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Wednesday, August 27, 2014 2 www.tulsabusiness.

com
DAI LY BRI EFS
THREE JOIN TULSAS
GH2 ARCHITECTS
Three new staff members have joined GH2
Architects, LLC.
Clark Todd Gollotte, AIA, EDAC has joined
GH2 as an architect and project manager.
Gollotte has been working in the archi-
tectural eld for more than ten years and
gained extensive healthcare and retail archi-
tecture experience while working in Metro
Atlanta.
Gollotte is a Registered Architect in Oklaho-
ma and Georgia, a member of the American
Institute of Architects, a registered disaster
assessment evaluator through CalEMA and
has attained Evidence-Based Design Accredi-
tation and Certication.
He is a Rural Studio Alumnus of Auburn
University where he earned a Bachelor of
Architecture and a Bachelor of Interior Ar-
chitecture. In his spare time, Gollotte enjoys
spending time with his wife and three children
and is a volunteer architect for Engineering
Ministries International.
Kayla Hein, Associate IIDA, SEGD is an in-
terior architect intern at GH2.
Having received a Masters Degree of Interior
Architecture and Product Design from Kansas
State University, Hein is now excited to be
living in Tulsa and working on hospitality,
education and multi-use projects at GH2.
She is an associate member of the Inter-
national Interior Design Association (IIDA),
and a member of the Society for Experiential
Graphic Design (SEGD) and Tulsas Young
Professionals.
In 2013, Hein received the Ellithorpe Student
Research Award, which provided a grant to
fund her thesis project. She also received
Best Portfolio from IIDA Kansas City in
the fall of 2013.
Robert Wadsack, Associate AIA, LEED AP
has joined GH2 as an architectural intern.
Wadsack has a well-rounded education
having received a Bachelor of Architecture
with distinction and Minor in Construction
Science from the University of Oklahoma and
a Master of Science in Structural Engineering
from Oklahoma State University.
He has ve years of experience working in
the architectural eld and also spent time
working for a millwork company.
Wadsack is a Leadership in Energy and En-
vironmental Design Accredited Professional
(LEED AP) and an Associate Member of the
American Institute of Architects.
While attending, Wadsack was involved
with AIA Students by serving on the board
and participating in Freedom by Design com-
munity service program.
GableGotwals lawyers are honored
GableGotwals lawyers from Tulsa and
Oklahoma City have been named to the
2015 Edition of Best Lawyers.
The 44 attorneys named to the list cov-
er a variety of legal disciplines.
They are: Steven L. Barghols: Arbi-
tration, Bet-the-Company Litigation,
Commercial Litigation, Mediation and
Oil and Gas Law; John R. Barker: Bank-
ing and Finance Law, Corporate Law,
Litigation Mergers and Acquisitions
and Securities/Capital Markets Law;
David L. Bryant: Arbitration, Bet-the-
Company Litigation, Commercial Litiga-
tion and Mediation; Dennis C. Cameron:
Bet-the-Company Litigation, Commer-
cial Litigation, Energy Law, Litigation
Environmental, Oil and Gas Law and
Product Liability Litigation Defen-
dants, and Timothy A. Carney: Com-
mercial Litigation, Employment Law
Management, Insurance Law, Litiga-
tion - ERISA and Litigation Labor and
Employment.
Also, Richard M. Carson: Energy Law
and Environmental Law; Dale E. Cot-
tingham: Commercial Litigation, En-
ergy Law, Litigation Environmental,
Oil and Gas Law and Water Law; Jeffrey
A. Curran: Insurance Law; John Dale:
Bankruptcy and Creditor Debtor Rights/
Insolvency and Reorganization Law and
Litigation - Bankruptcy; Sidney G. Du-
nagan: Banking and Finance Law, Bet-
the-Company Litigation, Commercial
Litigation, Energy Law and Litigation
Environmental; W.A. Drew Edmondson:
Administrative/Regulatory Law, Appel-
late Practice, Commercial Litigation and
Government Relations Practice; Craig
A. Fitzgerald: Commercial Litigation,
Insurance Law, Litigation Antitrust
and Litigation - Intellectual Property;
Amelia A. Fogleman: Appellate Practice,
Commercial Litigation and Litigation
Antitrust; John A. Gaberino, Jr.: En-
ergy Law; Robert S. Glass: Bankruptcy
and Creditor Debtor Rights/Insolvency
and Reorganization Law and Health
Care Law; Thomas Gruber: Administra-
tive / Regulatory Law; Jeffrey D. Hassell:
Banking and Finance Law, Bankruptcy
and Creditor Debtor Rights/Insolvency
and Reorganization Law, Corporate Law,
Litigation Banking and Finance, Liti-
gation Bankruptcy, Litigation Real
Estate and Litigation Trusts and Es-
tates; Steven G. Heinen: Corporate Law;
Oliver S. Howard: Antitrust Law, Appel-
late Practice, Banking and Finance Law,
Bet-the-Company Litigation, Commer-
cial Litigation, Corporate Compliance
Law, Corporate Law, Employment Law
Management, Energy Law, Litiga-
tion Banking and Finance, Litigation
Environmental, Litigation Labor
and Employment, Litigation Mergers
and Acquisitions, Litigation Securi-
ties, Mass Tort Litigation / Class Actions
Plaintiffs, Oil and Gas Law, Personal
Injury Litigation Defendants, Product
Liability Litigation Defendants and
Product Liability Litigation Plaintiffs,
and David D. Hunt II: Banking and Fi-
nance Law and Oil and Gas Law.
Also, Paul H. Johnson: Patent Law; Da-
vid E. Keglovits: Administrative/Regula-
tory Law, Commercial Litigation, Insur-
ance Law and Litigation Construction;
Eric R. Kin: Energy Law, Litigation
Regulatory Enforcement (SEC, Telecom,
Energy), Oil and Gas Law; Lloyd W. Lan-
dreth: Natural Resources Law; Graydon
Dean Luthey, Jr.: Bet-the-Company Liti-
gation, Commercial Litigation, Corporate
Compliance Law, Corporate Governance
Law, Corporate Law, Gaming Lawand
Native American Law; Leslie L. Lynch:
Employment Law Management and
Litigation Labor and Employment;
David B. McKinney: Employee Benets
(ERISA) Law, Health Care Law, Litiga-
tion ERISA; Sheppard F. Miers, Jr.:
Employee Benets (ERISA) Law, Litiga-
tion and Controversy Tax and Tax Law;
Joseph W. Morris: Arbitration, Mediation
and Natural Resources Law; Richard B.
Noulles: Bet-the-Company Litigation,
Commercial Litigation, Natural Resourc-
es Law and Oil and Gas Law; Terry D.
Ragsdale: Commercial Litigation and En-
ergy Law; Ronald Ricketts: Environmen-
tal Law and Litigation Environmental;
Rob F. Robertson: Commercial Litiga-
tion, Corporate Governance Law, Energy
Law, Litigation Banking and Finance,
Litigation Bankruptcy, Litigation
Environmental, Litigation; Real Estate
and Oil and Gas Law; Scott R. Rowland:
Commercial Litigation and Litigation
Environmental; John Henry Rule: Bank-
ing and Finance Law, Commercial Litiga-
tion, Litigation Banking and Finance
and Litigation First Amendment;
Stephen A. Schuller: Land Use and Zon-
ing Law, Litigation Real Estate and
Real Estate Law; G. Blaine Schwabe III,:
Bankruptcy and Creditor Debtor Rights /
Insolvency and Reorganization Law, Bet-
the-Company Litigation and Commercial
Litigation; Lisa T. Silvestri: Energy Law;
Leasa M. Stewart: Litigation ERISA;
Amy Stipe: Commercial Litigation and
Oil and Gas Law; James M. Sturdivant:
Bet-the-Company Litigation, Commer-
cial Litigation, Energy Law, Litigation
Antitrust, Litigation Securities and
Securities/Capital Markets Law; Sidney
K. Swinson: Bankruptcy and Creditor
Debtor Rights/Insolvency and Reorgani-
zation Law, Bet-the-Company Litigation
and Litigation Bankruptcy; Mia Vahl-
berg: Commercial Litigation, and Bradley
W. Welsh: Appellate Practice and Com-
mercial Litigation.
BY RALPH SCHAEFER
ralphs@tulsabusiness.com
the nations inland waterway system.
Earlier, the authority had considered
adding a mobile crane to the wharf.
With the new crane to be built about
where the transit shed once stood will
enable two barges to be loaded or un-
loaded simultaneously. It will be capable
of handling between 90 and 95 percent of
all barge shipments on the waterway.
David Yarbrough, deputy port director,
believed the plans could be ready for bid-
ding by the authoritys September meet-
ing and be in operation a year later.
As part of the wharf project, Cherokee
Pride Construction, Inc. was awarded an
$872,055 construction for reconstructing
about 6,000 square feet in the wharfs cen-
tral section.
Three other rms bid on the project
with the highest at $1.18 million. The
engineers estimate for the work was $1.1
million.
Kloeckner Metals Corp. was approved
to lease an additional 2.17 acres of land for
proposed expansion of its steel processing
and distribution facility. The company has
a 100,000 square-foot facility on its exist-
ing lease of 7.07 acres at the port.
Shippers moved 186,277 tons of cargo
on 114 barges through the port during
July, the authority was told.
It was more than the 143,388 tons on
89 barges the previous month, but down
from the 275,798 tons and 153 barges a
year earlier.
Outbound cargo accounted for 125,681
tons and 72 barges while inbound trafc
amounted to 60,696 tons and 42 barges.
The ports trafc represented 38 per-
cent of the 484,575 tons moved along the
Oklahoma portion of the waterway and a
fth of the 911,246 tons carried along the
entire two-state route.
Crane, from 1

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