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U.S. Furniture Makers on ABC News

By Home Furnishings Business in Business Strategy on February 28, 2011

Bedroom furniture manufacturer Vaughan Bassett Furniture is among U.S. furniture manufacturers featured on ABC News' "Made in America Challenge" this week.

The Vaughan-Bassett segment should air Wednesday or Thursday. In the four-minute feature story, ABC will provide a Dallas, Texas, family with an American-made bedroom set, living room set and kitchen appliances.

"We are extremely proud that Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Company has been chosen to provide the American-Made bedroom set for this home," said John D. Bassett III, chairman of Vaughan-Bassett, Galax, Va. "ABC News has informed us that they are creating a series of at least five stories this week that feature products Made in America by American craftsmen. Because Vaughan-Bassett is the largest American manufacturer of wooden bedroom furniture, we are a natural fit for this series."

A producer from New York and a film crew from Charlotte, N.C., spent seven hours filming manufacturing processes at the Galax factory on Feb. 21, interviewing several workers and Executive Vice President Doug Bassett.

Promotional ads featuring Vaughan-Bassett employees are already running on ABC programs. ABC News also created a Web site featuring the American-made products that will be shown during its week-long series.

Harden Furniture, McConnellsville, N.Y., also will be featured on the show, the Utica Observer-Dispatch reported.

EPA Revises Air Pollution Rules

By Home Furnishings Business in Business Strategy on February 28, 2011 Responding to a court-ordered deadline, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued a revised air pollution rules for industrial boilers last week.

Compared to earlier proposals, the new rules will make it easier and less expensive for domestic furniture producers to meet federal air quality standards.

The new regulations contain many provisions that were revised from the rules proposed last spring. The home furnishings industry was among groups that battled the original  proposed standards that were estimated to carry a $20 billion price tag for impacted business and industries.

Key changes in the rule impacting home furnishings manufacturers include:

* Area source boilers fired by "biomass, including dry wood fuel used by most furniture producers, will not be required to meet numeric emission limits as originally proposed. Under the revised rule, companies with area source boilers are required to perform a boiler tun-up every two years to improve combustion efficiency;

* For major source boilers, the revision includes a single solid fuel category instead of separate biomass and coal subcategories. The revised emission limits for major source boilers, including those that burn biomass, appear achievable using baghouse technology rather than an electrostatic precipitator coupled with carbon monoxide emission controls. The revision could reduce compliance costs from as much as $3 million per stack to around $200,000 per stack.

In a rule issued in tandem with the boiler rules, EPA stated that engineered wood residuals (or €œresinated wood€) are not considered a €œsolid waste.€ Therefore, combustion of resinated wood will be subject to the boiler emission standards, rather than EPA€™s more stringent emission standards for solid waste incinerators.

Bill Perdue, AHFA vice president of regulatory affairs, credits the commitment of AHFA€™s technical team with producing the environmental, health and financial details that were needed to prove the excessive industry burden and economic impact of the original boiler rule.  Team members included Barbara Nuckles, Ashley Furniture; Barry Branscome, Vaughan-Bassett; David Davis, Hooker Furniture; David Stout, Broyhill/Furniture Brands; Donna Musick, Hickory Chair; Mike Zimmerman, Sauder Woodworking; Rick Partlow, Harden Furniture; Justin Dusseault, Stickley; and Jesse Childers, Baker.

AHFA€™s advocacy efforts on the boiler rule began in 2002, when EPA first initiated rulemaking on air quality standards for industrial boilers.  The original rule proposed that companies retrofit even small industrial boilers with expensive add-on pollution control technologies. The controversial proposal was withdrawn following testimony from AHFA and other impacted industries.

EPA published a revised rule in September 2004 that, by definition, excluded 90 percent of the solid fuel, fire tube boilers used in the wood furniture industry. But EPA€™s efforts to develop a cost-effective standard provoked an outcry from environmental groups. In June 2007, the federal Court of Appeals in Washington sided with environmentalists, vacated the boiler rule and instructed the EPA to start over.

As the January 2011 deadline for finalizing the rule neared, AHFA capped off three years of lobbying efforts with a last-minute Washington visit in December to put industry executives face-to-face with key U.S. Senators. Executives who responded to AHFA€™s call included John and Wyatt Bassett, Vaughan-Bassett Furniture; Micah Goldstein, Stanley Furniture; Nuckles, Ashley Furniture; Reggie Propst, Kincaid Furniture; John Botsford, Furniture Brands International; and Gat Caperton, Gat Creek Furniture.

After hearing from industry executives describing the devastating implications of the proposed rule, the senators responded. They persuaded EPA to file a motion with the federal District Court in Washington seeking a 15-month extension of the deadline for finalizing the rule. Although the court rejected that motion, EPA€™s boiler rule strategy was impacted by the high level of interest in both houses of Congress.

Drexel, Thomasville Move HP Showrooms to IHFC

By Aggregated Content in High Point on February 26, 2011 from http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?z4177801865&z=1250249030 Thomasville Furniture Inds. and Drexel Heritage will relocate their High Point Market showrooms to the International Home Furnishings Center for the spring show.

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Scanwood Gets Reprieve from Court

By Aggregated Content in Bankruptcy on February 26, 2011 from http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?z4177855899&z=1250249032 Financially insolvent Scanwood Canada Ltd. won court approval Friday to borrow $1 million to ramp up production and keep about 220 people working at its plant.

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Furniture Brands Executives Wager on a Turnaround

By Aggregated Content in Case Goods on February 25, 2011 from http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r4174259133&f=10761 Furniture Brands International has been racked with problems, but a cluster of buying by top executives may signal they believe the worst is in the past.

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