World Fence News

March 2014

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66 • MARCH 2014 • WORLD FENCE NEWS Through the Years with World Fence News March 1989 cover March 1994 cover March 1989 Here are some articles and topics that were being covered in the March 1989 issue of World Fence News, 25 years ago this month. • The cover photo for March showed a crew from Western Fence Co. in Salt Lake City, Utah putting up a 19,000-foot fence at an Environ- mental Protection Agency Superfund cleanup site in really tough condi- tions—10 degrees below zero temper- atures and blowing snow! • OSHA's efforts to enforce the "hazcom" standard were on again, then off again, and now they're on again, a report detailed. • World Fence News contributing editor Jim Lucci told how to manage a sale for maximum success. The column was excerpted from his latest tape series. • World Fence News contributing editor Herb Borner continued his se- ries on accurately estimating job costs. The article was taken from Borner's presentation at a recent In- ternational Fence Industry Association convention. • Foreign competition (from out of town) forced Jim Hart to pull up stakes and move to greener pastures — out of town. • If the family business owner wants the business to continue after he or she is gone, the time to start plan- ning is now. March 1994 Here are some articles and items that were being covered in the March 1994 edition of World Fence News, 20 years ago this month. • The cover photo for March was of an unusual gate near Kettle Falls, Washington made up of bicycle parts. There was a fork latch made from a set of handlebars and a deer head mounted at the top of the entry- way made of handlebars and a saddle tank. The cover story was a report on the FENCETECH'94 show that was held in Nashville that year. • Markets and the prices paid for lumber could be volatile in 1994 as the failure to resolve the timber supply cri- sis continued to plague western saw - mills, a lumber industry association executive had said. • The intent of "controlled access" systems is to let authorized vehicles in while keeping all others out. More often than not, however, anyone fol- lowing (or tailgating) behind a person in a car who has opened the gate with his control device can easily gain entry to the property. One access control expert told how to tighten up these systems. continued on page 68 Helping To Keep The Good Stuff In And The Bad Stuff Out Since 1960. THE FENCEMAN'S FRIEND STRETCHES • LIFTS • ALIGNS • CLAMPS FOR: TIGHT CORNERS, SHORT PULLS, GATES PulJak ® Company LLC P.O. Box 449 • Branford, CT 06405 PHONE: (203) 500-2520 • FAX: (203) 738-1088 E-mail: puljak@comcast.net Visit us on the Web at www.puljakusa.com Designed for those "Impossible" jobs ONLY $95.90 ® MODEL A – 2 1 ⁄2

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