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ISS Reno Expo Presenter Hosts Webinar on Climate Control Legalities

Article-ISS Reno Expo Presenter Hosts Webinar on Climate Control Legalities

Jeffrey Greenberger, an official presenter for the upcoming Inside Self-Storage Reno Expo, will host a Legal Learning webinar regarding self-storage climate control on Tuesday, July 11th. "Defining 'Climate Control' at Your Self-Storage Site" will take place from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. ET. Participation is free for all attendees thanks to the event's sponsors, Inside Self-Storage magazine and Selfstoragelegal.com.

The online event addresses the unique legal and logistical challenges involved in offering climate control at a self-storage facility. Greenberger will discuss definitions of climate control as well as the differences between owner and tenant perception of the offering. He'll provide suggestions for handling the legal aftermath of mechanical system failures due to blackouts, brownouts or other interruptions. He'll also address how facility owners should define control in rental documents, providing suggested disclaimer language to assist in forming related provisions.

Greenberger will also present two educational seminars at the upcoming ISS Reno Expo, July 19-22, at the Reno Hilton Resort & Casino. "Death, Divorce, Disappearance and DragNet" takes place on July 19, 2:15 to 3:15 p.m. It focuses on difficult issues involved with tenant interaction: What to do if a customer passes away; how to handle a spouse when a tenant divorces; what to do when a customer disappears; and how to field police investigations. "Advanced Legal Issues" is an overview of critical topics: wrongful sale, breach of contract, employment law, wage and hour claims, valuation limitation, package-acceptance policies and procedures, and more. It takes place on July 20, 11 to 11:50 a.m.

To register for the July 11th Legal Learning webinar, visit www.insideselfstorage.com/webinars.

For more information about the ISS Reno Expo and to register, visit www.insideselfstorage.com/expo/reno.

Arizona Storage Association Re-Elects Board

Article-Arizona Storage Association Re-Elects Board

In the recent election of the Arizona Self-Storage Association (AZSSA) Board of Directors, five industry professionals were re-elected for a new three-year term: Bill Green, owner of Double J Court Self Storage in Wickenburg; Richard Marmor, president of Arbour Development Co.; Mike Perry, owner of AA Val-U-Stor in Yuma; Matt Shelton, Southwest regional recruiter for Shurgard; and Ted Williams, president of TLW Construction. Each is charged with directing member programs and services in support of the association.
 
The Arizona Self-Storage Association owes most of its success to the unpaid volunteer leadership of the board of directors, said Robert Schoff, association president. The recently re-elected board members have all gone above and beyond the call of duty in support of the association, and AZSSA is proud to have them represent its members.
 
The AZSSA is a non-profit trade group dedicated to strengthening the self-storage industry in Arizona, promoting professional standards and quality, and presenting a unified voice on issues affecting the industry. Founded in 1996, it represents almost 500 self-storage facilities throughout the state. For more information, visit www.azselfstorage.com.

5A Wins Kapolei Employer of the Year Award

Article-5A Wins Kapolei Employer of the Year Award

AAAAA Rent-A-Space in Kapolei (Oahu), Hawaii, was awarded the 2006 Employer of the Year Award by the local Rotary Club. The company is being recognized for excellent customer and community service.
 
In the Kapolei community, AAAAA has participated in the Hawaii Food Drive, Toys for Tots, Kapolei Christmas Parade and Sunset in the Park. It is a sponsor of the Pony League, Leeward Community Colleges Taste of the Stars, Taste at Kapolei, and the Kapolei Rotary Dictionary Project at Mauka Lani and Makakilo Elementary Schools. The company has also donated dozens of toys collected from its associates and customers for the foster childrens Christmas party sponsored by the Rotary Clubs of Honolulu and Kapolei.
 
Accepting the award for AAAAA was Elizabeth Morales, vice president and general manager of Hawaiian operations. She attributed the companys success to owners who encourage active involvement in the community and her support team at the Kapolei location. Being a part of the local community means everything, she said. We are often asked to help out in the community, and we do it wholeheartedly. It feels great to give back.
 
Over the years, AAAAA has received many commendations for its involvement in community service. It currently stores goods for more than 200 non-profit organizations at no charge or greatly reduced rates. It has always provided free storage for disaster and emergency-relief agencies, as well as the victims of earthquakes, fires, floods, hurricanes, etc.
 
AAAAA Rent-A-Space has been in business for more than 35 years, with 13 storage facilities in the San Francisco Bay Area and East Bay, and three in the Hawaiian Islands. For more information, call 808.871.6230.

Grandmother Stops Fleeing Bad Guy

Article-Grandmother Stops Fleeing Bad Guy


Iris Davis, Space Coast Bodybuilding Women’s Grand Master Champion, 2002 and 2003.
Driving at 75 mph, carrying high-caliber weapons and sporting a patent disregard for the consequences didn’t help two robbers escape their crime. Not when they ran afoul of petite 62-year-old Iris Davis, grandmother and bodybuilder. Davis, manager of All Space Storage, Cocoa, Fla., and her assistant manager Bobby Brozman were outside the facility watching the police try to impede a getaway car along U.S. 1. The suspects, careening from lane to lane and repeatedly crossing the median, were speeding south in the northbound lane. A crash was inevitable.

“Suddenly, bang, they smashed into an off-duty police car right outside my building in front of us,” Davis says. The robbers tried to escape, running by Brozman, who tripped one. Davis chased after the other, who turned on her. She reacted instinctively, she says. She grabbed his shirt, ripping it off and delaying him long enough for a police officer to catch him. “It all happened right in a split second,” she says.

Davis, who stands 5 feet 1 inch tall, weighs 100 pounds. She is also a champion bodybuilder who had the guts and determination to enter her first competition at 50.

Determined to Succeed

Davis’ determination not only extends to doing what is right in the split second it took to stop a criminal, but to all aspects of her life. She was always athletic, she says. Born in Dublin, Ireland, she and her friends walked and ran everywhere. When she was 15, her family moved to London, where she began weight training in her mid-30s. Often she was the sole female gym member. “There weren’t any role models for women in those days,” she says. “So I was on my own, usually working out with the guys.” She went dancing several times a week and was very athletic.

But at 45, Davis was struck down by myalgic encephalomyelitis, a virus that attacks the brain causing debilitating fatigue, acute muscle pain and memory impairment. She was paralyzed for five months and the prognosis was poor. The doctors said she’d be in a wheelchair for the rest of her life, she says. But Davis was determined to fully restore her health, and two years later she walked through the doors of a fitness center.


Iris Davis, manager of All Space Storage, Cocoa, Fla., and assistant manager Bobby Brozman.

“When I went back to the gym I couldn’t lift a quarter of a pound,” she says. Driven, she turned to what she knew best—bodybuilding, with her regimen of weights and circuit training, aerobics and nutrition. “I am in pain every day, but if I’m going to be in pain, let it be from using my muscles, not from losing them,” she says of her illness.

Encouraged by other gym members, she entered her first bodybuilding contest in London at age 50. Although she was competing against 20- and 30- year-old women, the age difference didn’t intimidate her. She took second place. “I did it once, did well, and that was enough,” she says. “Or so I thought.”

No Retirement

In 1996, Davis and her husband moved to Florida where she continued weight training. She met bodybuilder Doug Chastain, who was looking for a woman partner to compete in the 2002 Florida State pairs division. “I hadn’t competed in seven years, but I eventually agreed,” she says. She won the mixed pairs with Chastain at the Space Coast Bodybuilding competition, as well as the women’s grand master’s title. She was 57 and the oldest woman in the show. The same year she took eight more first places, and several seconds and thirds.

Davis won the women’s title again in 2003. Since then, she’s earned nine championship titles and several second-and third-place finishes. Last August, she won her final title, the Women’s Over 30 in Daytona Beach, Fla. In 2002, she was awarded two Presidential Fitness Awards—one for fitness walking and one for weightlifting.

Davis retired from competition last year, but not from the fitness life. She is a National Physique Committee judge and personal trainer, counting a champion among her students. “Keeping fit has been such a part of my life for so long I don’t see myself stopping.”

Although she no longer flexes her muscles on stage, Davis still works out to maintain her physical and mental well-being. Her daunting training regimen begins after nine hours at work. She spends 1.5 hours every day at the gym followed by a six-mile walk. Once a week she exercises for two to three hours to develop her legs. “It’s not just about lifting weights,” she says. “It’s about eating right and thinking right.”

Loving Her Job

With her focus on fitness, don’t imagine Davis watches the clock at work and counts the minutes until she can start pumping iron at the gym. She says she loves her job at All Space.


Heroes Bobby Brozman and Iris Davis in the lobby of All Space Storage, Cocoa, Fla.

Davis has been working for All Space Storage for 10 years, starting part-time when the facility had only 60 units. Since then, the store has grown to nearly 800 tenants and incorporates a U-Haul truck-rental section. Davis gradually took on more responsibility and now runs the facility. “My job is to do the absolute best I can for my employer so he doesn’t have a worry,” she says. But that also includes doing right for the tenants.

Facility owner Robert Brozman describes Davis as an “employer’s dream.” She has an over-abundance of confidence and a take-charge attitude, he says. He praises her acute business sense and consulted her when he was planning to add another building. “She soon became the force behind my facility.”

Brozman notes Davis’s affinity with people and her professional and courteous manner. When she helps tenants choose a unit that is right for them, it may not be the largest one. Tenants often return to the facility years later because of the treatment they received from Davis, he says. He is not shy to credit All Space’s success to Davis.

Davis doesn’t consider her age a factor in how she lives her life. “There’s no such thing as age,” she says. “I have a fierce pride in myself that leaves me with a desire to succeed.”