GRILLING UP THANKS.
Visitors to our Kalispell store were recently greeted by the smell of hamburgers and hot dogs on the grill and the sounds of a friendly crowd gathered to enjoy them. The occasion? A customer-appreciation BBQ lunch.
Visitors to our Kalispell store were recently greeted by the smell of hamburgers and hot dogs on the grill and the sounds of a friendly crowd gathered to enjoy them. The occasion? A customer-appreciation BBQ lunch.
Meet the April additions to Western States. Move your mouse over the photos to see names and locations.
One would think that dogs training in a building full of cats would have a difficult time staying focused. Fortunately, when the Meridian Police Department recently brought three dogs from their K-9 unit to the Meridian Western States Cat for on-going training, it wasn’t a typical dog-meets-cat scenario.
Meet the March additions to Western States. Move your mouse over the photos to see names and locations.
Looking for ways to break into new industries and markets, members from the Meridian EPG team recently attended the Pacific Northwest Section American Water Works Conference in Boise, ID. The idea was to raise awareness and gather engineering insights within the drinking-water industry. If some leads generated out of the deal, so much the better.
Meet the January and February additions to Western States. Move your mouse over the photos to see names and locations.
Despite the puddles and overcast skies, record numbers of customers turned out to enjoy a hamburger or hot dog (or both) at Lewiston’s Customer Appreciation Day last week.
The parking lot of the Four Rivers Cultural Center in Ontario, Oregon was the site of an unusual scene recently: a Cat backhoe and mini-excavator sat in the middle of the pavement, surrounded by caution tape and excited onlookers.
Meridian Parts Supervisor Jon Reigles has been a welcoming, friendly face around Western States for 27 years. So when the Meridian crew turned out en masse to congratulate him at his retirement party on April 1, it was bittersweet.
Columbia Pacific Construction, Inc. is building a wind farm. And not just any run-of-the-mill one either. Equipped with blades 185 feet long, these wind turbines will tower over 300 feet high. Twenty-five of these giant power creators will line the mountain top above the small community of Huntington, Oregon, along the Snake River.