Mobile Bay Blog

Alabama Motorsports Park - Mobile Alabama
January 18th, 2008 4:51 PM
From a press release issued by Alabama Motorsports Park:

MOBILE, AL – With the New Year brings new excitement for Alabama Motorsports Park, A Dale Earnhardt Jr. Speedway. Investors are continuing to work with Mobile-based Thompson Engineering and Kansas City-based HOK Sport to secure the necessary permits so ground breaking can begin for the multi-venue facility.

Earlier this month, Lewis Communications was selected as the agency of record for Alabama Motorsports Park. The firm’s primary scope of work will include creative design and media buying for Winners Circle seats, RV Slips and Garage Condominiums.

"We are thrilled to be a part of this exciting, world-class project that will no doubt bring unprecedented growth to our area and set new benchmarks in sports entertainment," says Ellen Wingard, SVP/Managing Director of Lewis Communications, Mobile.

This year will mark the launch of a web store hosted at www.alabamamotorportspark.com that will boast a variety of Alabama Motorsports Park themed merchandise. Both hard and soft goods with designs unique to the property will be highlighted. Charlottesville, VA-based Sportstoday has been selected to provide web store and fulfillment services. Merchandise is expected to be available for sale in late spring.

Posted by Kelby Linn on January 18th, 2008 4:51 PMPost a Comment (0)

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America's Fastest-Growing Metros includes Mobile Alabama
January 31st, 2008 9:22 AM
Best Places
America's Fastest-Growing Metros
Brian Wingfield and William Pentland 01.30.08, 2:20 PM ET

It's no secret that the Southeast and Western United States are booming. The costs of living and doing business there are often cheaper there than in big coastal cities. But where and how much those cities are thriving might surprise you.

Take Alabama. The state has some of the fastest growing metro areas in the country, including Mobile, which is projected to have the greatest change in "gross metropolitan product (GMP)," 34% between 2007-2012, according to research forecasts done for us by Moody's Economy.com.

In Pictures: America's Fastest-Growing Large And Small Metros

One boon to Alabama is ThyssenKrupp's announcement last year to build a $3.7 billion steel plant in Mobile. And Huntsville--expected GMP growth 15% by 2012--has long been a hub for defense and space research. Since the mid-1990s, Alabama has also become a manufacturing center for automakers like DaimlerChrysler, Toyota and Hyundai.

"The automotive industry has been Alabama's real growth industry in the last 15 years," says Brian Hilson, president and CEO of Huntsville's chamber of commerce.

Other metro areas, like Port St. Lucie and Palm Bay, are part of a growing biotech cluster in central Florida. Straddling Texas and Arkansas, Texarkana is seeing war-related development: Its Red River Army Depot is a major maintenance and storage facility for military equipment. And St. George, Utah, located about 120 miles from Las Vegas, has boomed in recent years as a destination for retirees.

All of them sit at or near the top of Forbes' list of America's fastest-growing metropolitan areas, places large and small that offer at least the promise of booming economies for years to come.

To compile our list, we looked at all of the country's 363 metropolitan areas, defined by the U.S. Census Bureau has a geographic region with a "core urban area" of at least 50,000 people. Because many small metro areas are high growth--and because we wanted to show growth in large cities as well--we split the group into two classes: the largest 100 metro areas (with at least 528,000 people) and everyone else. We use projections run for us by Moody's Economy.com to show growth in GMP between 2007-2012.

Of course, if one looks at economic growth in the country's largest 100 metros, the usual suspects jump to the top of the list. With an estimated 32% GMP growth from 2007-2012, Austin, Texas, is the winner for big metros. Atlanta, Seattle, Orlando, Houston and San Jose, Calif., also appear high on the list. What do they all have in common? They're tech hubs with proximity to universities and a healthy increase in population. Austin's population, for example, is expected to increase by nearly 15% by 2012, according to Moody's Economy.com forecasts.

Bruce Katz, director of the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution, says there are several factors to take into consideration when measuring the pulse of a metro area: innovation, human capital, infrastructure and the actual quality of a place.

"These assets drive everything," says Katz. Some ways to measure them: the number of patents a metro area produces (innovation), the number of college graduates that live there (human capital), the amount of passenger miles its residents travel (infrastructure) and the vibrancy of its downtown area (quality of place).

A glance at the country's most economically healthy large metro areas underscores his point. Computer manufacturer Dell and the University of Texas anchor Austin's tech community. San Jose receives an influx of grads from places like Stanford and UC-Berkeley who want to work in Silicon Valley. Atlanta, home to Emory University and the Georgia Institute of Technology, is also the headquarters of UPS, CNN and AT&T Mobility, the largest cellular carrier in the United States.

To be sure, GMP is not the only method of measuring a metro area's economic vibrancy. Population growth, job growth, housing starts and personal income growth are all other factors to consider. However, we felt that an examination of the output of goods and services in a metro area was perhaps the purest method of determining how vibrant an economy will be several years down the road.

Statistics on the other factors, compiled for us by research firm Global Insight, supported the forecasts for GMP growth. Mobile, Austin, Port St. Lucie, Cape Coral, St. George and other regions with high GMP growth projections all appeared near the top of their lists.

In the current economic climate, predictions for housing starts are open to the most uncertainty. Moody's forecasts take the current slowdown into consideration but do not account for a potential recession. A study compiled by Global Insight and released by the U.S. Conference of Mayors in November found that the most significant losses in real GMP were concentrated in California, though every state has taken a hit.

Several burgeoning metro areas barely missed our list, including Raleigh, N.C., San Antonio, and Atlantic City, N.J. But what about those near the bottom? Most are smaller metro areas in historical manufacturing centers in the Northeast and Midwest. Of the bigger metros Rochester, N.Y., Youngstown, Ohio, and Springfield, Mass., top the list.

They're also low for expected population growth. Why stay there when so many other urban centers are thriving?

In Pictures: America's Fastest-Growing Large And Small Metros


Posted by Kelby Linn on January 31st, 2008 9:22 AMPost a Comment (0)

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Mobile and Baldwin Primary Voting schedule changed due to Mardi Gras Conflict
January 14th, 2008 10:42 AM

George Altman
Press-Register
 
With Alabama's early presidential primaries and no clear Republican or Democratic front-runners, the state will likely have more of a say in determining the parties' nominees for president.

But to cast ballots, voters in Mobile and Baldwin counties will have to work around Mardi Gras, two voting dates and different election-day plans in each county.

The Legislature moved the state's primaries from their usual June slot to February in an attempt to give the state more influence in the presidential races. But the early date -- Feb. 5 -- falls on Fat Tuesday, which is celebrated with street-blocking parades, hall-filling Mardi Gras balls and general revelry.

The state granted each county an additional voting day, Jan. 30, to help avoid Mardi Gras conflicts and $100,000 to notify voters of the plans for the election. The counties are handling the upcoming primary differently.

Mobile County will have all precincts open Jan. 30 and is encouraging residents to vote on that day, rather than Feb. 5, when only one voting location will be available.

Baldwin County, meanwhile, will only have one voting location open Jan. 30, with all precincts available Feb. 5.

Mobile and Baldwin polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. both voting days.

Baldwin is taking the different approach because that county will have fewer Mardi Gras events around Feb. 5, Baldwin Probate Court Judge Adrian Johns said last week.

"Obviously, in Mobile County there can be gridlock on Mardi Gras Day," Johns said. "As it has turned out in Baldwin County, there's only one location -- that's the Fairhope Civic Center -- that needed to be moved because of Mardi Gras."

A Feb. 4 Mardi Gras ball in the civic center will push that precinct's Feb. 5 voters to Fairhope's James P. Nix Center, according to Johns.

Baldwin voters who don't want to vote on Mardi Gras can cast their ballots Jan. 30 at the Foley Civic Center.

"We're prepared to handle the voters at the polls whichever day they decide to vote on," Johns said.

Mobile Probate Court Judge Don Davis also expressed confidence that his county's election workers would be able to handle the separate voting days, but he's targeting Jan. 30 for the bulk of the voting.

"That's when we hope most, if not all, of the voters of Mobile County will go to their neighborhood precinct," Davis said.

Davis added that he is not expecting more than 12,000 people to show up Feb. 5 at the Revenue Commissioner's Office, located at Michael Boulevard and Azalea Road, the only Mobile voting center open that day.

Mobile and Baldwin residents can also vote by absentee ballot for any reason in this election.

Despite the opposite strategies that Mobile and Baldwin will employ for the primaries, Davis said he expects large public information campaigns to clear up most voter confusion.

Last week, Mobile County kicked off their ad campaign. The effort, which will continue through Feb. 5, includes newspaper, radio and television advertisements.

All registered Mobile County voters will also receive a postcard reminding them to vote Jan. 30. This postcard will be accepted at polls as voter identification, according to Davis.

"We are spending every penny" of the $100,000 the state will pay for Mobile to notify voters of the primary change, Davis said. "There will not be any excuse for ... a citizen of Mobile County not to know what's going on."

Johns anticipated that Baldwin will spend between $70,000 and $80,000 of its state allocation to inform voters about the election.

"My concern was that ... our effort be able to reasonably match the effort in Mobile County, to keep down the confusion on the part of Baldwin County voters" who may think Mobile's approach applies to Baldwin, Johns said. "I like to think positive. I expect very few problems."

SOME DATES TO REMEMBER

Jan. 22 : Last day to register to vote

Jan. 24 : Final day to apply for an absentee ballot in Baldwin County without emergency exception

Jan. 25 : Final day to apply for an absentee ballot in Mobile County without emergency exception

Jan. 30 : Preferred voting day in Mobile, all precincts open; Baldwin residents can vote at Foley Civic Center, 407 E Laurel Ave. in Foley

Feb. 4 : Latest date that a Mobile or Baldwin absentee ballot can be dropped off or postmarked

Feb. 5 : All Baldwin precincts open; Mobile residents can vote at the Revenue Commissioner's Office, 3925 Michael Blvd. at Azalea Road in Mobile

© 2008 Press-Register


Posted by Kelby Linn on January 14th, 2008 10:42 AMPost a Comment (0)

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Mardi Gras has its roots in Mobile, Alabama
January 7th, 2008 10:29 AM

Bands, fireworks, costumes highlight Alabama parade festivities

By: Bill Bordewick

Posted: 1/7/08

MOBILE, Ala. - Believe it or not, Mardi Gras didn't originate in New Orleans, La. It originated in Mobile, and the good people of southern Alabama were determined to show why they were the first revelers this past Saturday.

The city's Mardi Gras parade was filled with extravagant floats, numerous high school and college marching bands, and various GMAC Bowl assorted items - and let us not forget about those colorful plastic beads.

"I love the beads," said Shawna, a bartender at Pat's Downtown Grill, who declined to give her full name. Pat's was virtuously taken over by BG fans before the parade. "We all have a good time and it is good family fun."

The beads are what make Mardi Gras the event that it is. These 10-cent quality plastic beads are like gold down here - everywhere you look, people are wearing different sorts of beads.

People stationed on the floats hold all the cards because they are the ones in charge of dispersing the much-coveted beads.

Dispersing is kind way to put it. These guys throw Jake Peavy-like 95 mph fastballs at the patrons behind the barricades and it becomes "every person for themselves" at that point - duck, cover, throw a hand up and hope for the best.

Many of those parade-going patrons ducking out of the way of oncoming beads were decked out in all kinds of BGSU shirts, jerseys and hats.

"It was definitely a good turnout this year - a lot more orange on the streets tonight than usual," Shawna said.

The Falcons made their presence known all night long. Whether it was the pre-parade party at Pat's or the numerous chants heard throughout the night, Falcon fans turned Mobile into BG South and definitely outnumbered the Tulsa contingent on this night.

The "BG…SU" chant was heard was probably uttered more times on Dauphin Street in downtown Mobile than on Main Street in BG.

Across the street from Pat's at Boo Radley's, the Falcon fight song of Ay-Ziggy-Zoomba was even sung by a group of Falcon fans - and some converted Alabama fans for the night.

That, to go along with the chants, may have made for a very irritating night for non-BG supporters.

"These BGSU chants are really starting to get annoying," said Jeff, one of the bartenders at Boo Radley's, who also declined to give his full name.

At that point, it did not matter to these Falcon supporters. They were celebrating the Mardi Gras festivities and cheering on the Falcons in the process - nothing wrong with that.

Posted by Kelby Linn on January 7th, 2008 10:29 AMPost a Comment (0)

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