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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Greg Galusha named Zone Manager for Everett Office

MacDonald-Miller's Greg Galusha will be transitioning into the roll of sales and business zone lead out of the Everett office, which serves northeast King County, south Snohomish County, and areas up north through Bellingham.
Greg joined the company in 2003 as a service account manager for the greater eastside area.  Throughout his tenure, Greg has consistently delivered top ranking sales numbers and helped his territory realize significant growth in customer base and overall volume.  He has embraced our Building Performance initiatives and has been instrumental in leading the effort to educate customers on the benefits of energy management as it relates to building maintenance and overall system performance.
Greg's most recent success was securing MacDonald-Miller Facility Solutions® role as the ESCO (Energy Services Company) for the City of Bellevue.  It was Greg's initiative that convinced the city to consider an energy services program and issue the RFP.
The transition will take place over the next 3-6 months as we look for another star player to assume his territory on the eastside.  Please join us in congratulating Greg and wishing him (and the northend team) continued growth and success.

City unveils $38M effort to make buildings efficient

Excerpt of article published November 10, 2010 by Katie Zemptseff, DJC Staff Reporter

Community Power Works is partnering with Seattle Steam and MacDonald Miller. The program combines state, city, utility and private funding for a total of $11 million that will go to mechanical and electrical upgrades, with the goal of reducing energy use between 15 percent and 45 percent.

Owners of the commercial buildings will not pay upfront retrofit costs or incur debt. After receiving an energy audit, they enter into an energy services contract with MacDonald Miller. MacDonald Miller guarantees monthly utility savings, completes the work and owners pay for the upgrade through their monthly Seattle Steam bill over five to seven years.

Curtis said MacDonald Miller will try to leverage the program to create more capital for other projects over the next three years.

Read the entire article here: www.djc.com

More on Community Power Works can be found here: www.communitypowerworks.org