Harvard reminding owners about the chill factor.While the memories of a sweltering swel·ter·ing adj. 1. Oppressively hot and humid; sultry. 2. Suffering from oppressive heat. swel summer are fresh and much of the Northeast is enjoying an unseasonable un·sea·son·a·ble adj. 1. Not suitable to or appropriate for the season. 2. Not characteristic of the time of year: unseasonable weather. 3. Poorly timed; inopportune. warm Fall, executives at Harvard Maintenance, Inc., a leading New York-based independent building services provider, remind building owners and managers that now is the time to prepare for the often swift arrival of Winter weather. "It's never too early to prepare for the often sudden onslaught of winter in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. ," said Stan Doobin, president of Harvard Maintenance. "That's why we make sure by early October that each and every building we serve has a Snow Emergency Contingency Plan A plan involving suitable backups, immediate actions and longer term measures for responding to computer emergencies such as attacks or accidental disasters. Contingency plans are part of business resumption planning. in place, and that all building employees are aware of their responsibilities when a major storm hits." Harvard has received high marks for overall preparation and snow removal operations from office tower owners the company has under contract in Manhattan, and hundreds more throughout the tri-state area There are a number of places in the United States known as tri-state areas where three states or holdings meet at one point (a tripoint), or in proximity to each other. The two most well-known are for the New York and Chicago metropolitan areas. . In addition to calling in extra workers to deal with the increased workload when a winter storm hits, Harvard's senior executives make advance sweeps throughout the area prior to the storm to insure that each building is adequately stocked with Adj. 1. stocked with - furnished with more than enough; "rivers well stocked with fish"; "a well-stocked store" stocked furnished, equipped - provided with whatever is necessary for a purpose (as furniture or equipment or authority); "a furnished apartment"; snow-blowers, fuel, salt, shovels and foul weather gear. When storms begin, Harvard executives continue to travel from building to building to supervise operations, trouble-shoot problem areas and fulfill special requests from individual owners. "You have to make sure that salt-spreaders are loaded, blowers are fueled and everything is in place for workers to spring into action as soon as necessary," said Doobin." High profile properties such as those under contract with Harvard, many with sweeping plazas, large public areas, multiple entrances and lots of pedestrian traffic, present unique challenges to snow removal operations. Harvard's carefully thought-out and executed contingency plans insure a safe, efficient and orderly removal process. |
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