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2010 June/July
- At the 10th annual SBC Legislative Conference, component manufacturers and industry suppliers traveled to Washington, DC and visited with several members of Congress.
- This year, they lobbied lawmakers to address systemic problems related to the housing finance system and free up credit for builders.
- They also raised concerns about labor issues like EFCA and immigration reform, as well as the detrimental impact cap and trade energy legislation could have the SBC industry.
Article
2010 November
Article
2010 June/July
- Use a checklist to make sure you don’t skip an important step in your risk management procedures.
- Don’t reinvent the wheel—use the SCORE program, BCMC and ORisk as tools to develop best practices around.
- Effectively use attorneys, and be very careful when agreeing to allow an insurance company to defend you.
Article
2010 December
- Gravity loads causes trusses to deflect.
- Dead loads are permanent loads.
- Camber is an upward curvature built into a truss to compensate for dead load deflection.
Article
2010 December
- Toyota is known for using lean manufacturing in its operations, and many manufacturers (like Shelter Systems) in our industry use them as well.
- Since acquiring lumber just in time isn’t possible, Shelter Systems adjusted its lean principles and decided to stockpile lumber to manage price volatility.
- The uncertainty created by lumber price volatility is a huge risk for all component manufacturers.
- Through SBCA, manufacturers could pool their purchasing power and get lumber producers to listen to concerns about this volatility and other issue
Article
2010 November
- Joe Hikel from Shelter Systems Limited (Westminster, MD) is this year’s SBCA President.
- Hikel worked up through the ranks in the family business, doing everything from component assembly to truss design to sales.
- SBCA plays a very important role in Shelter’s pursuit of running a state-of-the-art operation.
Article
2010 November
- BCSI recommends that lumber used for restraining and bracing trusses be stress-graded.
- Stress-graded lumber is graded for mechanical properties like strength and stiffness.
- Stress-graded lumber can be found in visual grades, MSR and MEL grades.
- AF&PA’s Supplement to the National Design Specification® (NDS®) includes the design values for all commercially available lumber in the U.S.
Article
2010 Sept/Oct
- Thank you for your SBCA membership!
- Our industry is unique in that we are willing to help people who need it more than we do.
- BCMC Build 2010 will take place September 27-28 in Charlotte.