Crushing Bottles Cuts Costs, Saves Space, Helps Environment


Crushing Bottles Cuts Costs, Saves Space, Helps Environment

by Glenn Hasek of Green Lodging News

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Eight Steps You Can Take to Keep Your Waste Disposal Costs Under Control

Originally from Sept. 10 2006

Eight Steps You Can Take to Keep Your Waste Disposal Costs Under Control

Waste management is entrenched as the least exciting aspect of the lodging industry. Aside from the obvious unpleasantness, waste disposal is a comparatively small expense and is often thought of as, “out of sight, out of mind.” Even so, the nascent green lodging movement has taken trash and recycling from the loading dock and parking lot and into the executive offices. There, the movement has quickly established itself as a viable way to control costs, enhance guest satisfaction and improve occupancy.

While the economic benefits of going green are straightforward, the difficulty in executing a green lodging waste initiative boils down to the fact that it can be time consuming. While there are many resources advising hotel operators what to do, there are few resources who can actually step in and do it, saving managers time and money and helping them avoid missteps along the way. Consequently, this low hanging fruit is often ignored or abandoned after a couple of false starts.

To help stay on top of waste disposal costs, you need to do the following:

Remove Automatic Renewal Language In Your Contract

Standard waste vendor contracts include language that automatically extends existing rates and terms if certain notices aren’t properly given within a stated window of opportunity. Failing to give the proper notice means you forfeit your opportunity to improve rates and terms. To combat this, immediately send your vendor notice that you are canceling this language by certified letter, return receipt.

Don’t Rely on Competitive Bidding As Your Primary Cost Control

While competitive bidding may get you a decent price, it doesn’t guarantee you the exact service that you need. Haulers will ask what you have now and bid on that. Rarely will they spend the time to conduct a customized needs analysis for you. If you have an eight-yard dumpster, but really need a four-yard dumpster, getting a good price is meaningless because you’d still pay twice as much as you should.

Periodically Monitor the Waste Industry

Ask an administrative assistant to do an Internet search periodically. If a hotel operator had searched earlier this year, he’d be forewarned that the largest companies in the waste industry, like Waste Management Inc., and Allied Waste Systems, are focusing on return on capital, much of which is coming from price increases.

Don’t Buy Into the Myth Of ‘National Purchasing Leverage’

Waste disposal pricing, and the vendor’s costs, are largely a function of the distance from a property’s dumpster to the vendor’s nearest landfill. So while “purchasing leverage” does entail some discounting, it is really a misnomer for administrative simplification, where the hotel operator leaves money on the table in exchange for time. In particular, hotel operators who work with waste brokers sacrifice transparency and control because they no longer see the actual waste and recycling vendor invoices. This gives the waste broker the opportunity to operate with, and profit from, an additional margin.

Don’t Accept Price Increases Without Question

Waste vendors prepare for a percentage of their customers to refuse their price increases using actuarial techniques. Also, the sales managers instruct their staff not to lose any business over a price hike. So the next time you’re notified of a price increase, be sure to call them up and challenge it.

Be Clear on How Waste Bans and Laws Impact Your Costs and Liability

The bulk of a standard waste hauler agreement is language that limits their liability. Your vendor will not advise you nor guide you with respect to waste recycling requirements and regulations. You alone are responsible to ensure compliance and know that your hauler may provide services that expose your organization to financial risk and other penalties simply because it’s cheaper for them to operate that way.

Capture and Recycle All Valuable Commodities

There’s big money in selling cardboard, cans and plastic, so recycling service costs should be lower than those for solid waste. Managers should verify that the lower cost structure is passed along to them, not pocketed by the hauler. If there is space for one or more recycling containers, separating recyclables from waste should be carefully considered. Composting should also be considered for larger properties. Operators can reap community service and publicity benefits by considering local options for recycling like nonprofits and small businesses.

Identify and Correct Problems With Waste Collection Equipment

At larger properties, compactors are the equipment of choice. Like everything else, they require periodic maintenance, but it’s most often up to the hotel operator to ask for a checkup. Compactors should have working, accurate pressure gauges so staff can accurately monitor capacity. If you don’t have a pressure gauge, demand one from your vendor. In either case, it’s advisable to have an independent third party verify that the compactor’s pressure limit switches meet the manufacturer’s specifications. If they are lower than spec, you’ll pay for more frequent pickups, which makes your hauler more money.

Tim Johnson is president of Madison, Wisc.-based Midas Management Consulting LLC. Midas is a cost recovery and containment firm that specializes in no risk, performance-based expense reduction services for small and mid-sized businesses. Go to Midas Management Consulting or write to timjohnson@midasmanagementconsulting.com.

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Report reveals how to trim the #1 most often overlooked expense category

First reported 5/11/2006
Report reveals how to trim the #1 most often overlooked expense category

In today’s market, waste disposal costs should be triggering some alarm bells. Companies like Waste Management Inc., and Allied Waste Systems, the two largest companies in the waste industry are focusing on return on capital, a big part of which is coming from price increases. What’s more, all businesses have seen a significant run up in their costs of doing business over the past three years due to the rise in materials, transportation and fuel costs.

Fuel in particular is a pass through cost that adds anywhere from seven to eleven percent on top of the standard service fees that hauler’s collect. Virtually all waste vendors’ contracts have a clause that allows them to pass through their diesel costs. “If you’re obliged to buy them their diesel, then it’s just smart business to see that you get the service you need, at a fair rate, in the fewest amount of trips possible,” says Tim Johnson, President of cost containment firm Midas Management Consulting LLC.

While every business generates waste and recyclable materials, Johnson says most firms have not yet awakened to the cost containment opportunities available in their waste, recycling and by-product disposal programs.

This disturbing trend is the rationale that led Johnson, to publish the just-released report, “5 Warning Signs of ‘The Sucker Punch’, How to make sure your solid waste management program isn’t hitting you where it hurts!”

“It’s a classic vicious circle that has most firms unintentionally limiting their profits,” says Johnson. “Senior executives and small business owners view waste as an afterthought because it’s a comparatively small expense – they see it as an inescapable cost of doing business. Meanwhile, line management doesn’t pay waste much attention because it’s not on senior management’s priority list. Consequently, this low hanging fruit is ignored.”

The report is designed to help executives establish, improve, and benchmark waste and recycling cost containment initiatives. It contains an original analysis designed to help executives understand:

* Why relying on haulers for industry expertise is often expensive.
* The myth of “national purchasing leverage” in the waste industry.
* Benefits of maximizing recycling opportunities.
* Three basic options available to executives the benefits and risks associated with working internally, hiring a broker or hiring a consultant and who chooses which model.
* Four case studies from different sectors.

It’s clear from the report that those firms that move to create or improve their initiatives now can look forward to hefty returns on their investment. For firms that fail to address these expenses, their costs will continue to spiral, unnecessarily limiting their profits.

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Hotel-Online Special Report

Hotel-Online Special Report 2006

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Meetings Industry Soapbox

It’s easy being green from June 27, 2006

If the naysayers need more evidence that businesses can be both environmentally and economically friendly, Pineapple Hospitality has offered it. The environmental hospitality consulting company is now promoting a company that audits a facility’s waste disposal and recycling habits, as a firm with which hotels should do business.

The company, Midas Management Consulting, guarantees its clients that if after the audit they don’t save money, they don’t pay for the service. The company says it saves its clients an average of 37 percent on waste disposal expenses, and it asks little extra work from the client themselves.

Meeting planners can increase environmental stewardship by demanding that their event facility recycle, and Pineapple and Midas have made that request easier for a hotel to accommodate.

The meetings industry as a whole certainly plays a major role in resource use and waste production in this country. According to Pineapple president and founder Ray Burger, the approximately 4,700,000 hotel rooms in the U.S. generate about .2 cubic yards of waste per guest room, per week.  That’s 48,880,000 cubic yards of waste per year.

It’s time for planners and hotels to step up and take responsibility for their impact on the planet, and save some cash too.

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