Latest news with #Solidago


Business Wire
09-06-2025
- Business
- Business Wire
Solidago Raises Maintenance Request Completion Rate to 86% with FacilGo
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- FacilGo, the ultimate AI-driven maintenance, turn, and renovation platform for the multifamily and single-family property markets, today announced dramatic results for their client Solidago, including a 36% rise in on-time maintenance request completion. When Solidago needed a tool to create the best possible maintenance experience for residents across their diverse portfolio of multifamily properties, FacilGo was the ideal partner to streamline processes and make property management and technician teams more productive. 'Working with Solidago has been a great experience for everyone at FacilGo, and we admire their commitment to creating welcoming environments where residents experience superior quality and service, are respected and empowered, and can grow and enrich their lives,' says FacilGo Founder and CEO Ken Murai. 'By implementing AI-driven maintenance with the FacilGo platform, Solidago saw remarkable results as their rate of timely maintenance request completion rose from 50% to 86% since March 2024.' Beyond offering trackable and consistent results across all properties, FacilGo's platform view gives the Solidago team the perspective to improve their best practices by leveraging and reusing all Solidago data, making it more efficient for the Solidago team to see how much turnover costs both in terms of supplies and services. Solidago also uses FacilGo to mitigate overhead by reducing the cost of supplies and handling resident chargebacks. During procurement, Solidago can secure the best pricing thanks to FacilGo, which tracks the pricing on all items, as well as Solidago's preferred rates. Solidago leadership is only expecting efficiency to continue improving as FacilGo provides an ongoing view of Solidago performance data. 'I live by KISS: keep it simple, stupid. FacilGo takes all the thinking out of maintenance but allows us to get the best pricing,' says Darrell Johnson, Vice President of Facilities at Solidago. 'FacilGo allows me and my team to track where we stand at all times and support each team to meet its goals. Vendors who sign up with us can get on the back end, and gain access to billing from start to finish. I would encourage anyone to use FacilGo. It's such a time saver. It's cut-and-dry with everything at your fingertips. There are no old paper trails, no phone calls. FacilGo is bringing property management to the 21st century.' About FacilGo FacilGo is an all-inclusive AI-enhanced platform for residential rental property turnover, renovation, maintenance, and call centers. The FacilGo platform streamlines work orders, procurement, services, bidding, capex/renovation management, inventory/fixed asset management, and invoicing into a seamless process within a single database to maximize NOI and ROI. FacilGo solutions have seen amazing results at properties across North America and are trusted by leading property companies.


Boston Globe
27-05-2025
- General
- Boston Globe
Chelsea Chop is the catchy new name for a classic gardening technique
And that's a good thing because it popularizes a useful technique. What's involved in the chop The method involves pruning certain perennials — those with clumping roots, like coneflower (Echinacea), black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia), goldenrod (Solidago), sneezeweed (Helenium), Salvia and yarrow (Achillea) — by cutting each stem back by one-third to one-half its height in spring. Cuts should be made on the diagonal, just above a leaf node. Related : Advertisement The 'chop' forces plants to produce bushier growth, resulting in sturdier, tighter and fuller plants that aren't as likely to grow leggy, require staking or flop over by the end of the season. It also delays blooming, which can benefit the late-summer garden. You might get creative and prune only alternate stems so that some bloom earlier and others later — or prune only half of your plants — to extend the blooming season. Do not attempt this with one-time bloomers, single-stemmed plants or those with woody stems; the amputations would be homicidal to the current season's flowers. Advertisement This image provided by Jessica Damiano shows the pruning of the top third of a chrysanthemum plant. Three such carefully timed prunings each year will result in fuller, sturdier plants. Jessica Damiano/Associated Press When should you chop? Gardeners should consider their climate and prune when their plants have grown to half their expected seasonal height, whenever that may be. (The Chelsea Chop is done at different times in different places, depending on plant emergence and growth.) A variation for late-summer and fall bloomers To take things a step further, some late-summer and fall bloomers, like Joe Pye weed, chrysanthemum and aster, would benefit from three annual chops. Related : In my zone 7, suburban New York garden, that means cutting them back by one-third each in the beginning of June, middle of June and middle of July. Customize the schedule for your garden by shifting one or two weeks earlier per warmer zone and later per cooler zone, taking the season's growth and size of your plants into account. Make the first cuts when plants reach half their expected size, the second two weeks later and the third about a month after that. I'd like this fall-plant pruning tip to catch on as well as the Chelsea Chop has. Maybe I should call it the Damiano Downsize and see what happens. Jessica Damiano writes weekly gardening columns for the AP and publishes the award-winning Weekly Dirt Newsletter.

Associated Press
08-04-2025
- Science
- Associated Press
Oaks, asters and 6 other ‘keystone' native species to plant for biodiversity
University of Delaware entomologist Doug Tallamy's research has identified 'keystone' plant species that make up the foundation of many U.S. ecosystems by producing food for native insects, thus supporting the ecological food web. Even planting just one keystone plant in the yard or in a container will help restore biodiversity on your property. Here are eight of the most important trees and plants that Tallamy, author of the new book, 'How Can I Help?', recommends (find a complete list for your ecoregion at Top keystone trees __ Oaks (Quercus spp.): Best in the 84% of the U.S. counties in which they occur. __ Native willows (Salix): Best farther north. __ Native Cottonwood (Populus): Best in drier regions. __ Native cherries (Prunus): Very important nationwide. __ Native plums (Prunus): Very important nationwide. __ Goldenrod (Solidago) __ Perennial sunflower (Helianthus) __ Aster (Symphyotrichum)