NEWS July 19, 2010 : Page 6newsline summer months.” Additionally, the majority of HARDImembers reported higher inventory levels in May, which was the first such occurrence since December 2008. When broken out by region, distrib-utor sales were up everywhere except for the West. Noting that the data for the Western region has been erratic “MORE THAN JUST THE AND MOST CONVENIENT BEST-PRICED TECHNICAL SALES AND BUSINESS TRAINING ” IN THE HVAC INDUSTRY. Over 400 ONLINE Technical, Sales and Business Courses available 24/7 to make you and your company more profitable. All Technical Courses are NATE-recognized CEHs. $999 12-Month Subscription Unlimited use for up to 25 employees ACCA RELEASES TECHNICAL MANUALS, STANDARDS IN ELECTRONIC FORMAT ■ ASHRAE REVISES REFRIGERATION HANDBOOK FOR 2010 ■ so far in 2010, HARDI’s chief econo-mist, Alan Beaulieu of the Institute for Trend Research, commented, “Oregon and Washington had a horrible month for housing permits in May, with April to May declines of 16.9 percent and 11 percent, respectively.” Yet overall, according to HARDI, most distributors are seeing continued signs of recovery. Other general reports for May were not as positive. Residential data revealed that sales of new homes were down nationwide. According to estimates released by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, sales of new single-family houses fell 33 percent in May. In addition to the lackluster report from the residential market, the U.S. Census Bureau also reported that nonresidential construction spending decreased slightly in May. According to Anirban Basu, chief economist for the Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC), “The level of construction spending in May hardly changed from the prior month, and April represented an improvement over March. However, for the most part, [this] report should be viewed as fur-ther indication that the U.S. economic recovery continues to stall.” Basu noted that construction spending growth is still dominated by publicly financed projects, and private financing for con-struction has not returned. Management System Learning Online, Anytime. First Female President Named A ASK ABOUT OUR TEST DRIVE… Visit online at www.hvacls.com or call 1-800-654-3283, Option 2 eProduct #71 at achrnews.com LBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Condi-tioning Engineers (ASHRAE) installed new officers and directors at its 2010 annual meeting held June 26-30. The new president is Lynn G. Bel-lenger, PE, Fellow ASHRAE, partner, Pathfinder Engineers & Architects, Rochester, N.Y. Bellenger is ASHRAE certified as a Building Energy Model-ing Professional and a High Perfor-mance Building Design Professional. She is the first female president in the society’s 116-year history. Bellenger’s presidential theme is “Modeling a Sustainable World,” and she noted that in energy simulation, daylight analysis, CFD and BIM soft-ware, there are powerful resources Lynn G. Bellenger that can be used effectively in an integrated design process for new buildings and in analyzing retrofit opportunities in existing buildings. “Our biggest challenge is imple-integrated design in daily menting practice,” she said. “The traditional approach where the architect designs the building shape, orientation, and envelope and then transmits the drawings to the mechanical and elec-trical engineers for their design is a silo approach that misses the rich opportunities for optimizing building performance through a collaborative approach from the beginning. It EXPLICIT All black for neater installations. Average 75% recycled content, highest of any textile duct liner on the market. Deep, rich black. Same great performance as ToughGard® 2. Did we mention the cool black color? DUCT LINER TOUGHGARD® T TEXTILE DUCT LINER BACK IN BLACK t DFSUBJOUFFE DPN t IUUQ CMPH DFSUBJOUFFE DPN 300'*/( t 4*%*/( t 53*. t 8*/%084 t %&$,*/( t 3"*-*/( t '&/$& */46-"5*0/ t (:146. t $&*-*/(4 t '06/%"5*0/4 t 1*1& eProduct #22 at achrnews.com 6 is going to require a real cultural shift in our industry to transform the design process, and it’s a shift that has to occur ifwe are going to reach our goal of net-zero-energy buildings.” BPI to Draft Standards M ALTA, N.Y. — The Build-ing Performance Institute Inc. (BPI) launched four new standards initiatives for home energy performance and personnel certification credentialing. The new technical standards are intended to improve residential performance for air distribution, conventional insula-tion, air leakage control, and quality assurance inspection. Parties interested in helping to draft the standards are encouraged to contact BPI at standards@bpi.org with their contact information and background, indicating the working group in which they want to partici-pate. Most of the meetings will be by teleconference; working groups plan to commence drafting standards AIR CONDITIONING, HEATING & REFRIGERATION NEWS ■ July 19, 2010 HVAC Learning Solutions |


