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2003 posts categorized "Follow-up"

July 13, 2009

John Hardy's + ex-Roscoe's @ Cedarwood

071009johnhardysroscoesjk I realize this is already common knowledge. Many people have posted comments or sent me e-mails about John Hardy's Bar-B-Q opening a third Rochester location in the restaurant building in front of the Cedarwood Square Plaza.

I'll just chime in and say, 'yeah, that's right.'


That's the spot vacated by Roscoe's Barbeque Rootbeer and Ribs at the end of May.

I have been trying to contact the good folks at John Hardy's for a few weeks on this. Most of the employees say they do not know any details. One manager is aware of the plan, but has been very busy. 

Hopefully, I'll get the meat on this one before it burns on the grill.

July 09, 2009

Meaty tidbits - 2 Roch. eateries cooking

070809meatheadssign With all of the chaos related to Rochesterfest and then being out of the office last week, I missed out on the opening of a couple of the eateries that are heating things up for the local carnivore crowd.


One, predictably, is Meatheads Meats and Deli in the former Taco John’s/Great Steak Escape building on the U.S. 52 frontage road just off of 41st Street Northwest.

The deli/ butcher shop spin off of a Red Wing business is open and serving.
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The other one is the new Roscoe's Express in the Chateau Center, just south of Chateau Theaters at North Broadway and 37th Street in northeast Rochester. This is the space that has been empty since the TCBY yogurt place closed its doors in 2007.

I'm kind of surprised the gregarious owner of Roscoe's, Steve Ross, didn't give me a call when this spot started serving food. He must have been working on a new celebrity sandwich.

A spark @ Westfire? Could it get license back?

Westfireinside Word on street is that talks will soon be underway to possibly stir Westfire Grille's barely glowing embers back into a blaze.


Someone interested in taking over the management of the northwest Rochester bar is talking with the owner and the city, which revoked its liquor license recently.


If a plan can be hammered out, a proposal to regain the troubled club’s liquor license could go to the Rochester City Council.

July 07, 2009

Two Roch. linked companies + Russell 3000

I need to come clean. I had no idea what the Russell 3000 Index was before Monday morning. Is that a bad thing for a business editor to confess to?
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Bad or not, it is true. For the few other folks out there who are not up on their stock indexes, here's the definition from Russell's web site:

"The Russell 3000 Index measures the performance of the largest 3000 U.S. companies representing approximately 98% of the investable U.S. equity market. 
The Russell 3000 Index is constructed to provide a comprehensive, unbiased, and stable barometer of the broad market and is completely reconstituted annually to ensure new and growing equities are reflected."


I read up on this since two companies with substantial Rochester connections - EnteroMedics Inc. and Computer Task Group, Inc. made it onto the Russell 3000 list last week.

• Anyway, EnteroMedics Inc. signed a deal with Mayo Clinic back in 2005 to work together to develop an external, Pacemaker-like weight control device and to license some of Mayo Clinic's patents.

“Spectacularly successful” is how then-EnteroMedics CEO Mark Knudson described the relationship with Mayo Clinic back in 2006. 

Another local link is that former Pemstar exec Greg Lea is the CFO for the rapidly rising firm.

Here's a snippet from the Twin Cities-based company's announcement about Russell:

 "Russell indexes are widely followed by the investment community and inclusion in the Russell 3000 is an important benchmark for any emerging company. We expect that this milestone will increase our visibility and bring EnteroMedics' efforts in obesity, diabetes,and hypertension to a wider investor audience," said Greg S. Lea, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of EnteroMedics.


• Buffalo, N.Y.-based Computer Task Group, Inc.  or CTG is a major contractor for IBM and had up to 300 people working in Rochester back in 2006. Its Rochester office opened in 2004.

Since then it has had several layoffs and paycuts, though the company has declined to provide details on those moves.

June 26, 2009

Newt's Express preps for opening

Lunch in downtown Rochester today disproved an old axiom. 

IMG_3137 A long line of downtown workers did get a free lunch as the crew at the new Newt's offshoot – Newt's Express - did a dress rehearsal with lots of hot hamburgers for anyone walking by.

The new space designed to become a hot spot for quick burger for lunch sports lots of wood and brick reflecting the classic style of the historic Oddfellows building in which the eatery was crafted.

Expect the styling of the original Newt's with all of the pics on wall, big windows and whatnot. The big difference is expect it to be brighter than the twilight-feeling bar above City Cafe.

IMG_3145 IMG_3123 I chatted with Jerry Zubay and Mike Currie, the guys behind the Creative Cuisine stable of Rochester eateries - Newt’s Bar, City Café300 First, Redwood Room, Culinary Market. Both retired last year, but it didn't stick for long.

Right now and their families have lots of stuff cooking with the new Newt's, the soon-to-open Pi Pizza and ZZest Culinary Market.

On Thursday, they had a booth at Thursdays on First, one at Rochesterfest and a crew putting the finishing touches - like a neon sign - on the Newt's Express space.

June 25, 2009

Mayo Clinic model is hot topic, but is it sustainable?

It all comes down to sustainability.


Most people in the feverish national debate about the cost of health care, from the president of the United States to experts and pundits in magazines and on television, agree that Mayo Clinic offers  “fantastically high levels of technological capability and quality.”


But can even Mayo continue to use the Mayo model?

Gawande, atul

Dr. Atul Gawande wrote recent article in The New Yorker comparing health care at Mayo Clinic to that provided by hospitals in the community of McAllen, Texas. He pointed out the level of quality at Mayo with its payment method that does not rely on how many  surgeries a doctor performs.


He compared that to how the pay-per-service McAllen model has apparently driven up costs with pricey scans, and surgeries without  improving care.


In his article, “The Cost Conundrum,” Gawande wrote,  “In the war over the culture of medicine—the war over whether our country’s anchor model will be Mayo or McAllen—the Mayo model is losing.”


That was echoed in a Time magazine article on the Mayo model that was written soon after Gawande’s.


Dr. Dawn Milliner of Mayo Clinic was quoted as saying, “We've been able to buffer our staff from the harsh realities of the system, so they can concentrate on patient needs, But it’s not clear how long we can keep doing that.”


In an interview this week, Gawande explained his conclusion about how to provide Mayo Clinic-like care.


“Their (Mayo’s) practice model is closer to the quality and cost we want, though we have a financing system that doesn't make it sustainable,” wrote Gawande in an e-mail. “My conclusion is that it’s the financing system that has to change, not the medical system.”


Mayo Clinic, which lost $840 million on $1.7 billion in Medicare treatment last year, agrees.


“That’s the underlying reason we are involved in health care reform,” says Josh Derr of the Mayo Clinic Health Policy Center. “The Medicare system is a fee for care system. We want to that shifted to value.”

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With the Baby Boomer wave aging fast, Derr says a “perfect storm” is coming. 


How should the shift from per service to payment for value be done?


Derr says the health policy center sees a short term fix and a long term one.


The short term one stays with the per service model, but it adds a “value index” calculation to different Medicare reimbursement level for each region. 


The long-term proposal, tosses out the pay-per-service plan completely to be replaced with something like a bundled care method. That means a heart attack would be covered with one fee for all related treatment and that encourages a hospital “to do things right the first time,” he said.


Of course, it will the politicians in Washington, D.C. to make any sort of change and Mayo Clinic knows that might take a long while, even if Barack Obama admires Mayo’s methods.


Does that mean Mayo might need to change its focus to more profitable actions, since its current model is “unsustainable.”?


“Mayo will still find way to stick with its model of care going forward,” he says “We’ll just have find different ways to do that.”

June 23, 2009

My defeat in ice cream eating smackdown

Social 8 You know how the buzz during the Olympics was that Michael Phelps had an ideal body type to be a swimmer.

Social 9
I would say that KTTC's weather guru Ted Schmidt is genetically the perfect ice cream-eating machine.'

What he does to a block of ice cream reminds one of what a crocodile does to an unsuspecting wildebeast. It is devastating, violent and decisive. 

Anyway, I need to tip my cap to Schmidt for his decisive win in the pseudo-celebrity ice cream eating contest last night at the Possibilities  Ice Cream social.

By the way, Mayor Ardell Brede was the mystery contestant and he held his own well. 

It was a perfect night for it and the ice cream itself was a great prize that I really enjoyed once I was allowed to use a bowl and a spoon.

By the way, watch for an announcement later today about my next ... uh...unusual... public appearance coming up on Wednesday.

And the best thing is I'm opening it up as opportunity for one of my loyal blog readers to get their own chance in the spotlight.

It will not be messy, I promise.

Mayo-linked biotech moving to Madison, Wis.

Exactsciences Exact Sciences Corp., a biotech that recently signed with Mayo Clinic for “exclusive rights to intellectual property” for new cancer screening technology created by Rochester-based Dr. David Ahlquist, landed a $1 million loan from the Wisconsin Department of Commerce to relocate its HQ to Madison from Marlborough, Mass.

Wisconsin hopes to Exact will create about 150 jobs for Madison.

This is latest in a string of recent announcements from Exact, which includes closing "an $8.2 million private placement of 4.3 million shares of its common stock.”

June 21, 2009

Mayo Clinic venture capital fund is humming along

Here's some from a piece that will be in the business section Monday. For the full story, check out the dead tree edition and postbulletin.com Monday.
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Mayo Clinic knows where it wants to invest ... in Mayo Clinic.

Actually, the money is not invested directly in Mayo Clinic, but in Mayo’s ideas, medical devices, drugs, tests and patents.

In mid-2008, the clinic launched the $10 million Mayo Medical Ventures Fund II to further the work of its predecessor MMV I. The fund develops joint investments with health care venture capital firms to provide financing of between $250,000 to $500,000 for companies based on Mayo creations or research.

So far this fund has financed four companies, starting with Nevro Corp. last year. Nevro is creating implantable devices to help manage chronic pain.

It also has financially fed Torax Medical Inc., a medical device firm in Minneapolis. Torax was founded in 2003 with help from Mayo and it is working on a device to control acid reflux.

June 19, 2009

Last day for Lewiston grocery

Here's some from a good piece by my colleague John Weiss about the last day of Lewiston's only grocery store. Find the full story here.


Nearly all the 24 Malt-O-Meal bins were empty, refrigerated dairy cases had but a few gallons of milk, many shelves of Wiens Food Center were bare Friday.

At 6 p.m. Saturday, the only grocery store in Lewiston will close. Scott Wiens, who owns it with his wife LouAnn, said he can’t get enough business with the store its present size and can’t afford to expand to compete with bigger stores nearby. 

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Any remaining food will be sold to Mike’s, another independent grocery store, in St. Charles.


It means people will have to drive at least 12 miles or more for most of their groceries.


But three people at the store Friday said the closing means more than extra driving time. It means a harder time to raise money for FFA, fewer jobs and a harder time for Vickie Luehmann to bake Christmas cookies.


For Natalie Schumann, the closing means she will have more time on her hands this summer. She will be a senior at Lewiston-Altura High School next year and planned to work at Wiens again this summer. 


Vickie Luehmann said she began shopping there since it opened 18 years ago. “Certainly it’s a loss to our community,” she said. “Scott really bent over backwards to get things.”

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