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September 4, 2012

CHICAGO — Without water, you have nothing

Editor's Note: Ken Tyler is on break. AmericanLaundryNews.com is reposting a column that originally appeared on the site in July 2008.

CHICAGO — 1. No matter how much you would like to complicate the chemical process of laundering, water is the key element associated with it. Without water, you have nothing.

2. It has been proven that washing in low, controlled temperatures can produce textiles as hygienically clean as washing in high temperatures. Don’t forget that most laundered items reach high temperatures during drying, steam finishing or ironing.

3. The key to maintaining the quality of textile processing or cleaning is service. Don’t overcomplicate the laundry chemistry process — there is little difference between products that are available. Be careful about being oversold on products.

4. Really know your cost to operate. Purchasing/processing textiles through and out of a laundry are way past the 50 cents-per-pound scenario. Don’t forget about capital depreciation, fringe-benefit labor costs, and energy and transportation costs, along with the other costs that are part of the process.

5. Your operation can only be as good as the employees you hire, so treat them with respect and dignity. Walk the floor; know your people and the systems that make your operation run.

6. Don’t purchase any equipment without establishing a process to gauge production, potential cost savings, and ergonomic value — be able to ascertain the total cost, not just the net cost. In other words, determine the best value. Make sure that you purchase equipment from someone who can provide the service you need within a timely basis. Always specify the terms and conditions of the purchase — I recommend you pay 90% on delivery and 10% on acceptance. Always make sure you have a way to get new equipment in and out of your facility.

7. A sound maintenance program requires expertise, not just a handyman. Spend as much time training these folks as you do anyone else. Every manufacturer has a training program — make the investment. One of the most critical aspects of a successful laundry program is a sound routine and preventative maintenance program. Without such a program, you might as well shut your doors.

8. Never forget that you will learn something every day in this industry. Never think you know it all — no one does.

9. Never forget that the laundry is a production facility, not a warehouse. Get off the kick of quotas, give the customer whatever they want or even think they need, and don’t make our business more complicated than it is. Invest in a good textile management system, as well as a production management system that is not linked to in-house systems. Learn the importance or lack of importance of pounds per productive employee. Never forget that employees have little control over production, especially where machine design pretty much controls the process — you can’t get blood out of a turnip. Think incentives for production — those who have it out-produce those who don’t.

10. Become active in the industry, learn how to write performance specifications for equipment (I had to throw that in), and always invest in your future with the formal educational programs and seminars that are available.  

June 20, 2011

ROANOKE, Va. — The escalating cost of textile products is causing many organizations to refocus on reducing linen-replacement costs.

During my years in this industry, both as a laundry manager and as a laundry consultant, the challenge of reducing linen-replacement costs has been a recurring theme. Some years ago, I had the pleasure of working with a major hospital on a linen-cost-containment program.

The immediate goal was to lower the hospital’s annual expenditures on linens; the hospital had been trying to accomplish this for several years. It was making the same mistakes that many U.S. healthcare facilities make: It was looking for a quick and easy solution.

There is no such quick fix available. But it is interesting and educational to review the efforts of this hospital and compare them with the eventual solutions. In order to save money on the purchase of replacement textiles, this hospital began an aggressive purchasing program designed to:

June 7, 2011

[Editor's Note: This article was updated June 8 to correct the type of accounting system utilized by the association.]

LAS VEGAS — Linda Fairbanks, the director of academic affairs for the Association for Linen Management (ALM) for several years, has been promoted to executive director of academic affairs, ALM Board President Randy Wendland announced at the Clean Show.

Executive Director Jim Thacker resigned unexpectedly in February, and the ALM board decided to consolidate the position with another and promote Fairbanks rather than hire a replacement.

Fairbanks has overseen ALM’s educational offerings, including the American Laundry & Linen College (ALLC), and now finds herself heading an association that faces mounting financial problems and dwindling membership numbers.

During Sunday’s annual business meeting, it was revealed that ALM has approximately $100,000 in unpaid bills. Chief Financial Officer Paul Jewison says the association is shifting from a cash accounting system to an accrual based system to better track spending.

May 31, 2011

CHICAGO — Charles Thompson, the longtime publisher of American Laundry News, has purchased the magazine from Crain Communications Inc. effective June 1. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

American Trade Magazines LLC (ATM) will continue to publish American Laundry News, as well as American Drycleaner and American Coin-Op, from offices in Chicago.

January 13, 2011

WILMINGTON, Mass. — Adopting a “hippie look” to go undercover in his company for the CBS series Undercover Boss, UniFirst President and CEO Ronald Croatti often found himself unable to match the speed of the workers training him, as he sought to discover if he could “make the cut” as an employee.

But his week-long journey was as much about seeing the company through his employees’ eyes and learning if the “family culture” he believed to be in place was truly there.

November 19, 2010

WASHINGTON — The Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) has recently taken more action to impose fines and enforce regulations concerning combustible dust and lint in laundry facilities.

This extra attention has translated into a regulatory push for higher standards and the potential for significant fines for lack of compliance.

January 22, 2010

[Editor's Note: This story was updated Jan. 25, 2010, 10:54 a.m. CT.]

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Washex Inc., a longtime manufacturer of industrial laundry equipment that abruptly closed its Wichita Falls, Texas, factory in September, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection here on Friday.

The company’s filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, in effect, halted an auction scheduled to have begun that day at the Wichita Falls facility.

January 15, 2010

Luckily, the only thing hurt was Ralph McMillan’s pride.

McMillan tells me his Texas company, RAMCO Laundry Machinery, was nearly victimized in a scam perpetrated by someone claiming to be from the United Arab Emirates.

While no money or equipment was lost, he asked if I would alert the industry to the possibility of similar scam attempts.

An individual from “Orion General Trading” contacted RAMCO by e-mail in November, claiming to represent a client who was interested in buying two flatwork ironers.

January 11, 2010

(Editor's note: Since this story's release, the auction has been canceled. Please click here for the full story.)

December 14, 2009

(Editor's note: Story updated Dec. 16, 2009, 9:20 a.m. CT)

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — A life-cycle assessment study conducted at the University of Minnesota Medical Center shows that reusable medical textiles are superior to single-use disposables in terms of cost, environmental impact and infection prevention, according to the American Reusable Textile Association (ARTA).

October 28, 2009

I would like to introduce some thoughts on why, after full evaluation, many hospitals are finding the room to install uniform exchange lockers for scrubs. One of the first reasons to move from an open system is that the hospital can limit which staff members have access to scrubs. In an open system, staff members can help themselves. In a closed system, with lockers, only individuals authorized by the institution have the ability to access scrubs. Further, the number of cycles a staff member can use in a given week can be limited.

(Editor’s note: This is a response to Eric Frederick’s column, Scrub Rental: Look at Costs, Storage.)

I would like to introduce some thoughts on why, after full evaluation, many hospitals are finding the room to install uniform exchange lockers for scrubs.

October 20, 2009

CHICAGO — Thanks to Halloween, October is a time of year that’s synonymous with fear. The fright is intended to be all in fun, but things sometimes happen in our industry that can cause a real scare. So, American Laundry News asked its Wire subscribers about what gets their hearts pounding.

August 1, 2009

Editor’s Note: Equipment installation in an existing laundry is rarely done without having to meet certain construction challenges. Charles Berge of American Laundry Systems, a full-service mechanical contractor catering exclusively to the commercial laundry industry, recounts his company’s latest project.

SAN FRANCISCO — American Laundry Systems (ALS) recently completed the second phase of a three-phase laundry renovation with Ellis Corp. here at the Hilton San Francisco.

June 13, 2008

I’ve just completed my third seven-day cruise in the last three years, but it was my first opportunity to go below deck and see the onboard laundry operations. While everything about a cruise is first-class, the ship simply isn’t set up to allow passengers that kind of access.

June 11, 2008

Editor’s Note: This story was written prior to Hillary Clinton’s decision on Saturday to suspend her campaign and throw her support behind fellow Democrat Barack Obama.

Presidential candidates are talking big on foreign policy and the Middle East; budget deficits, taxation, government spending, healthcare, global warming and free trade, but saying little about pending legislation that would upend labor laws and greatly ease union organizing efforts.

February 8, 2008

As you already know, the next Clean Show will be held in New Orleans in June 2009. Understandably, there has been some concern expressed by a few TCATA members about the condition of New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina. The condition of the city’s infrastructure, crime rate and hotel/restaurant staffing capacity are legitimate concerns, ones that I would have if I were considering exhibiting or visiting the city. Having visited New Orleans recently, I want to offer you my personal impressions.

Editor’s Note: This letter was distributed to members of the Textile Care Allied Trades Association (TCATA) on Thursday and is being reprinted here with permission.

November 29, 2007

When my oldest son was just beginning to talk, he went through a phase of wanting to rename all of the animals in the world. He’d ask what an animal was named, think about the answer he was given and then decide to call it something else.

August 30, 2007

Of all the fabric terms that the reusable textile industry has wrestled with over the years, “linen” is second only to “muslin.” Despite the arguments about their being more expensive and harmful to the environment, those marketing disposable surgical gowns and drapes had little if any problem selling against what they referred to as muslin.

July 5, 2007

FAIRFIELD, N.J. — Perchloroethylene (perc) consumption in the U.S. drycleaning industry dropped to roughly 20.6 million pounds in 2006, according to the results of an annual survey released by the Textile Care Allied Trades Association (TCATA). That total is less than one-tenth (7.4%) of the perc used in 1985 and almost one-third (32.5%) less than 2005’s 30.5 million pounds.

April 27, 2007

FAIRWAY, Kan. — The board of directors for the American Reusable Textile Association (ARTA) has appointed Nancy Jenkins its new executive director.

She succeeds Bill Carroll, who began serving in 2000 and announced his retirement at the end of 2006.

Jenkins has been editor of the organization’s Reusable Textiles newsletter since January 2004 and played a key role in planning and executing ARTA’s first seminar on reusable surgical textiles in spring 2006.

March 12, 2006

(Editor’s Note: American Laundry News asked laundry engineer and consultant Gerard O’Neill to explain what operators must do to properly match their systems to the amount and types of work their plants have to process.)

Let’s talk about new plants before we touch on existing plants. Assuming that location – access to highways, routes, etc. – has been researched and all is well, then you should focus a large amount of your energy on utilities.