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August 1, 2011

OAK CREEK, Wis. — When Crothall Laundry Services officially opened its new 83,000-square-foot plant during a June 27 ribbon-cutting ceremony, it marked a couple of important firsts for the Crothall Healthcare service line.

The $13 million state-of-the-art facility is the first that Crothall has built from the ground up, and it is reportedly the first laundry in the world to certify (its processing included) under certain LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environ-mental Design) standards. And Crothall managed to complete the construction project—aided by many industry vendors—in nine months.

The Oak Creek plant is one of the few facilities in the country to process laundry without using high-pressure steam boilers, Crothall says. Instead, a Thermal Engineering of Arizona (TEA) Steamless Water Treatment System—using natural gas-fired hot-water boilers and heat exchangers that recover heat from wastewater—provides all the hot water needed for washing.

A gas-fired steam tunnel from Colmac Industries used to condition lab coats generates its own steam independent of a traditional boiler.

Chicago Dryer Co. provided 42 pieces of flatwork finishing equipment to maximize the facility’s production output with minimal utility consumption and enhanced ergonomics.

There are two full ironing lines, each featuring an Edge Maxx cornerless spreader-feeder; Powerhouse self-contained, thermal-fluid, deep-chest ironer; Skyline large-piece folders and Bridge linen transition conveyors.

A small-piece ironing line includes a Rapid Feed small-piece vacuum feeding aid, Powerhouse ironer, Skyline folder and DrawBridge linen transition conveyors to move stacked product from the folder directly to the main conveyor.

There are dedicated systems for a variety of tumble-dried items, including three Blanket Blaster cornerless finishing systems, two Skyline fitted sheet and blanket folders and six Air Chicago folders. All have Bridge conveyors.

All feeding and folding equipment incorporates CHI•Touch, an advanced PC-based control system that offers optimum visualization of operating, electronic and mechanical machine functions, as well as real-time display of production numbers.

Crothall management can set, monitor and maintain desired standards and production levels. CHI•Touch guides employees through each step of machine operation and uses the same logic and uniform style display on every machine so staff members can easily switch to a different piece of equipment.

Click here for Part 1.

July 18, 2011

BOSTON — G&K Services Co., in conjunction with its subsidiary Alltex Uniform Rental Service of Manchester, N.H., has agreed to settle claims by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that it violated the Clean Air Act, the agency reports.

G&K has agreed to pay a civil penalty of $65,000; to undertake a Supplemental Environmental Project with a value of at least $220,000 to replace old, polluting wood stoves in southern New Hampshire with new, cleaner models; and to install equipment at its facility to remove approximately 20 tons per year of emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs).

G&K has agreed to help homeowners replace their inefficient and polluting wood stoves with EPA-certified wood stoves or other cleaner, more efficient home heating equipment such as gas or propane heaters. The company will provide funding to households as an incentive to help replace pre-1988 woodstoves, which are a significant source of indoor and outdoor air pollution.

“Southern New Hampshire will most certainly benefit from this wood stove change-out project,” says Curt Spalding, regional administrator of EPA’s New England regional office. “Homeowners will get help with buying new wood stoves, which will burn cleaner and more efficiently. This project will create green jobs, reduce fuel consumption, and improve air quality in communities by reducing the harmful pollutants that come from wood smoke.”

G&K operates an industrial laundry that, among other services, washes and dries towels that have been used by its customers to wipe oils and solvents from machinery and equipment. The soiled towels contain VOCs and hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) that are emitted during the cleaning process.

Alltex installed new laundry equipment at the facility in 1997 without installing air pollution control equipment and without applying for a permit required under the Clean Air Act’s new source review provisions, according to the EPA. In 2007, G&K Services acquired Alltex, and continued to operate the facility without the required controls and permit to limit VOC emissions.

The consent decree, lodged in federal court and requiring approval by the court, requires the company to install emissions control equipment to significantly reduce VOC and HAP emissions, to conduct emissions testing, and to come into compliance with the Clean Air Act by getting the proper permits. The EPA action grew out of an EPA inspection of the facility in July 2008.

December 11, 2009

BETHLEHEM, Pa. — MacIntosh Services is a large commercial linen rental supply company in the scenic Lehigh Valley area of Northeastern Pennsylvania. From its headquarters here, the company supplies not only table linens and napkins, but also uniforms, chef apparel, aprons and towels to restaurants, hotels and other facilities throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

The company uses more than 90,000 gallons of clean water a day. In fact, MacIntosh Services is the largest single user of municipal water in the Bethlehem metropolitan area.

June 18, 2009

NEW ORLEANS — There’s a cost to “greening” your laundry operation, but there are ways you can protect the environment without breaking the bank, Ed Kwasnick, president of Turn-Key Industrial Engineering Services, suggested during an early-morning educational session today at Clean ’09.

April 3, 2009

NORRISTOWN, Pa. — A facility that launders the protective garments used by nuclear industry employees is monitoring the buildup of radiation in the Schuylkill River, Pennsylvania environmental officials report, but the low levels detected to date present no danger to the public through recreational contact or fish consumption.

February 5, 2007

Laundry operators are called on to perform a delicate balancing act each and every day: clean their goods in an efficient, cost-effective way while conserving resources and preventing pollution.

They aren’t always successful, as the Ohio laundry president who was recently fined $5,000 and sentenced to probation for improper wastewater handling can attest.

With costs related to water and energy continuing to rise, equipment and systems intended to better utilize or even reuse resources grow more attractive.

April 26, 2006

MALIBU, Calif. – Natural gas and fuel oil prices have been on the rise in recent years, and industry veteran Al Jenneman doesn’t see that trend ending anytime soon. Thus, it’s vitally important, urges Jenneman, sales executive vice president from Kemco Systems, that commercial laundries regularly monitor their energy efficiency and adjust their operations accordingly.

This can be calculated using therms per hundredweight, he says, which is a critical and oftentimes cost-saving measuring stick.