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Kevin Yanik

Kevin Yanik is editor-in-chief of Pit & Quarry. He can be reached at 216-706-3724 or kyanik@northcoastmedia.net.

Tealinc restructures to emphasize company leadership

The company is reinforcing its leadership in three top-line divisions, with the ultimate goal of supporting Tealinc customer needs. Keep Reading

Quarterly concrete, agg revenue down at Eagle Materials

The decline, however, reflects the sale of the company’s northern California concrete and aggregate businesses during the first quarter of fiscal 2021. Keep Reading

Mississippi Lime names safety director

Ryan Seelke will focus on proactive risk-based safety practices, leadership and training in his new role at Mississippi Lime Co. Keep Reading

Case dealer Sonsray Machinery takes on Arizona

Sonsray Machinery’s expansion into the Grand Canyon State gives the dealer 15 locations across five Western states where it's representing Case Construction Equipment. Keep Reading

New head of sales, marketing at Case

Case Construction Equipment is turning to Terry Dolan, a longtime construction industry exec, to fill the role voided by the retiring George Preocanin. Keep Reading

Volvo CE’s outside-the-box innovation continues

Having previously debuted futuristic prototypes in loading and hauling, Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE), through Volvo Concept Labs, has yet another prototype in an electric mid-size excavator. Keep Reading

House bill introduced to save mining operations, jobs

The Saving America’s Mines Act will prohibit any administration from unilaterally halting the mining of critical minerals on federal lands where mining is currently permissible. Keep Reading

Sponsored: Looking back on the Zatezalo era at MSHA

Ogletree Deakins’ Bill Doran reflects on assistant secretary David Zatezalo’s three-plus years at the Mine Safety & Health Administration (MSHA), detailing what his legacy there is and what its lasting effects might be. Keep Reading

Diesel pickup trucks trending upward

According to the Diesel Technology Forum, five of top 10 fastest-growing alternative technology vehicles in the U.S. last year were diesel powered. Keep Reading

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