
Energy Conservation Services to include: pay from savings, projects and programs.
Typical services we provide:
-Lighting Retrofits
-Mechanical Equipment Replacement
-Water Conservation Projects
-Utility Metering Projects
-Operations Evalutation
-Engineering and Energy Consultations
TL Services' in-house staff of engineers are made up of mechanical, electrical and energy specialists
through the Ph. D. level.
For more information please contact us
TL Services has been verified by the Department of Energy (DOE) as a Qualified Government Energy Services provider for fiscal year (FY) 2010. In addition to this TLS is the only Service Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) company with this prestigious designation.
TL Services introduces under its Infection Prevention program, Zurn's Antimicrobial Toilet Seats. These Antimicrobial Toilet Seats are elongated, open front toilet seat, less cover, with a stainless steel check hinge. The commercial heavy duty toilet seats standard design features include:
Available in standard white and premium white color choices.
For more information you can click here or call us for details and pricing.
Military.com Week of December 28, 2009
President Barack Obama recently signed the Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act of 2009 into law. The new law will provide timely, predictable funding for the Veterans Health Administration one-year ahead of the regular appropriations process. The text of the new law is available online.
By John Boyle Citizen-Times.com December 7, 2009
It's inevitable. As the World War II generation continues to dwindle, remaining veterans know the date that lives in infamy will gradually fade from America's consciousness.
“In 10 years, it'll barely be remembered — it's certainly not as important now as it used to be,” said Craig Kirkpatrick Sr., a U.S. Navy sailor who was on the USS Castor in Pearl Harbor when the Japanese struck on Dec. 7, 1941. “You know how these historical things pass along.”
Kirkpatrick, 90, is one of about 2 million surviving World War II veterans, out of 16.1 million who served. He's not bitter about Pearl Harbor remembrances becoming less prominent, partly because he knows it's just human nature for memories to grow fainter as time rolls on.
“Even 9/11 is certainly not as prominent in people's minds as it was at first, and that's only been a few years ago,” Kirkpatrick said.
The attack 68 years ago today claimed 2,400 lives, sank 21 of the 96 U.S. Navy vessels in the harbor and left most of America's 394 planes on the Hawaiian island damaged or destroyed. It galvanized the United States like few other events ever have, spurring the largely isolationist county into World War II and firmly onto the world stage as a dominant power.
But veterans of that day are clear-eyed about Americans' long-term memories.
“Our generation started a lot of programs, dedications, monuments for Pearl Harbor,” said Leo Sienkiewicz, 90, president of the N.C. Pearl Harbor Survivors Association. “But the younger groups are just not interested. And it's not just Pearl Harbor survivors — the American Legion, the (Veterans of Foreign Wars), they're losing members left and right and have not got replacements.”
Joe Alexander, a retired Marine Corps colonel who served two tours of duty in Vietnam and has appeared on the History Channel as a World War II expert, wrote the book “Storm Landings, Epic Amphibious Battles in the Central Pacific.” He acknowledges that Pearl Harbor remembrances are waning but stressed that the event still carries a historical wallop that few other episodes do.
“I think in terms of Pearl Harbor, it will have a longer grasp in our memory, even after the last survivors of that date pass on,” Alexander said. “It precipitated a war that like no other event will ever do. It was such a devastating attack, and it was a turning point for the whole war.”
The war set America on a course as a superpower, and it instilled a mindset of the necessity for preparedness, mainly because America had been caught so badly off-guard. It also exposed an entire generation of Americans to combat. Sailors watched massive battleships sink and saw their friends die.
“You had extraordinary heroes from that day — people who had never been exposed to these things before all of the sudden were in the middle of it,” Alexander said. “You want to remember the individuals who suffered through it.”
Kirkpatrick, a modest man who spent a career in the Navy and the U.S. Coast Guard before moving back home to the mountains in 1968, makes no case for his own heroism that day. The USS Castor, a supply ship, was carrying 2,000 tons of ammunition, and Kirkpatrick and most of his shipmates were eating breakfast when the attack began.
The ship's quartermaster alerted them to the attack, and Kirkpatrick headed toward the ship's stern to see what was happening in the harbor, where most of America's Pacific fleet was moored.
“I was going out on the exit facing the stern, and that's when I saw the plane with the red spots on the wings,” Kirkpatrick said, referring to a Japanese bomber. “I saw the pilot and the gunner pretty plain, and I decided that was the wrong place for me. I did an about-face and went up to my battle station, which was the steering gear room.”
An electrician, Kirkpatrick continued to man his station, but he did come up to survey the incredible damage in the harbor and at the nearby airbase. The memories from that day are seared into his mind.
Kirkpatrick's son, Craig Kirkpatrick Jr., is a member of the Pearl Harbor Day Commemorative Committee in Henderson County, which hosts an annual high school essay competition about Dec. 7, 1941. The group will host a gathering at 11 a.m. today at the Historic Henderson County Courthouse on Main Street at which winners will be announced — and the Day of Infamy remembered.
A retired Air Force veteran, Kirkpatrick Jr., 65, said the essay contest is one way the group can keep Dec. 7 in the public's consciousness, particularly with younger people. But he knows that Americans will eventually move on, although he doubts they'll ever completely forget Dec. 7, 1941.
He suspects that in 10 years or so, when the Department of Veterans Affairs estimates just 303,000 World War II veterans will remain alive, the date will be edging toward historical footnote territory. About 1,200 World War II veterans die every day, by some estimates.
“Other than the dry pages of history books, I can foresee the days of our country pausing to recognize Pearl Harbor passing away,” he said. “It will probably be put in as a footnote in calendars.”
Military.com November 30, 2009
The U.S. Senate voted 98-0 to pass the Caregivers and Veterans Omnibus Health Services Act of 2009, a sweeping reform bill sponsored by Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Daniel K. Akaka (D-Hawaii) for wounded warriors and the families who care for them. S. 1963 merges two veterans' health bills which passed the Committee with unanimous bipartisan support this summer, only to be blocked from a floor vote by a single Senator until today.
9
President Obama on Monday signed an executive order designed to boost the number of veterans in the federal workforce.
The directive creates Veterans Employment Program offices in federal agencies, to match veterans with job openings and help them navigate the application process. The offices also will give veterans guidance on how to adjust to civilian life after they are hired.
"This initiative is about more than repaying our debt for their courageous service and selfless sacrifice," Obama said. "It's also about continuing to fill the ranks of federal employees with men and women who possess the skills, dedication and sense of duty that Americans deserve from their public servants. And few embody those qualities like our nation's veterans."
In addition, the executive order establishes a Council on Veterans Employment, to be chaired by the secretaries of Labor and Veterans Affairs. It requires the Office of Personnel Management to develop a strategic plan in consultation with other agencies, such as the Defense, Homeland Security, Labor and Veterans Affairs departments.
The order comes as the number of military members re-entering civilian life is ballooning.
OPM Director John Berry has emphasized the hiring of veterans, saying government should take a more proactive role in recruiting former military members and preserve veterans preference during the selection process.
"We are going to honor our veterans and increase their employment in our domestic agencies," Berry said during Government Executive's Excellence in Government conference in July.
The percentage of veterans in the federal workforce has increased just slightly in recent years. According to the Office of Personnel Management's most recent report, it rose 0.5 points from 25 percent in fiscal 2003 to 25.5 percent in fiscal 2007.
Veterans groups and some managers praised Obama's order.
"The federal government is really no different than any business when it comes to hiring quality people," said Joe Davis, spokesman for Veterans of Foreign Wars. "They want educated, responsible and motivated people who are loyal to the company and to each other. With the boomer generation beginning to retire en masse, it just makes good business sense for the federal government to do whatever it can to recognize and recruit this talented pool of job-ready employees."
Pat Niehaus, Federal Managers Association chapter president and labor relations officer at Travis Air Force Base in California, said having an agency contact could be valuable to veterans re-entering civilian life.
"In so many agencies, [the hiring process] is so computerized," Niehaus said. "If they had someone to help, I think it would be very beneficial to them. The civilian world is significantly different from the military world."
This Veterans Day, TL Services would like to take the opportunity to thank the men and women of our armed forces for their service to our country. With a veteran owner and many veteran employees, we understand the sacrifices that are made to defend our freedom. Today we join the rest of our nation in remembering the sacrifices and expressing our appreciation to America's 25 million veterans. Thank you.
We are happy to announce the debut of our newly designed website! We hope that you will find it easy to navigate, and full of useful information to help your facility.
Please take the time to view the products we have available in our new programs: Infection Control, Green & Energy Conservation, Building Protection, and the new TL Services line of products- the SecureLav and our antimicrobial tables. More exciting products and information is soon to follow.
Have a great day, and enjoy the new look of TL Services.com!