Archive for January, 2010

CIGNA Insurance Information for Employees

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

To maximize your company insurance experience and resources, please use the following information to access information from CIGNA.

Log onto myCIGNA.com to set up your personalized account to help you track your health history, deductibles and claims.  You are able to search for doctors, hospitals and dentists, see what benefits are covered, print forms and print or order additional ID cards.

Are you using your new health insurance ID cards?  Every family member (enrolled in the plan) should have received a new health insurance card from CIGNA.  Make sure to use this card the next time you go to your doctor or pharmacy!

Did you contact CIGNA to update Other Insurance Information?  In order to expedite processing of your family’s claims, you are required to notify CIGNA if your dependents (enrolled in the health plan) have other insurance coverage.  You may log onto myCIGNA.com or call 1-800-CIGNA24 to update this information.

Annual Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc. Safety Meetings

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

The Annual Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc. Safety Meetings are scheduled for Monday, January 25 and Tuesday, January 26 at the Santa Claus United Methodist Church in Santa Claus, Indiana.  Registration will begin each morning at 6:00 am (CST) / 7:00 am (EST) and the meetings will commence at 3:30 pm (CST) / 4:30 pm (EST).

The 2010 Annual Safety Meeting will feature Keynote Speaker Billy Robbins and his dynamic presentation “Hooked on Safety”. 

Charter bus transportation is scheduled to leave the Charlestown Quarry at 5:30 am (EST) on Tuesday, January 26.  Employees interested in using this company sponsored transportation can sign up with their supervisor.

Santa Claus United Methodist Church is located at 351 N Holiday Blvd., Santa Claus, IN 47579.

For driving directions to Santa Claus United Methodist Church in Santa Claus, Indiana, click here: http://www.mapquest.com/maps?city=Santa+Claus&state=IN&address=351+N+Holiday+Blvd&zipcode=47579-8530&country=US&latitude=38.122563&longitude=-86.926642&geocode=ADDRESS

A Day in the Life of Mulzer Employee Staff Sgt. Martin Kittridge

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010
Staff Sgt. Martin Kittridge

Staff Sgt. Martin Kittridge

Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc. employee, Staff Sgt. Martin Kittridge, is currently serving in Joint Base Balad, Iraq.  Kittridge has been a long time member of  the Army Reserves, as well as an employee of Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc.  The following article was taken from the Nutclub Acorn, a publication by the West Side Nut Club of which Kittridge is a member.

“At 0400 West Side Nut Club Member Staff Sgt. Martin Kittridge, platoon sergeant for the ITN (Iraqi Transportation Network) mission security detail, starts hi day in Joint Base Balad (JBB), Iraq.  Sgt. Kittridge’s platoon is responsible for guarding the entrance to the base known as the North Entry Control Point.  This entry point is where all civilian convoys operated by host nations or third country companies enter JBB as part of the ITN mission.  The ITN is the first phase of the Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq.  The control point is guarded by a combination of the civilian security teams, military units and a security detail from the 90th Sustainment Brigade, based in Little Rock, Ark.  This checkpoint serves as a portal for the massive logistics and supply operations driving the repositioning of equipment from the outlying forward operating bases that are in the process of closing down.  This equipment has been deemed non-essential to the current mission in Iraq.  “The personnel and equipment requirements of this mission are very high,” said Staff Sgt. Kittridge, “currently there are approximately 30 soldiers assigned to this mission.”

“My job once we were in Balad was to sit in a secured building at a desk with several computers and track the huge amounts of fuel in the area of responsibility (AOR) that th e90th was in charge of, which is in Diyala Province.  I also was one of the units auditors that went to the fuel farm and made sure that civilian contractors were doing what the government pays them to do,” said Kittridge.  “We had all had to do a lot of training to get us up to speed on what the job called for.  We had to learn Iraqi numbers because the license plates are Iraqi and our Transportation Movement Requests (TMR’s) are all in English so we had to be able to translate quickly.  We also had to be certified in combat lifesaving techniques and personnel searches.  once the mission started, which we took over from another active duty unit, my days started at 0400 and went to 1900 hours daily.  I had to make sure everyone that was assigned for the days mission showed up, did our morning checks of the vehicles we were using, go to breakfast, then we had to pick up our TMR’s from a transportation unit here on the base.”

As trucks approach the initial gate, they are stopped a safe distance from the checkpoint and the drivers are signaled to exit the vehicle.  At this point, months of training are employed by the security team members as they search the drivers and vehicles for explosives and other hazards. 

“Soldiers that work this mission are not exempt from any of the additional duties that might come up.  On any given day, several individuals may be pulled from Charge of Quarters duty, maintenance or other tasks, but we still have to complete the mission,” explained Kittridge about the ability of the ITN mission team to maintain other responsibilities of being a Soldier while ensuring mission success.”

Mulzer Crew Spots Fisherman in Trouble on the Ohio

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Yesterday afternoon, around 4:48 p.m. CST, a Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc. River Crew unloading Magnetite from the Weinbach Plant south of Green River Road and I-164, spotted a fishing boat running in circles with no one aboard.  Upon further inspection, the crew spotted a man in the Ohio River nearby with a floatation device floating up river with the current away from the location of the running fishing boat.  The Mulzer employees were unable to reach Randy Merta, 45, of Chandler, Ind. on their own.  Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc. employee, Jim Rhodes, immediately called 911 and directed rescue services to the location of the Merta.   Rhodes also contacted Ohio Valley Marine Service to help rescuers pull the Merta from the river as quickly as possible using one of their available tugboats.

According to the Courier & Press, the temperature of the river was recorded at 32 degrees Wednesday at J.P. Myers Lock and Dam at Mount Vernon, Ind.  Merta was reportedly in the water for approximately 25 minutes.  Thanks to the keen eye and quick response of the Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc. crew, Merta was spotted and rescued before anything tragic occurred.

For the complete story, check out the Courier & Press article at http://www.courierpress.com/news/2010/jan/06/warrick-deputy-rescued-ohio-river/.