Commercial Buildings Maintenance Inc has commercial cleaning contracts in the following New York towns:
Victor NY:
Victor is a town in Ontario County, New York, USA. The population was 9,977 at the 2000 census. The town is named after Claudius Victor Boughton, a hero of the War of 1812.
The Town of Victor contains a village, also called Victor. The town is in the northwest corner of Ontario County and is southeast of Rochester.
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Williamsville NY:
Williamsville is a village in Erie County, New York in the United States. The population was 5,573 at the 2000 census. The village is named after Jonas Williams, an early settler. It is part of the Buffalo–Niagara Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area.
Williamsville is located mostly within the town of Amherst, but Creek Road and Creek Heights in the south part of the village are in the town of Cheektowaga. The village is in the northeastern quadrant of Erie County.
Williamsville is also a postal ZIP code: 14221 (14231 for PO Boxes); however, that zip code contains large sections of the town outside of the village and also includes significant commercial areas within Clarence.
The Williamsville School District is a school system covering Williamsville, most of the eastern part of Amherst, and a small portion of the western end of Clarence.
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Rochester NY:
Rochester is a city in Monroe County, New York, south of Lake Ontario in the United States. The Rochester metropolitan area is the second largest economy in New York State, behind the New York City metropolitan area. Known as The World’s Image Centre, it was also once known as The Flour City, and more recently as The Flower City. It is the county seat for Monroe County.
Rochester’s population is approximately 207,000, making it New York’s third most populous city. It is at the center of a larger Metropolitan Area which encompasses and extends beyond Monroe County and includes Genesee County, Livingston County, Ontario County, Orleans County and Wayne County. This area, which is part of the Western New York region, had a population of 1,037,831 people at the time of the 2000 Census. As of 1 July 2005, this population rose slightly, to 1,039,028.
Rochester was ranked as the sixth ‘most livable city’ among 379 U.S. metropolitan areas in the 25th edition (2007) of the Places Rated Almanac. The Rochester area also received the top ranking for overall quality of life among U.S. metros with populations of more than 1 million in a 2007 study by Expansion Management magazine. In the same study, Expansion Management rated the area’s public schools as sixth best nationwide.
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Amherst NY:
Amherst is a town in Erie County, New York. As of the 2000 census, the town had a total population of 116,510. This represents an increase from the 1990 census figure of 111,711. The town is named for Lord Jeffrey Amherst, a British Army officer of the colonial period.
The largest and most populous suburb of Buffalo, New York, the Town of Amherst encompasses most of the Village of Williamsville and the hamlets of Eggertsville, Getzville, Snyder, Swormville, and East Amherst. The town is in the northern part of the county and borders a small section of the Erie Canal.
Amherst is home of the Amherst campus of the State University of New York at Buffalo, the graduate campus of Medaille College, a campus of Bryant and Stratton College, and Daemen College. Millard Filmore Suburban Hospital is located in the center of town on Maple Road.
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Help Wanted Cleaning Crew Staff
$8.50 per hour
Need help in the following New York cities:
Amherst
Rochester
Victor
Williamsville
Contact Malcolm Carter
1 888 695-9665
info@commercialbldgmaintenanceinc.com
Commercial Buildings Maintenance Inc
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SEE ALL NEW YORK CITY VIDEOSEven if you’re visiting New York for the first time, you’ve undoubtedly seen some version of this city before. Its images are ubiquitous—in movies and on television, in novels high- and low-brow, in songs, in classic photographs, and on the nightly news. You’ve probably watched enough Times Square ball drops and late-show lead-ins to anticipate its blaring horns, mega-watt neon lights, and skyscraper canyons—and, to be sure, New York will deliver them all. Perhaps you first fell in love with New York through Woody Allen movies—and imagine it to be full of neurotic writers and fledgling actors, who have affairs in Bohemian apartments and somehow can afford to eat out every night. While few live a lifestyle that glamorous, artists, intellectuals, and pseudo-intellectuals of every stripe do seem to gravitate here. Does your family tell stories of immigrant ancestors arriving at Ellis Island, penniless but hopeful? The 300 languages spoken on the city’s streets and its incomparable array of ethnic cuisines prove that New York is still a melting pot today. Perhaps you were raised on Eloise stories at bedtime, and you dream of luxuriating in plushly decorated hotel suites. New York certainly has no shortage of those to offer, though unless you’re here on an expense account, you’ll likely have to content yourself with a drink in a chic hotel bar. If, with some trepidation, you’re expecting the Gotham City of crime novels and the tabloid press—grimy and congested, dangerous and macabre—the extent to which New York has cleaned itself up in recent decades may surprise you, though a host of urban problems persist. On the other hand, if you’re expecting New York’s sidewalks to be as celebrity-packed as the pages of Us Weekly , you’ll probably be let down—but who knows who you might spot parading in SoHo? The truth is, each of these facets of New York life contains an element of truth, but what makes the city so intense is that it’s beyond any single cliché—and more than all of them put together. You could spend your whole life exploring New York and never exhaust its riches.
Facts And Figures
Mayor: Michael Bloomberg, re-elected to a second four-year term in 2005.
Population: 8.1 million, 18.7 million in the surrounding metropolitan area.
Land Area: 321 sq. mi.—the most densely populated region in North America.
Most Populated Borough: Brooklyn, with 2.5 million residents (Manhattan has 1.5 million).
Racial Mix: 45% white, 27% African American, 27% Latino, 10% Asian.
Tourists: 46.0 million visitors in 2007—83% domestic, 17% foreign.
Subway: 468 stations, 660 mi. of track, and 1.4 billion annual riders.
Licensed Yellow Cabs: 12,778.
Hotel Rooms: 71,000, with 85% occupancy on an average night.
New Restaurants Opened Yearly: About 250.
Acres Of Parkland: 28,000, 843 in Central Park.
Money Exchanged Annually On The Nyse: $5.5 trillion.
Gold Stored At The Federal Reserve Bank: $600 billion’s worth—in 27 lb. bars, locked 80 ft. underground by a 90-ton steel door.
Tallest Buildings: Empire State Building (1250 ft.), Chrysler Building (1046 ft.), American International Building (952 ft.).
Tallest Structure In 1664: A two-story windmill.
Essentials
Passport: Required by citizens of all foreign countries except Canada.
Visa: Required by citizens of most countries
Currency: US dollar (US$)
Sales Tax: 8.625 %; for hotel rooms, there is an additional 5 % hotel tax and $2 room fee per night
Tourism Office:www.iloveny.com
Drinking Age: 21
Phone Numbers: 911 for emergencies
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