Skip to main content
Products
Product Overview
See how gWorks solutions can help your city or county.
Finance Hub
Simplified fund accounting made for local government.
HR Hub
Payroll and time-tracking made easy for local governments.
FrontDesk
Enable your citizens to interact with your government online.
Utility Billing Hub
Streamline utility billing and revenue collection with a user-friendly utility billing system.
Operations Hub
From permits to work orders, optimize all aspects of your agency's operations.
Maps Hub
Visualize assets on a map to make informed decisions and provide public transparency.
Storage Hub
Securely store all your important documents in one centralized location.
gWorks Payments
Process government payments with ease using an integrated payment processing system.
Support and
Professional Services
Trust friendly, reliable support and professional services to help you every step of the way.
Solutions
Essentials
Core
Enterprise
Company
About
Careers
Resources
All Resources
Insights
Testimonials
Events
Webinars
gWorks University
+1 (888)-608-7666
Support Login
Contact Us
Menu
Products
Cloud Solutions
Product Overview
Finance Hub
HR Hub
FrontDesk
Utility Billing Hub
Operations Hub
Maps Hub
Storage Hub
gWorks Payments
Support and Professional Services
Solutions
Solutions
Essentials
Core
Enterprise
Company
Company
About
Careers
Resources
Resources
Insights
Testimonials
Events
gWorks University
Support Login
© 2020 GIS Workshop, LLC dba gWorks
Contact Us
+1 (888)-608-7666
gWorks Named to GovTech 100 for 5th Consecutive Year
Learn more
Insight

Excessive Optimism: Why You Should Employ Physical Asset Management

by
gWorks Editors
Asset Management
An image of a public works crew repairing a water main break on main street in a small town.
Asset Management
Share:

Close

Joe is the CEO & President of gWorks. This article appeared in the June edition of Cityscape, a publication created by the Iowa League of Cities (ILC). Read the full edition here. gWorks is an ILC Partner.

“It won’t happen to us.” 
“I’ve been here 40 years, and nothing has ever happened.” 
“This is how we’ve always done it.” 
“We can wait a few years until we deal with it.”

We’ve all made comments like these above whether in our personal or professional lives.  Sometimes these things we tell ourselves are immaterial, and sometimes they can upend your life or your organization.  Bad things only happen to other people is what we’re really communicating. This belief is Excessive Optimism, and it is at the heart of why risk management is so important. 

Under state law, as a general rule, Iowa municipalities have some immunity from liability claims but can be responsible for civil wrongs that result in destruction or injury or life, property, or both due to negligence, errors of omission and breach of duty—just to name a few.  The employment of risk management—the mitigation of risk through analysis, controls and oversight—aids city leaders in reducing excessive optimism and in building a defensible bulwark because they are proactive in preventing civil wrongs.

An essential tool in your risk management toolbox is physical asset management (PAM), which is the proactive maintenance of, documentation of, and data-driven decision making for physical infrastructure assets in a city to achieve a desired reliability and life at the lowest possible ownership cost.

Story about Fire Hydrants

Using PAM as part of your risk management program reduces a city’s risk exposure while promoting a better quality of life.  Here are five reasons why:

  1. Reliably functioning assets reduces operational risk because stoppages or disruptions decrease over time as does their impact on people and businesses.
  2. Proactive maintenance reduces hazard risk such as sewage backups, unclean water, and their related health risks.
  3. Preventative maintenance reduces financial risk because reactionary maintenance and crisis response are more detrimental to a city’s budget than their proactive cousin. Documentation of this maintenance can reduce an insurer’s or federal agency’s claim processing and investigation time, and it may improve the likelihood of claim approval.
  4. Reliably functioning assets reduces reputational risk because voters will remember the bad and not the good.  A city’s brand and an official’s tenure can be curtailed when assets fail and cause harm to life or property
  5. Logs, documentation and metadata from PAM are considered to reduce litigation risk because a municipality is defensible. 

Officials leading municipalities of all sizes seek to achieve a vibrant and resilient community.  Citizens want to live in this type of community to raise their families, conduct business and have hometown pride.  These same citizens interact with a city’s assets throughout the day.  A city that employs PAM not only reduces all five types of risk related to Excessive Optimism, but also bolsters the vibrancy, resiliency and pride every community wants. 

Wouldn’t you rather spend your time being excessively optimistic about your upcoming festival, high school sports tournament or new economic development project than hoping that every fire hydrant will work should it ever be needed?

Joe is the CEO & President of gWorks. This article appeared in the June edition of Cityscape, a publication created by the Iowa League of Cities (ILC). Read the full edition here. gWorks is an ILC Partner.

“It won’t happen to us.” 
“I’ve been here 40 years, and nothing has ever happened.” 
“This is how we’ve always done it.” 
“We can wait a few years until we deal with it.”

We’ve all made comments like these above whether in our personal or professional lives.  Sometimes these things we tell ourselves are immaterial, and sometimes they can upend your life or your organization.  Bad things only happen to other people is what we’re really communicating. This belief is Excessive Optimism, and it is at the heart of why risk management is so important. 

Under state law, as a general rule, Iowa municipalities have some immunity from liability claims but can be responsible for civil wrongs that result in destruction or injury or life, property, or both due to negligence, errors of omission and breach of duty—just to name a few.  The employment of risk management—the mitigation of risk through analysis, controls and oversight—aids city leaders in reducing excessive optimism and in building a defensible bulwark because they are proactive in preventing civil wrongs.

An essential tool in your risk management toolbox is physical asset management (PAM), which is the proactive maintenance of, documentation of, and data-driven decision making for physical infrastructure assets in a city to achieve a desired reliability and life at the lowest possible ownership cost.

Story about Fire Hydrants

Using PAM as part of your risk management program reduces a city’s risk exposure while promoting a better quality of life.  Here are five reasons why:

  1. Reliably functioning assets reduces operational risk because stoppages or disruptions decrease over time as does their impact on people and businesses.
  2. Proactive maintenance reduces hazard risk such as sewage backups, unclean water, and their related health risks.
  3. Preventative maintenance reduces financial risk because reactionary maintenance and crisis response are more detrimental to a city’s budget than their proactive cousin. Documentation of this maintenance can reduce an insurer’s or federal agency’s claim processing and investigation time, and it may improve the likelihood of claim approval.
  4. Reliably functioning assets reduces reputational risk because voters will remember the bad and not the good.  A city’s brand and an official’s tenure can be curtailed when assets fail and cause harm to life or property
  5. Logs, documentation and metadata from PAM are considered to reduce litigation risk because a municipality is defensible. 

Officials leading municipalities of all sizes seek to achieve a vibrant and resilient community.  Citizens want to live in this type of community to raise their families, conduct business and have hometown pride.  These same citizens interact with a city’s assets throughout the day.  A city that employs PAM not only reduces all five types of risk related to Excessive Optimism, but also bolsters the vibrancy, resiliency and pride every community wants. 

Wouldn’t you rather spend your time being excessively optimistic about your upcoming festival, high school sports tournament or new economic development project than hoping that every fire hydrant will work should it ever be needed?

Highlights

Start Date
End DAte
Location and Address

Website

View external link

Add to Calendar
Apple CalendarGoogle CalendarOutlook Calendar

Add to your calendar:

Excessive Optimism: Why You Should Employ Physical Asset Management

Joe is the CEO & President of gWorks. This article appeared in the June edition of Cityscape, a publication created by the Iowa League of Cities (ILC). Read the full edition here. gWorks is an ILC Partner.

“It won’t happen to us.” 
“I’ve been here 40 years, and nothing has ever happened.” 
“This is how we’ve always done it.” 
“We can wait a few years until we deal with it.”

We’ve all made comments like these above whether in our personal or professional lives.  Sometimes these things we tell ourselves are immaterial, and sometimes they can upend your life or your organization.  Bad things only happen to other people is what we’re really communicating. This belief is Excessive Optimism, and it is at the heart of why risk management is so important. 

Under state law, as a general rule, Iowa municipalities have some immunity from liability claims but can be responsible for civil wrongs that result in destruction or injury or life, property, or both due to negligence, errors of omission and breach of duty—just to name a few.  The employment of risk management—the mitigation of risk through analysis, controls and oversight—aids city leaders in reducing excessive optimism and in building a defensible bulwark because they are proactive in preventing civil wrongs.

An essential tool in your risk management toolbox is physical asset management (PAM), which is the proactive maintenance of, documentation of, and data-driven decision making for physical infrastructure assets in a city to achieve a desired reliability and life at the lowest possible ownership cost.

Story about Fire Hydrants

Using PAM as part of your risk management program reduces a city’s risk exposure while promoting a better quality of life.  Here are five reasons why:

  1. Reliably functioning assets reduces operational risk because stoppages or disruptions decrease over time as does their impact on people and businesses.
  2. Proactive maintenance reduces hazard risk such as sewage backups, unclean water, and their related health risks.
  3. Preventative maintenance reduces financial risk because reactionary maintenance and crisis response are more detrimental to a city’s budget than their proactive cousin. Documentation of this maintenance can reduce an insurer’s or federal agency’s claim processing and investigation time, and it may improve the likelihood of claim approval.
  4. Reliably functioning assets reduces reputational risk because voters will remember the bad and not the good.  A city’s brand and an official’s tenure can be curtailed when assets fail and cause harm to life or property
  5. Logs, documentation and metadata from PAM are considered to reduce litigation risk because a municipality is defensible. 

Officials leading municipalities of all sizes seek to achieve a vibrant and resilient community.  Citizens want to live in this type of community to raise their families, conduct business and have hometown pride.  These same citizens interact with a city’s assets throughout the day.  A city that employs PAM not only reduces all five types of risk related to Excessive Optimism, but also bolsters the vibrancy, resiliency and pride every community wants. 

Wouldn’t you rather spend your time being excessively optimistic about your upcoming festival, high school sports tournament or new economic development project than hoping that every fire hydrant will work should it ever be needed?

Joe is the CEO & President of gWorks. This article appeared in the June edition of Cityscape, a publication created by the Iowa League of Cities (ILC). Read the full edition here. gWorks is an ILC Partner.

“It won’t happen to us.” 
“I’ve been here 40 years, and nothing has ever happened.” 
“This is how we’ve always done it.” 
“We can wait a few years until we deal with it.”

We’ve all made comments like these above whether in our personal or professional lives.  Sometimes these things we tell ourselves are immaterial, and sometimes they can upend your life or your organization.  Bad things only happen to other people is what we’re really communicating. This belief is Excessive Optimism, and it is at the heart of why risk management is so important. 

Under state law, as a general rule, Iowa municipalities have some immunity from liability claims but can be responsible for civil wrongs that result in destruction or injury or life, property, or both due to negligence, errors of omission and breach of duty—just to name a few.  The employment of risk management—the mitigation of risk through analysis, controls and oversight—aids city leaders in reducing excessive optimism and in building a defensible bulwark because they are proactive in preventing civil wrongs.

An essential tool in your risk management toolbox is physical asset management (PAM), which is the proactive maintenance of, documentation of, and data-driven decision making for physical infrastructure assets in a city to achieve a desired reliability and life at the lowest possible ownership cost.

Story about Fire Hydrants

Using PAM as part of your risk management program reduces a city’s risk exposure while promoting a better quality of life.  Here are five reasons why:

  1. Reliably functioning assets reduces operational risk because stoppages or disruptions decrease over time as does their impact on people and businesses.
  2. Proactive maintenance reduces hazard risk such as sewage backups, unclean water, and their related health risks.
  3. Preventative maintenance reduces financial risk because reactionary maintenance and crisis response are more detrimental to a city’s budget than their proactive cousin. Documentation of this maintenance can reduce an insurer’s or federal agency’s claim processing and investigation time, and it may improve the likelihood of claim approval.
  4. Reliably functioning assets reduces reputational risk because voters will remember the bad and not the good.  A city’s brand and an official’s tenure can be curtailed when assets fail and cause harm to life or property
  5. Logs, documentation and metadata from PAM are considered to reduce litigation risk because a municipality is defensible. 

Officials leading municipalities of all sizes seek to achieve a vibrant and resilient community.  Citizens want to live in this type of community to raise their families, conduct business and have hometown pride.  These same citizens interact with a city’s assets throughout the day.  A city that employs PAM not only reduces all five types of risk related to Excessive Optimism, but also bolsters the vibrancy, resiliency and pride every community wants. 

Wouldn’t you rather spend your time being excessively optimistic about your upcoming festival, high school sports tournament or new economic development project than hoping that every fire hydrant will work should it ever be needed?

Highlights

Start Date
End DAte
Location and Address

Website

View external link

Add to Calendar
Apple CalendarGoogle CalendarOutlook Calendar

Add to your calendar:

Excessive Optimism: Why You Should Employ Physical Asset Management

Joe is the CEO & President of gWorks. This article appeared in the June edition of Cityscape, a publication created by the Iowa League of Cities (ILC). Read the full edition here. gWorks is an ILC Partner.

“It won’t happen to us.” 
“I’ve been here 40 years, and nothing has ever happened.” 
“This is how we’ve always done it.” 
“We can wait a few years until we deal with it.”

We’ve all made comments like these above whether in our personal or professional lives.  Sometimes these things we tell ourselves are immaterial, and sometimes they can upend your life or your organization.  Bad things only happen to other people is what we’re really communicating. This belief is Excessive Optimism, and it is at the heart of why risk management is so important. 

Under state law, as a general rule, Iowa municipalities have some immunity from liability claims but can be responsible for civil wrongs that result in destruction or injury or life, property, or both due to negligence, errors of omission and breach of duty—just to name a few.  The employment of risk management—the mitigation of risk through analysis, controls and oversight—aids city leaders in reducing excessive optimism and in building a defensible bulwark because they are proactive in preventing civil wrongs.

An essential tool in your risk management toolbox is physical asset management (PAM), which is the proactive maintenance of, documentation of, and data-driven decision making for physical infrastructure assets in a city to achieve a desired reliability and life at the lowest possible ownership cost.

Story about Fire Hydrants

Using PAM as part of your risk management program reduces a city’s risk exposure while promoting a better quality of life.  Here are five reasons why:

  1. Reliably functioning assets reduces operational risk because stoppages or disruptions decrease over time as does their impact on people and businesses.
  2. Proactive maintenance reduces hazard risk such as sewage backups, unclean water, and their related health risks.
  3. Preventative maintenance reduces financial risk because reactionary maintenance and crisis response are more detrimental to a city’s budget than their proactive cousin. Documentation of this maintenance can reduce an insurer’s or federal agency’s claim processing and investigation time, and it may improve the likelihood of claim approval.
  4. Reliably functioning assets reduces reputational risk because voters will remember the bad and not the good.  A city’s brand and an official’s tenure can be curtailed when assets fail and cause harm to life or property
  5. Logs, documentation and metadata from PAM are considered to reduce litigation risk because a municipality is defensible. 

Officials leading municipalities of all sizes seek to achieve a vibrant and resilient community.  Citizens want to live in this type of community to raise their families, conduct business and have hometown pride.  These same citizens interact with a city’s assets throughout the day.  A city that employs PAM not only reduces all five types of risk related to Excessive Optimism, but also bolsters the vibrancy, resiliency and pride every community wants. 

Wouldn’t you rather spend your time being excessively optimistic about your upcoming festival, high school sports tournament or new economic development project than hoping that every fire hydrant will work should it ever be needed?

Joe is the CEO & President of gWorks. This article appeared in the June edition of Cityscape, a publication created by the Iowa League of Cities (ILC). Read the full edition here. gWorks is an ILC Partner.

“It won’t happen to us.” 
“I’ve been here 40 years, and nothing has ever happened.” 
“This is how we’ve always done it.” 
“We can wait a few years until we deal with it.”

We’ve all made comments like these above whether in our personal or professional lives.  Sometimes these things we tell ourselves are immaterial, and sometimes they can upend your life or your organization.  Bad things only happen to other people is what we’re really communicating. This belief is Excessive Optimism, and it is at the heart of why risk management is so important. 

Under state law, as a general rule, Iowa municipalities have some immunity from liability claims but can be responsible for civil wrongs that result in destruction or injury or life, property, or both due to negligence, errors of omission and breach of duty—just to name a few.  The employment of risk management—the mitigation of risk through analysis, controls and oversight—aids city leaders in reducing excessive optimism and in building a defensible bulwark because they are proactive in preventing civil wrongs.

An essential tool in your risk management toolbox is physical asset management (PAM), which is the proactive maintenance of, documentation of, and data-driven decision making for physical infrastructure assets in a city to achieve a desired reliability and life at the lowest possible ownership cost.

Story about Fire Hydrants

Using PAM as part of your risk management program reduces a city’s risk exposure while promoting a better quality of life.  Here are five reasons why:

  1. Reliably functioning assets reduces operational risk because stoppages or disruptions decrease over time as does their impact on people and businesses.
  2. Proactive maintenance reduces hazard risk such as sewage backups, unclean water, and their related health risks.
  3. Preventative maintenance reduces financial risk because reactionary maintenance and crisis response are more detrimental to a city’s budget than their proactive cousin. Documentation of this maintenance can reduce an insurer’s or federal agency’s claim processing and investigation time, and it may improve the likelihood of claim approval.
  4. Reliably functioning assets reduces reputational risk because voters will remember the bad and not the good.  A city’s brand and an official’s tenure can be curtailed when assets fail and cause harm to life or property
  5. Logs, documentation and metadata from PAM are considered to reduce litigation risk because a municipality is defensible. 

Officials leading municipalities of all sizes seek to achieve a vibrant and resilient community.  Citizens want to live in this type of community to raise their families, conduct business and have hometown pride.  These same citizens interact with a city’s assets throughout the day.  A city that employs PAM not only reduces all five types of risk related to Excessive Optimism, but also bolsters the vibrancy, resiliency and pride every community wants. 

Wouldn’t you rather spend your time being excessively optimistic about your upcoming festival, high school sports tournament or new economic development project than hoping that every fire hydrant will work should it ever be needed?

Highlights

No items found.
Products / Solution
No items found.

Joe is the CEO & President of gWorks. This article appeared in the June edition of Cityscape, a publication created by the Iowa League of Cities (ILC). Read the full edition here. gWorks is an ILC Partner.

“It won’t happen to us.” 
“I’ve been here 40 years, and nothing has ever happened.” 
“This is how we’ve always done it.” 
“We can wait a few years until we deal with it.”

We’ve all made comments like these above whether in our personal or professional lives.  Sometimes these things we tell ourselves are immaterial, and sometimes they can upend your life or your organization.  Bad things only happen to other people is what we’re really communicating. This belief is Excessive Optimism, and it is at the heart of why risk management is so important. 

Under state law, as a general rule, Iowa municipalities have some immunity from liability claims but can be responsible for civil wrongs that result in destruction or injury or life, property, or both due to negligence, errors of omission and breach of duty—just to name a few.  The employment of risk management—the mitigation of risk through analysis, controls and oversight—aids city leaders in reducing excessive optimism and in building a defensible bulwark because they are proactive in preventing civil wrongs.

An essential tool in your risk management toolbox is physical asset management (PAM), which is the proactive maintenance of, documentation of, and data-driven decision making for physical infrastructure assets in a city to achieve a desired reliability and life at the lowest possible ownership cost.

Story about Fire Hydrants

Using PAM as part of your risk management program reduces a city’s risk exposure while promoting a better quality of life.  Here are five reasons why:

  1. Reliably functioning assets reduces operational risk because stoppages or disruptions decrease over time as does their impact on people and businesses.
  2. Proactive maintenance reduces hazard risk such as sewage backups, unclean water, and their related health risks.
  3. Preventative maintenance reduces financial risk because reactionary maintenance and crisis response are more detrimental to a city’s budget than their proactive cousin. Documentation of this maintenance can reduce an insurer’s or federal agency’s claim processing and investigation time, and it may improve the likelihood of claim approval.
  4. Reliably functioning assets reduces reputational risk because voters will remember the bad and not the good.  A city’s brand and an official’s tenure can be curtailed when assets fail and cause harm to life or property
  5. Logs, documentation and metadata from PAM are considered to reduce litigation risk because a municipality is defensible. 

Officials leading municipalities of all sizes seek to achieve a vibrant and resilient community.  Citizens want to live in this type of community to raise their families, conduct business and have hometown pride.  These same citizens interact with a city’s assets throughout the day.  A city that employs PAM not only reduces all five types of risk related to Excessive Optimism, but also bolsters the vibrancy, resiliency and pride every community wants. 

Wouldn’t you rather spend your time being excessively optimistic about your upcoming festival, high school sports tournament or new economic development project than hoping that every fire hydrant will work should it ever be needed?

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Joe is the CEO & President of gWorks. This article appeared in the June edition of Cityscape, a publication created by the Iowa League of Cities (ILC). Read the full edition here. gWorks is an ILC Partner.

“It won’t happen to us.” 
“I’ve been here 40 years, and nothing has ever happened.” 
“This is how we’ve always done it.” 
“We can wait a few years until we deal with it.”

We’ve all made comments like these above whether in our personal or professional lives.  Sometimes these things we tell ourselves are immaterial, and sometimes they can upend your life or your organization.  Bad things only happen to other people is what we’re really communicating. This belief is Excessive Optimism, and it is at the heart of why risk management is so important. 

Under state law, as a general rule, Iowa municipalities have some immunity from liability claims but can be responsible for civil wrongs that result in destruction or injury or life, property, or both due to negligence, errors of omission and breach of duty—just to name a few.  The employment of risk management—the mitigation of risk through analysis, controls and oversight—aids city leaders in reducing excessive optimism and in building a defensible bulwark because they are proactive in preventing civil wrongs.

An essential tool in your risk management toolbox is physical asset management (PAM), which is the proactive maintenance of, documentation of, and data-driven decision making for physical infrastructure assets in a city to achieve a desired reliability and life at the lowest possible ownership cost.

Story about Fire Hydrants

Using PAM as part of your risk management program reduces a city’s risk exposure while promoting a better quality of life.  Here are five reasons why:

  1. Reliably functioning assets reduces operational risk because stoppages or disruptions decrease over time as does their impact on people and businesses.
  2. Proactive maintenance reduces hazard risk such as sewage backups, unclean water, and their related health risks.
  3. Preventative maintenance reduces financial risk because reactionary maintenance and crisis response are more detrimental to a city’s budget than their proactive cousin. Documentation of this maintenance can reduce an insurer’s or federal agency’s claim processing and investigation time, and it may improve the likelihood of claim approval.
  4. Reliably functioning assets reduces reputational risk because voters will remember the bad and not the good.  A city’s brand and an official’s tenure can be curtailed when assets fail and cause harm to life or property
  5. Logs, documentation and metadata from PAM are considered to reduce litigation risk because a municipality is defensible. 

Officials leading municipalities of all sizes seek to achieve a vibrant and resilient community.  Citizens want to live in this type of community to raise their families, conduct business and have hometown pride.  These same citizens interact with a city’s assets throughout the day.  A city that employs PAM not only reduces all five types of risk related to Excessive Optimism, but also bolsters the vibrancy, resiliency and pride every community wants. 

Wouldn’t you rather spend your time being excessively optimistic about your upcoming festival, high school sports tournament or new economic development project than hoping that every fire hydrant will work should it ever be needed?

Free Download

Download this guide to see how PAM can help reduce risks in your community.

Download Now
Resource

When is the Right Time to Implement Physical Asset Management?

Read More
Insight

Transforming the Local Government Experience

Join us in celebrating Customer Service Week and meet Tina Clark, a longtime gWorks team member with over 12 years of experience. From assisting her hometown with FEMA reporting to empowering rural communities, Tina’s dedication to helping clients shines through in everything she does.
Read More
Solution

Manage and Streamline Work Completed in Your Government

Maintain your community effectively with Operations Hub. From work orders to permits and inspections, optimize all aspects of your agency's operations.
See Solution
Solution

Front Desk: A modern, convenient relationship between citizen and government

Having accurate and current asset inventory data enables local government to effectively allocate resources which saves time, costs, and disruptions.
See Solution

Ready to get started? Talk with our team today

Reliable & easy-to-use solutions to help your government know what’s going on, act decisively, and benefit greatly.

Contact our team
Secure
Simple
Integrated
Empowering Local Government through Simple Software Solutions
PRODUCTS
OverviewFrontDeskPaymentsUtility Billing HubHR HubOps HubFinance HubMaps HubStorage HubPubWorksCounty WebGIS
Solutions
EssentialsCoreEnterprise
Resources
All ResourcesInsightsTestimonialsEventsWebinarsgWorks University
Company
AboutCareersContact UsRequest a ConsultationSupport Login
888-608-7666
info@gworks.com
3905 South 148th St
Ste 200
Omaha, NE 68144
Privacy PolicyTerms of UseCookie Manager
© 2020 GIS Workshop, LLC dba gWorks. All Rights Reserved

Your Privacy is important to us

Customize your cookie preferences or click “Accept All” to agree to the storing of cookies on your device. View our Privacy Policy for more information.
Preferences
Accept All
Deny
Privacy Preference Center

Below we list the different types of cookies that we use on the Site.  The specific cookies that we use, and the categories to which they belong, are available in the consent manager. To the extent any personal information is collected through cookies, our Privacy Policy applies and complements this Policy.

Always Allow Cookies
Close
Manage Consent Preferences
Required cookies enable you to navigate the Site and to use its services and features.  Without these absolutely necessary cookies, we may not be able to provide the Site or certain services or features, and the Site will not perform as smoothly for you as we would like it to.

These cookies are used to deliver advertising that is more relevant to you and your interests. They may also be used to limit the number of times you see an advertisement and measure the effectiveness of advertising campaigns. Advertising networks usually place them with the website operator’s permission.

Personalization cookies can provide a more customized experience by remembering choices a user makes, such as their language, location, or username.

These cookies allow us to analyze your use of the Site to evaluate and improve our performance, for example, by providing us information about how our site is used.

Reject AllConfirm My Choices
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.