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Content about Missouri

April 2, 2012

TRSA is fostering continuous improvement in textile services industry operations including development of environmentally friendlier, more economical and safer techniques. TRSA speaks with one voice to the government, marketplace and media about best management practices (BMPs) for serving industrial, hospitality and healthcare markets. At this meeting you will learn what TRSA is saying and assess your company’s position in light of emerging BMPs.

Clean Green – Gauge your progress in conserving water and energy and modifying processes and work habits to improve efficiency as TRSA certifies such companies’ efforts and promotes them locally and nationally.

Workplace Safety– TRSA’s Safety & HR Committee is reaching out to the industry as it publishes BMPs. In Kansas City you can help ensure your operation fits the profile, helping to develop and publicize the safety BMP list:
- Executive Management Support
- Route/Driver Safety
- Wash Aisle and Lock-Out/Tag-Out
- Injury Prevention Programs
- Ergonomics

Westin Kansas City at Crown Center will host the event. Contact Salita Jones, 703-519-0029, ext. 108, sjones@trsa.org, for more information.

January 26, 2012

ALBANY, Ga. — Equinox Chemicals has announced that it has acquired Adco Cleaning Products, based in Sedalia, Mo. Terms of the acquisition were not announced.

Equinox will move Adco’s manufacturing operations to its state-of-the-art manufacturing plant in Albany, according to Yalda Harris, Equinox’s executive vice president for Global Product Management.

Dr. Jim Schreiner, Adco’s chief product technology officer, will also be relocating, she says.

Customer-service and order-taking staff will remain in Sedalia, and there will be no changes to the way customers or distributors order from Adco, Harris adds. The national sales team will remain the same.

Equinox is a specialty chemical manufacturer with specialty research, innovation, product development and commercialization capabilities that reach markets spanning the globe, the company says.

Adco manufactures a comprehensive line of specialty cleaning chemicals and detergents used in dry cleaning, commercial laundry, and janitorial and institutional cleaning applications. It offers more than 300 proprietary products through the Adco and Laidlaw brands.

“This latest acquisition will continue our aggressive strategy to revolutionize and revitalize the laundry, dry cleaning and cleaning chemical industry,” says Mark Grimaldi, CEO of Equinox Chemicals.

Mentor Partners had owned Adco since 2007.

December 8, 2011

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Faultless Laundry Co., commonly known as Faultless Linen, has decided to sell its hospitality business and focus entirely on establishing itself as a healthcare-only textile provider in the Midwest.

The company operates two healthcare-only plants in Kansas City and two more in St. Louis. The Spence family has continuously operated Faultless since Sam and Cora Spence founded it in 1896.

Faultless has served the hospitality market for decades from its downtown Kansas City plant, but that facility has aged to the point that significant repairs and reinvestment are required. Due to the financial and competitive pressures in the hospitality market, such a reinvestment doesn’t make good economic sense, the company says.

Faultless has decided to transition its hospitality business to two other Kansas City-based, family-owned linen providers: Excel Linen Supply, owned and operated by the Brancato family, and Ace Image Wear, owned and operated by the Heilman family. Faultless’ accounts are being divided between the two companies, which will retain nearly all affected Faultless employees.

Faultless continues to expand its healthcare services throughout Kansas, Missouri and Illinois, and will be opening a 103,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art plant in St. Louis next summer.

November 16, 2011

JOPLIN, Mo. — The Sisters of Mercy have made a commitment to spend as much as $543 million on a new state-of-the-art hospital—slated to open in 2014—to replace St. John’s Regional Medical Center, which was destroyed by an EF-5 tornado.

The May 22 tornado, which packed winds of up to 198 miles per hour, killed five patients and one visitor at the 367-bed hospital. The victims were among a total of 154 people killed by the severe weather in this southwestern Missouri city of 50,000 people.

20-Minute Warning

Hospital staff and patients received a 20-minute warning that the tornado was headed toward the city, according to Endicott. That gave hospital staff time to implement their emergency plan, which consisted of two parts: One, evacuate patients from their rooms to safe places, such as corridors, stairwells or interiors of the building, where they would be less likely to be directly impacted; and two, protect those patients who could not be safely moved.

A total of 183 patients and an unknown number of relatives and visitors were in the building when emergency management declared a Condition Gray.

In the frightening moments when the tornado struck, the building shook, the rooms went dark, glass shattered and swirled, and the air was sucked out. Emergency management reported the conditions inside the hospital lasted a minute or more, while the entire building seemed to be engulfed in the deafening roar of the tornado. Endicott described it as “the scariest experience I’ve ever had to endure.” When the tornado finally passed, an eerie still descended. Staff members walked from patient to patient using flashlights.

The twister cut a swath of damage through Joplin that officials estimated was nearly a mile wide and four miles long. As much as 30% of the city was damaged or destroyed.

New Landscape in Store

Under Mercy’s new capital plan, the new hospital in Joplin will consist of 327 in-patient beds, with the potential to expand to 424 beds. Ground will be broken for the new facility in January, with construction expected to last approximately two years.

Mercy is also planning to add a secondary, northeast campus in Joplin. That campus is anticipated for completion sometime in 2014. That will boost overall construction spending to a total of $950 million at the time of completion. The projects are expected to have an invigorating effect on the devastated economy of the small city.

The Sisters of Mercy came to Joplin and opened its first hospital in 1896. Today, Mercy is the eighth largest Catholic health system in the U.S. It has more than 36,000 employees and operates in seven Midwest states, primarily Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Arkansas.

Lynn Britton, president and CEO of Mercy Health, says that rebuilding the hospital will “set in motion a new Joplin landscape and economic recovery.”

“We are making this commitment because it’s the right thing to do for Joplin,” Britton says. “The May 22 tornado devastated our community here in Joplin and destroyed our hospital. But we’ve promised all along that we would rebuild. We’ve been through hard times before—perhaps nothing quite on the magnitude of this—but our commitment to Joplin remains strong.”

Click here for Part 1.

November 15, 2011

JOPLIN, Mo. — The Sisters of Mercy have made a commitment to spend as much as $543 million on a new state-of-the-art hospital—slated to open in 2014—to replace St. John’s Regional Medical Center, which was destroyed by an EF-5 tornado.

The May 22 tornado, which packed winds of up to 198 miles per hour, killed five patients and one visitor at the 367-bed hospital. The victims were among a total of 154 people killed by the severe weather in this southwestern Missouri city of 50,000 people.

The late-afternoon tornado made a direct hit on St. John’s and then appeared to stall over the hospital for a minute or more, according to emergency management personnel. It tore off portions of the hospital’s roof and peeled off entire sections of its façade.

Walls in the modern nine-story building were knocked 10 feet out of place; windows were blown out and rooms and corridors strewn with broken glass, fragments of concrete, and ceiling tiles. Virtually every patient and visitor suffered cuts from flying broken glass. Medical records and X-rays were sucked up by the tornado and dumped two counties away.

On the morning after the storm, the hospital—one of Joplin’s tallest buildings—appeared bombed out.

“The hospital was completely devastated,” says Jeff Hamilton, emergency management coordinator for the Sisters of Mercy Health System, which operates 28 hospitals and more than 200 outpatient facilities in the Midwest. “The tornado twisted the building 41/2 inches off its foundation. I’ve never seen anything remotely like it in my life.”

Employees in linen services escaped injury and death, according to Marilyn Endicott, director of materials management, which includes linen services. Linen services distributes clean linen provided by Healthcare Linen Specialists, a commercial service in Joplin.

“It’s miraculous that no one in linen services was killed or injured,” says Endicott, who credits the health system’s emergency evacuation plan, dubbed Condition Gray, with saving lives and sparing injury to the employees.

Remarkably, the only major loss involved damage to linen inventory, according to Endicott.

By the morning after the tornado struck, the hospital, which is a major trauma care center in the area, had moved all its patients to other facilities, says Cora Scott, a spokeswoman for the hospital.

Hospital staff worked all night caring for patients. The most critical patients were taken to Freeman Health System hospital, about two miles east. Patients who were able to walk were taken to Memorial Hall, a community building in Joplin, where a makeshift clinic was set up. Still others were taken to a Catholic high school, at least temporarily.

St. John’s Regional Medical Center set up as a Mobile Surgical Hospital near the ruins of the hospital and received linen twice daily from Healthcare Linen Specialists. Under a talent-sharing program, employees of linen services did not lose their jobs; they were dispersed to work at other hospitals in the area, as needed.

Tomorrow: The twister cut a swath of damage nearly a mile wide and four miles long…

July 25, 2011

ST. JOSEPH, Mich. — Maytag Commercial Laundry awarded John Morris Equipment & Supply Co. of Springfield, Mo., this year’s Red Carpet Service Excellence Award. Pride Laundry Systems of North Hills, Calif., took the On-Premises Laundry (OPL) Excellence Award. The honors were presented during Maytag’s 53rd Annual Meeting in Palm Springs, Calif.

The Red Carpet Service Excellence Award is presented to a company that best exemplifies the excellent service and dependability characterized by the Maytag Commercial Laundry brand, Maytag says.

“John Morris Equipment & Supply Co. has been affiliated with Maytag Commercial Laundry for more than 50 years,” says Craig Kirchner, global director of Maytag Commercial Laundry. “Year after year, their dedication to quality service, our brand and their customers is truly remarkable.”

“Dependability and reliability are a major part of our job, and we pride ourselves on providing our customers with the best service available,” says Terry Gideon, general manager of John Morris Equipment & Supply Co. “This award demonstrates our dedication to the long-standing Maytag Commercial Laundry brand, and our current and future customers.”

John Morris Equipment & Supply Co.’s territory covers Missouri and portions of northern Arkansas, eastern Kansas and western Illinois. The company is a past recipient of Maytag’s OPL Excellence Award.

But this year’s On-Premises Laundry (OPL) Excellence Award, an honor that recognizes a company’s effective and efficient service to its OPL customers, went to Pride Laundry Systems.

“Excellence, dependability and exemplary service are synonymous with the Maytag Commercial Laundry brand,” says Kirchner. “Pride Laundry Systems embodies what our company stands for, and we’re pleased to recognize them with this distinguished honor.”

“We take great satisfaction in our reputation as an efficient and dependable distributor to the OPL market,” says Mark Goodman, president of Pride Laundry Systems. “Our loyal association to the dependable Maytag Commercial Laundry brand reinforces our dedication and promise to provide the best equipment and service to our customers.”

Pride Laundry Systems, Inc. serves Southern California and Nevada as a commercial laundry equipment specialist and an authorized Maytag Commercial Laundry distributor. The company specializes in developing coin-laundry stores, multi-housing laundry sales and services, OPL equipment and design, and laundry equipment parts and service.

June 27, 2011

PHILADELPHIA — The Missouri Water Environment Association (MWEA) recently honored ARAMARK Uniform Services (AUS) with the Gold Award for its commitment to preserving, protecting and improving the quality of Missouri’s water environment, ARAMARK reports.

The award recognizes the company’s compliance in managing wastewater from its Springfield-based industrial laundry facility. It is the seventh consecutive year AUS has received the honor.

“It recognizes our team’s diligence in ensuring that we reduce our environmental footprint while delivering exceptional operational results,” says Cavin Cowan, AUS general manager.

Operating five days a week, the facility processes approximately 24,000 garments each day and treats approximately 55,000 gallons of wastewater.

The treatment system includes a heat reclaimer that recovers and reuses the heat from the wastewater (wash-water temperature is heated to 160 F), reducing the plant’s gas use by 15%. In addition, a water-reuse system minimizes clean-water use by 20%, saving 2.6 million gallons per year.

April 28, 2011

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — For the ninth time in the past decade, the Missouri Water Environment Association (MWEA) has recognized UniFirst for the cleanliness of the wastewater it discharges from its Springfield facility, the textile service company reports.

The MWEA found that UniFirst was “100 percent compliant” with its wastewater discharges for 2010 and presented the company with a “Gold Award.”

April 25, 2011

ST. JOSEPH, Mich. — Maytag Commercial Laundry recently honored exceptional distributors at its 53rd annual meeting, held in Palm Springs, Calif.

The Fred Maytag Award went to Pierce Commercial Laundry Distributors, Mandeville, La., for outstanding achievements and remarkable performance. The Maytag Red Carpet Service Excellence Award went to John Morris Equipment & Supply Co., Springfield, Mo., for exemplifying the excellent service and dependability for which Maytag is known.

July 27, 2010

COLUMBIA, Mo. — Linen King, an Oklahoma-based provider of laundry services to the healthcare industry, will be opening a 52,000-square-foot facility in an industrial park here.

With four healthcare-specific industrial laundries, Linen King has the capacity to process almost 75 million pounds of laundry per year and will employ more than 200 people for fiscal 2010 with revenues approaching $20 million.

September 22, 2009

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Inc. magazine has named Faultless Laundry Co. (Faultless Linen) to its list of the 5,000 fastest-growing private U.S. companies in the Business Products & Services Category for the second year straight.

June 4, 2009

BENTON HARBOR, Mich. — Maytag Commercial Laundry has added Loomis Bros. Equipment Co. as a distributor to coin-operated self-service laundries, hotel and motel guest laundries, apartment and university laundries, and appliance dealers throughout Kansas and parts of Missouri and Illinois.

January 12, 2009

WILMINGTON, Mass. — UniFirst Corp. has won a variety of awards recently for its environmentally friendly laundering processes, the company reports.

The Missouri Water Environment Association, an organization dedicated to improving the quality of water resources throughout the state, gave the company a top “Gold” award for “outstanding achievement” in water safety.

June 6, 2008

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — At Superior Linen Supply Co., the Kartsonis family and other principals in the independent, family-owned company can look back on any number of important moments and appreciate how they have molded and shaped the 115-year-old business.

Few dates in its lengthy lineage have been as significant to Superior Linen as Dec. 1, 2006.

March 7, 2008

In order for my customers to be responsible for linens and garments, I suppose they need to be instructed or reminded about abuse. What steps can my operation take to train them and minimize these occurrences? Is it possible that we’re abusing the linen during processing and/or distribution?

February 21, 2008

KANSAS CITY – John “Jack” S. Spence, 80, retired president of Faultless Laundry Co., Kansas City, Mo., died here Friday, Feb. 15.

Spence represented the third generation in the family business, working several years with his father, John B. Spence, and his grandmother, Cora Spence. He became president in 1962, marking a time in which he would start to aggressively grow the business for the next 30 years.

February 1, 2008

SEDALIA, Mo. — Mentor Partners of Boston and Adco Cleaning Products of Sedalia, a leading manufacturer and distributor of chemicals for the drycleaning industry, have purchased the Chemical Products Division of Laidlaw Co., Scottsdale, Ariz.

The two companies merged their chemical-sales teams: Brent McWilliams, formerly vice president of Laidlaw, joins Adco as vice president of sales. Laidlaw's sales team will continue to service wholesale accounts, with end users receiving all Laidlaw products through normal distribution channels.

January 30, 2008

In the third of a series, this year’s contributors to the American Laundry News Panel of Experts introduce themselves, describe their operations, identify challenges and list their accomplishments for 2007.

November 1, 2007

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In celebrating its 75th anniversary, an independent, family-owned uniform and image-enhancement service provider has renamed itself in honor of its founder.

AAA Uniform Services, headquartered in Kansas City, and Shepherd’s Uniform and Linen Supply, with facilities in Dallas, Houston and Beaumont, Texas, have combined under the new name Ace ImageWear. The Heilman family owns Ace, and its second- and third-generation family members run the company.

May 2, 2007

SEDALIA, Mo. — One of the drycleaning industry’s oldest companies, Adco Inc., revealed Tuesday that it has been sold. A Cambridge, Mass.-based equity firm, Mentor Partners, assumed ownership of Adco on April 13 for an undisclosed sum.

November 16, 2006

CHICAGO — When laundry managers and administrators were asked if their home states should pass an increase in the minimum wage, the result was a tie – 50% yes, 50% no, according to our latest Wire survey.

Responses were received from at least 16 states. (Voters in Ohio, Arizona, Missouri, Montana, Colorado and Nevada approved ballot measures last week to raise their state's minimum wage.)

November 2, 2006

CHICAGO — Voters in six states - Arizona, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Nevada and Ohio - will vote on ballot initiatives on Tuesday that would raise the minimum wage from $1 to $1.70 per hour above their current levels.

If the increases are approved, these states will join eight others that recently raised their minimums - including Pennsylvania, which voted this summer to boost the state's minimum wage by $2 to $7.15 beginning next year.

October 1, 2006

I'm hearing a lot about microfiber towels and mops. What can you tell me about their performance compared to more well-established products? Are they processed differently in the laundry? How do they differ from cotton and other materials?

September 17, 2006

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Justice announced this summer that it won’t oppose a new venture allowing 10 textile maintenance companies to bid jointly to provide textile rental and laundry services to national healthcare outpatient centers.

Based on representations made in the proposal by Linen Systems for Healthcare, the Justice Department concluded that the joint venture isn’t likely to produce anticompetitive effects and could create a new competitor for national accounts, according to the Department’s Aug. 8 press release.