat performance next season.
GE Advanced Materials - a division of GE Plastics headquartered in Pittsfield - announced this week that it has renewed as an associate sponsor of 2003 Winston Cup Champion, Matt Kenseth, and the #17 DEWALT Ford Taurus for the 2004 NASCAR racing season.
The extension marks the second year that GE Advanced Materials has teamed up with DEWALT and Roush Racing to promote its LEXAN(R) brand of polycarbonate plastic, which is used as an ingredient component in many consumer products. The #17 DEWALT Ford Taurus will once again feature the green LEXAN resin logo across the back.
The relationship with DEWALT - commenced to mark the 50th anniversary of LEXAN resin - has been significant because for the last 15 years, LEXAN polycarbonate technology has contributed to what is the biggest spectator sport in America. Most NASCAR stock cars feature front windshields make with LEXAN resin, while most NASCAR drivers wear helmets with shells made with LEXAN resin. A premier product of GE Advanced Materials, LEXAN resin is one of the world's foremost engineering thermoplastics.
"The NASCAR sponsorship has allowed us to show the association between high-performance applications like NASCAR windshields and the products people use everyday that are also made of LEXAN resin," said John Dineen, vice president and general manager of the global LEXAN business and global product companies for GE Advanced Materials.
"The sponsorship of the #17 DEWALT Ford Taurus during the 2003 championship season exceeded our expectations from both a branding perspective and as a way to connect with both customers and our employees," said Greg Adams, general manager of global marketing for GE Advanced Materials. "We look forward to another championship season with Roush Racing and DEWALT."
LEXAN resin is one of the toughest and most versatile polymers in existence and can be found in everything from DVDs to automotive headlamps and steering columns, to camping equipment, cell phones, and computer housings.
About GE Advanced Materials
GE Advanced Materials is a world leader in providing materials solutions through engineering thermoplastics, silicon-based products and technology platforms, and fused quartz and ceramics. Headquartered in Pittsfield, Mass., GE Advanced Materials is the combined entity of GE's former Plastics, Silicones and Quartz businesses. Its offerings include:
Silanes, specialty silicones, urethane additives, adhesives, sealants, caulks, resins and elastomers for a variety of vertical markets such as personal care, automotive, tire and rubber, construction, healthcare, electronics, household and institutional, agriculture, textiles, appliances, bedding and furnishings and foam control, as well as the consumer "do it yourself" market. ( www.gesilicones.com/gesilicones/am1/en/home.jsp )
Engineering thermoplastic resins serving customers in a variety of industries including aerospace, appliances, automotive, building and construction, data storage and optical media, medical, electrical and electronics devices, telecommunications, computers and peripheral devices, outdoor vehicles and devices, and packaging. ( www.geplastics.com/ )
High-purity quartz and advanced ceramic materials for the semiconductor, telecommunications, lighting, electronics, personal care, and water purification industries. GE Advanced Materials is the number one supplier of quartz materials to the semiconductor industry. ( www.gequartz.com/en/index.htm )
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Dalton Planners Hold Public Hearing on Tiny Homes Bylaw
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The Planning Board held a public hearing last week on a bylaw for mobile accessory dwelling units (ADU) that will be brought before a special town meeting.
For nearly two years, Amy Turnbull has been trying to amend the current ADU bylaws to allow mobile tiny homes.
A movable tiny home is defined as a unit under 400 square feet that meets all of someone's daily needs, including sanitation, cooking, and other facilities, and which is also mobile. Most homes considered "tiny" are built on a trailer so they can be towed.
Her proposal defines a movable tiny house as a "residential property with an existing primary house, intended for year-round living," and outlines eight conditions for approval.
Among these conditions: the unit must adhere to accessory dwelling unit regulations, undergo site plan review, be licensed and registered with the state Registry of Motor Vehicles, have approved energy, water, and wastewater systems, and comply with American National Standards Institute 119.5 and National Fire Protection Association 1192 safety requirements.
Additionally, the unit must be certified for ANSI or NFPA compliance by a manufacturer or third-party inspector, including adherence to Appendix Q and the International Residential Code's structural guidelines and energy efficiency standards. The tiny house cannot move under its own power, and its undercarriage, wheels, axles, tongue, and hitch must be concealed from view. Wheels and leveling or support jacks are required to rest on a level gravel or paved surface.
Turnbull has gotten enough signatures for her petition to amend the current bylaws to add her definition of the mobile ADUs. Last Wednesday, the board held a public hearing on the petitions, which will be voted on at a special meeting.
Turnbull says she has two reasons for wanting to add this to the town's bylaws: aging in place and affordable housing.
"We need a variety of housing types in Dalton, and that we also need to address the idea that you know nearly 30 percent of our population by 2035 is going to be over 65 years old, and it's problematic because ... there's not enough choice for these people to to age in place,"she said. "What movable tiny houses does, is it provides a less restrictive ADU. It's much cheaper to place, and it's easier to place, less time consuming. And what it offers to people is it offers people who are owners a place for their children to come and live, or a caregiver to come and live, or for the people who own their own house to come and live while they rent out their maybe their three bedroom home to a new family who wants to attend to Craneville simultaneously."
She said people need to move away from calling and treating the tiny homes as though they are trailers, as one former Planning Board member has voiced opinions on.
"That is an opinion, and I think we need to get over that, because I want to say that these are foundation homes, and that the chassis is a foundation, and it's a stick-built home on a chassis, and in very many ways it's like a modular house. I think we will not be surprised in the next 10 years if we see the market turn around and start to make smaller, tiny modular homes, but that is not the case right now, and we have a dire need for affordable housing," she said.
At a former Fire District meeting the Water Department drafted regulations for water hook-ups for these types of homes. The superintendent sent a letter to the Planning Board to be read at the meeting stating it will not be a hindrance for sewer system connection.
"The Department of Public Works does not feel that mobile ADUs will be an issue with the town sewer system. The homeowners will be responsible for any issues outside of the sewer main and connect and responsible for connecting in, so that would address any permits, fees, or anything like that would be added to that," the letter states.
"The Water Department, as we've stated previous, and as you stated, the water department has come up with their own set of SOPs, standard operating procedures, for hooking up a an adu and a mobile adu, which will then have to meet winterization and all those, but they've laid out a plan for that, that they have, so I'd like to point that out," board Chair Robert Collins said.
One concern was raised that if someone can have a mobile ADU could they also have another tiny home on their property, including the main house. That situation is not likely, said Turnbull, as it would cost a considerable amount of money. Town Manager Eric Anderson also stated that in his former community when they adopted similar laws their first one wasn’t put in until a couple years later and then maybe one a year.
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