greening newsletter - Green Hotels Association
Transcription
greening newsletter - Green Hotels Association
® ROUTE TO: General Manager Sales Manager Chief Engineer Housekeeping Rooms F&B Purchasing Personnel Front Desk Lobby “Green” Hotels Association GREENING NEWSLETTER ALLY MEMBER SUCCESS STORIES As our green programs continue to be refined, we’re reminded more and more that none of us can be really green without the green products and services offered by green vendors. GHA continues to encourage and support our Ally Members, and to bring you news of their successes—new products, new ideas, new techniques, recent awards, new contracts, etc. So, each July/August issue of this newsletter focuses on new and refreshing stories about our Ally Members’ successes. Here we go once again . . . * * * * * RD FRESH, Ecovisionary ALLY MEMBER RD FRESH is an ECOVISIONARY awardwinning 100% natural, 100% green, 100% passive, zero footprint product―a refrigeration dehumidifier―that keeps food fresher longer and saves energy while doing so. As a company, RD FRESH continues to move forward, not only expanding nationally with very successful distributorships in Texas, Virginia, Washington and more, but also expanding to Vancouver, Canada; Puerto Rico and even Norway―the greenest country in the world! “We’ve also expanded into the retail market with VegieFresh which is doing equally well, already in 300 small chain supermarkets and health food stores and having just signed up our first major chain, Sprouts.” “Most importantly for “Green” Hotels Association® members, we are also now at the point where we can handle direct ship accounts for those hotels in places where we do not yet have distributorship representation. Please contact me directly at 954/732-8025. As the developer of the product, founder of the company, and a 6-year member of GHA, I’ll be happy to take care of you and your hotel personally including special discounts for all “Green” Hotels Association® members,” explains owner Steve Gerson. To learn more, visit rdfresh. com. An establishment that has recently demonstrated such fiscal and environmental leadership through the use of furniture renovation solutions, such as refinishing, remanufacturing and re-upholstering is Best Western Plus at King of Prussia, PA, a 168-room property owned and operated by RWK Enterprises, Inc. After receiving guest feedback around the need for larger screen LCD televisions, the property managers were left with the difficult decision to either buy new furniture or repurpose existing, high quality television armoires. Choosing the more sustainable and cost-effective option, the King of Prussia hotel invested in The Refinishing Touch’s furniture asset management Before solutions to restore headboards, nightstands, side chairs, benches, desks, micro-fridge cabinets and armoires in 100 rooms throughout the establishment. 7-YEAR ALLY MEMBER THE REFINISHING TOUCH’s production crew remanufactured the television armoires by eliminating a top portion of the furniture piece, applying a granite surface and staining the asset with a more contemporary, darker finish. Refinishing and laminate replacements were also completed on 143 nightstands, while After 100 benches received a color change and were reupholstered using the company’s durable fabrics from its Touch Textiles division. The expert team then refinished headboards, desks, micro-fridge cabinets and side chair legs using the company’s innovative non-toxic, low VOC lacquers. The work was completed in just 30 days, and The Refinishing Touch’s same day room turnover allowed the property to stay open for business throughout the entire renovation project. As a result of choosing furniture asset management, and avoiding the need to buy new pieces, the Best Western Plus King of Prussia reduced its total expenditure by an estimated 75.8%. In addition to the cost savings, the property also prevented landfill waste and deforestation, while minimizing carbon emissions from 125.32 tons to a mere 1.24. To read more about these renovations, see a before-and-after video or for more information on The Refinishing Touch’s furniture asset management, visit therefinishingtouch.com. COFFEE FOR A CAUSE ONE OF THE REFINISHING TOUCH’S SUCCESSES Wyndham Resorts and the Arbor Day Foundation Preserve the World’s Rainforests, One Cup at a Time As the hotel industry becomes more environmentallyconscious, hotel owners and managers must consider sustainability while balancing budget pressures and required brand standards during renovations. This juggling act is forcing many to rethink the renovation process entirely, and instead, invest in emerging, best-practice solutions like furniture asset management. Approximately two years ago, Wyndham Vacation Ownership properties made the switch to serving Arbor Day Specialty Coffee―a certified shade-grown coffee―in their 185+ resorts around the world, thanks to a partnership with ALLY MEMBER ARBOR DAY FOUNDATION, a non-profit focused on planting trees. In doing so, Wyndham has done more than provide great-tasting coffee to their 900,000 owner families. They’ve July / August 2013 “Green” Hotels Association® Greening Newsletter 1 Internet: greenhotels.com, e-mail: green@greenhotels.com provided fair wages, access to healthcare and better housing and education options for Peruvian farmers while preserving vital tropical rainforests and the ecosystems they support. By selecting and exclusively serving this eco-conscious coffee, Wyndham’s commitment to the environment is evidenced in the numbers: more than 25 million square feet of rain forest has been preserved each year since 2011 through their participation in this coffee program. Arbor Day Specialty Coffee has certifications through Fair Trade, Rain Forest Alliance and Smithsonian Bird Institute and is made from certified shadegrown coffee beans that thrive underneath the rain forest canopy. Unlike typical coffee, shade-grown beans thrive in harmony with the rest of the rain forest, thus saving an entire eco-system including plant life, trees, birds, insects and mammals. Shade-grown coffee beans produce a richer, more flavorful coffee and prevent the clear-cutting of rain forests that usually accompanies massproduced, sun-grown coffee. For more information about Arbor Day Specialty Coffee and how your hotel can participate, call Ryan at 402/473-2105 or visit arborday.org/coffee TODAY! Success for Impact Enterprises, Inc.! Sixteenfifty Creative Intelligence teamed with ALLY MEMBER IMPACT ENTERPRISES, INC. to provide environmentally responsible, unique and quality presentation products to the recently renovated and magnificent Rancho Valencia Resort & Spa in Rancho Santa Fe, CA (ranchovalencia.com). Sixteenfifty.com, a nationally recognized creative development team for the casino and hospitality industries, was chosen by the Rancho Valencia Resort & Spa to develop environmentally responsible presentation products and print for all areas of the resort. Impactenterprises.com, an internationally recognized design and manufacturing company specializing in eco-friendly custom presentation products, information and product packaging, custom signage, and other custom products, was chosen by Sixteenfifty to manufacture and offer design suggestions based on materials chosen and Impact’s unique manufacturing capabilities. Together, Sixteenfifty and Impact developed a collection of environmentally responsible presentation products that are branding quality and distinctive. Most items are solid woods from Verified Sustainable Forests. Other products are manufactured with fabrics that are durable and aqueous coated. Items include: Guest Services Directories, Tabletop Displays, InRoom Products, Menu Covers, Wine List Covers, Check Presenters and Stationary Holders. For more information, please contact Ralph Salisbury, rsalisbury@impactenterprises.com or green@ impactenterprises.com. 2 713/789-8889, Fax 713/789-9786 WHY EO SUCCEEDS! ALLY MEMBER EO has been a pioneer of green/natural products since its inception 18 years ago. Co-Owners Brad Black and Susan Griffin-Black founded the company on using only pure essential/organic oils (NO synthetic fragrance ever), and natural ingredients for their products that are both body and earth friendly. Manufacturing has always been an important element at EO (which stands for essential oils) because we can control not only the quality of what goes into the product but also how to manufacture with minimal impact to the environment. 2013 has been an exciting year for EO as we have opened our first retail location in downtown Mill Valley, CA, and have moved to our new facility in San Rafael, CA. This new facility has allowed us to further our commitment to the environment with our new water recycling system, which is saving up to 250,000 gallons of water per month, and we have increased our cooling and heating efficiency by 50%! EO’s values and practices are all documented: Bay Area Green Certified, 8-year “Green” Hotels Association® Approved Vendor, Certified B Corporation. Many of our products are also Certified Organic, non-GMO. Certified and Gluten Free! You can find us in all Whole Foods and other natural food stores across the US. Our amenity program currently serves 300 amenity properties nationwide! Learn more at eoproducts.com TODAY! Cascades Tissue Group Launches 100% Recycled Bathroom Tissue North America’s fourth largest producer of towel and tissue paper, 5-year ALLY MEMBER CASCADES TISSUE GROUP, announced the launch of Cascades® Moka™ 100% recycled, unbleached bathroom tissue, a first-ofits-kind product available to the away-from-home market. Beige in appearance, Cascades’ Moka™ offers commercial purchasers the highest hygienic qualities and softness while significantly reducing the environmental impact associated with manufacturing a very common, single-use product. In addition to eliminating chemical whitening, Cascades’ value-added tissue product is made of a pulp mix composed of 100% recycled fiber, 80% of which is post-consumer material and 20% is derived from recovered corrugated boxes. The product is also offset with 100% Green-e® certified renewable wind electricity; saving 2,500 pounds of CO2 emissions for each ton produced. A detailed life cycle analysis of Moka™ undertaken by the company revealed a reduction in overall environmental impact by at least 25% when compared to Cascades’ 100% recycled fiber bathroom tissue, which has been regarded as a sustainable tissue exemplar in recent years, but includes a chlorine-free whitening process for aesthetics. “Beige is the new green, at least as it relates to towel and tissue,” said Cascades Tissue Group CEO Suzanne Blanchet, who personally conceived and championed Moka™ bath tissue’s development. “The last several years have “Green” Hotels Association® Greening Newsletter July / August 2013 Internet: greenhotels.com, e-mail: green@greenhotels.com brought about countless habit changes meant to preserve the environment. The quality of this bath tissue hasn’t been sacrificed one bit, so adjusting to a new color seems like a small step to take for even greater sustainability.” Cascades started offering its Moka™ concept with the introduction of its Moka™ napkin line in the late ‘90s. Commercial sales for the product have steadily increased, as corporate purchasers have become more aware of its environmental benefits. In 2004, the Moka™ napkin line represented 10% of its total away-from-home sales in North America, whereas it now comprises over 23% of case sales. The company believes that the commercial market will continue to serve as the first frontier for sustainable innovations, as people evolve their tastes and habits out in public before modifying behaviors at home. While the recycled bath tissue is still cleaned and de-inked, the elimination of the whitening process ultimately reduces manufacturing impact associated to the elimination of natural gas and whitening chemicals. Virgin pulp prices have more than doubled over the past three years, invoking price increases in recycled fiber as well. By expanding to varied fibers such as corrugated, Cascades believes it can hedge its products’ exposure to commodity price fluctuations and white fiber shortages outside its control, keeping tissue prices affordable in its served markets. For more information about Cascades Tissue Group, visit afh.cascades.com or sustain. cascades.com. LUX LIGHTING DESIGN’S BOLLARD SUCCESS ALLY MEMBER LUX LIGHTING DESIGN recently converted outdoor lighting of the Hilton Doubletree Bedford, MA’s approximately 5 acres of beautifully groomed grounds and terraces. The property’s gracious landscape is used for outdoor eating, weddings and other outdoor events. Prior to this installation, the grounds were originally lit with 150 watt incandescent bulbs in outdoor fixtures. The fixtures were later switched to include CFL screw-in bulbs which were inappropriate for the fixtures and resulted in a gloomy nighttime look. These required a lot of maintenance related to their position in grassy areas. Doreen LeMay Madden, Owner and President as well as Lux Lighting Design’s Certified lighting designer (LC), did the necessary research to find the best technology for this scenario. She chose 27 watt LED high efficiency, minimal maintenance, 42” bollard pathlights with the best light levels and color rendering to enhance the outdoor pathways. The 28 fixtures are generally lit 12 hours each day and are very important to the general appearance and safety of the property at night. The installation with save approximately 3,500 watts per month on the property’s electric bill, and also resulted in a $3,000 rebate from the State of Massachusetts for the energy conservation on which Lux Lighting Design coordinated all paperwork. Lux is now preparing to convert the property’s lighting on their three major parking areas. The goal will be to control glare from guestrooms, provide high efficiency along with minimal maintenance. Contact Doreen at 617/484-6400 or visit luxld.com to learn more. July / August 2013 713/789-8889, Fax 713/789-9786 P&G Achieves Zero Manufacturing Waste at 45 Sites Worldwide “P&G’s efforts are helping protect the environment, conserve precious natural resources, and make our planet cleaner and healthier for our children, families and future generations.” Three-year ALLY MEMBER PROCTER & GAMBLE, the Company behind consumer brands including Gillette®, Ariel®, Tide® and Pampers® announced that 45 of their facilities have now achieved zero manufacturing waste to landfill, which marks a major step towards the company’s long-term vision of sending zero manufacturing and consumer waste to landfills. Over the past 5 years, P&G’s work to find worth in waste has created over $1 billion in value for the company. P&G has a vision for the future, where plants are powered by renewable energy, products are made from recycled and renewable materials and resources are conserved, with no waste going to landfill. Changing the way the company sees waste has brought P&G one step closer to this goal at 45 sites worldwide, where all of the manufacturing waste is recycled, repurposed or converted into energy. P&G announced its first zero-manufacturing-waste-to-landfill site in Budapest in 2007. Since then, the company has shared a long-term Environmental Vision, pledging to work toward zero consumer and manufacturing waste worldwide. Through quality assurance, packaging reduction, compaction and recycling efforts, the company now ensures that 99% of all materials entering P&G plants leaves as finished product or is recycled, reused or converted to energy. Now, as the Company celebrates its 175th year, less than 1% of all materials entering P&G sites globally leaves as waste! To drive all sites toward zero, P&G has searched for innovative ways to find value in what was once seen as waste. In Mexico, paper sludge from a Charmin toilet tissue plant is turned into low-cost roof tiles used to build homes in the local community. At a US Pampers site, scrap from the wipe manufacturing process is converted to upholstery filling. And, in the UK, waste created in the production of Gillette shaving foam is composted then used to grow turf for commercial uses. Learn about these and other innovative reuse stories in the short video “Worth from Waste.” “There are well-defined systems for recycling materials like paper, plastic and glass, but our product portfolio is incredibly broad, resulting in a diverse set of waste streams for which to find sustainable solutions,” shared Dr. Forbes McDougall, who leads P&G’s global zero manufacturing waste program. Today, we have found ways to divert most of our major waste streams away from landfill, so we’re now seeing new sites achieve zero manufacturing waste to landfill nearly every month.” Learn more from the “Worth from Waste” video at youtube.com/ watch?v=GPLqLBT5q8c. . Hotels Embrace Green Laundries for Big Savings Going green is a hot topic among hoteliers, according to Joel Jorgensen, ALLY MEMBER CONTINENTAL GIRBAU INC. vice president. “This is because a hotel’s on-premise laundry greatly impacts overall water, electricity and natural gas usage,” he said. “It also impacts labor costs and service quality.” No wonder hotels across North America are embracing energy-efficient and productive Continental washers, dryers and ironers. In doing so, hotels can curb utility costs, boost productivity, reduce wastewater and “Green” Hotels Association® Greening Newsletter 3 Internet: greenhotels.com, e-mail: green@greenhotels.com become greener in the process. Critical, too, is wash quality and finishing quality. Continental equipment delivers superior results. With this in mind, the Westin® Riverwalk Hotel, located in drought-stricken San Antonio, TX, recently reinvented its on-premise laundry. The remake involved the removal of water-guzzling washers for more efficient Continental models, and the installation of a complementing water reclamation system. The rehabilitated laundry gleaned a $29,000 rebate from the San Antonio Water System, and despite processing around 2.6 million pounds of laundry per year, slashed water usage by 3.6 million gallons annually. Key to its success is the laundry’s new Continental E-Series high-speed, freestanding washer-extractors (two 130s and one 55), and Continental L-Series hard-mount washers (two 125s), as well as an ozone and water reclamation system. Productivity catapulted as water, natural gas and chemical consumption plummeted. The same holds true at the first LEED-certified hotel in Tennessee―the Hilton Garden Inn in Gatlinburg. The green hotel boasts an in-house laundry complete with an ozone system, Continental E-Series high-speed washer-extractors and Continental high-efficiency dryers. In five years, the laundry will likely save $60,000. At both properties, Continental E-Series high-speed washers were embraced over traditional machines because of their efficiency, productivity, ease-of-use and simple installation. They also play a critical role in water, natural gas and energy conservation. They reach 387 G-force extract speeds, unlike traditional washers, and thus, remove considerably more water per load. As a result, dry time is decreased by up to 40%. This means more laundry is completed in less time, using less labor and natural gas. When high-speed washers are combined with Continental ironers, utility savings and productivity further improve. Gouldings Lodge, a 68-room resort located in Monument Valley, UT, saves $40,000 annually because it no longer outsources laundry. The new on-premise laundry, which includes Continental high-speed washer-extractors and drying tumblers, also features a Continental flatwork ironer. Like the Continental high-speed washers, the flatwork ironer bolsters laundry productivity and cuts natural gas consumption and electricity. Uniquely, damp linens are fed directly from the washers into the ironer, where they are finished and folded automatically. This eliminates the need for drying the linens first, which conserves natural gas and electricity, while extending linen life. Because linens aren’t tumbled dry, more laundry is completed in less time, using less labor. Three employees run the laundry three days per week. During their 10-hour shifts, they complete all the washing, drying, ironing and folding. Continental Girbau, Inc. is the largest of 14 subsidiaries of the Girbau Group, based in Vic, Spain. Girbau laundry products, marketed throughout 90 countries worldwide, hold both ISO9001 and ISO14001 certifications, and is a member of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGB). To find out more about Continental laundry products, visit continentalgirbau.com or call 800/256-1073. * * * * * 4 713/789-8889, Fax 713/789-9786 BATTERIES ON THE HEAD OF A PIN People take batteries for granted, but they shouldn’t. All kinds of technological advances hinge on developing smaller and more powerful mobile energy sources. Researchers at Harvard University and the University of Illinois are reporting just such a creation, one that happens to be no bigger than a grain of sand. These tiny but powerful lithium-ion batteries raise the prospect of a new generation of medical and other devices that can go where traditional larger batteries can’t. Many devices already derive too much of their weight and bulk from batteries. But with a tiny battery, implantable sensors might, for example, send reports from inside the body while being recharged by the beating of a human heart. In the Harvard-Illinois research, tiny wasn’t even the whole point. Researchers made these new batteries by spitting them from a custom 3-D printer using special electrochemical inks. Jennifer Lewis, a materials scientist at Harvard, says these batteries can store more energy because 3-D printing enables the stacking of electrodes in greater volume than the thinfilm methods now used to make microbatteries. 3-D-printed batteries can deliver more power because the printing process allows the anode and cathode—the alpha and omega of any battery, shuttling ions and electrons between them—to be placed closer together. That raises the prospect of, say, hearing aids with rechargeable batteries molded right into the body of the device. Or smartphones with batteries woven into every spare millimeter. Or robotic insects covered with battery material and photovoltaic cells, so they can hover untethered while drawing on solar power. The implication is that someday practically anything can be made to store and discharge energy, as long as someone can figure out how to have a printer (directed by a computer) extrude layers of functional materials with great precision. Who says printing is dead? On the contrary, it’s about to become electrifying. Akst, Daniel, “Batteries on the Head of a Pin,” The Wall Street Journal, The Week, June 22-23, 2013 Satellites hint at water depletion, threat to farming Satellites peering down on California’s great Central Valley have discovered evidence that the nation’s prime food source is fast losing precious reserves of water from the valley’s underground aquifers. Loss of water from beneath the surface, combined with increasing shortages of surface irrigation caused by climate change is quietly adding up to a crisis that threatens one of the state’s major industries. “We don’t recognize the dire water situation we face,” said Jay Famiglietti, a UC Irvine hydrologist who has monitored those stored water levels every month since the spacecraft began measuring the sources 11 years ago. Even as those reserves are being depleted, diminished surface water sources are forcing many farm districts in the region to pump their water from ever deeper levels of the underground aquifers. Pumps that once brought up water from 500 feet deep are now reaching as deep as 900 or even 1,500 feet. As you suck that water out of deep clay layers, you not only get subsidence, but changes in water quality. It’s salty, and acidic, and that’s not good for crops.” California farmers have long faced chronic water shortages, “Green” Hotels Association® Greening Newsletter July / August 2013 Internet: greenhotels.com, e-mail: green@greenhotels.com and this year the mountain snowpack has been at barely half its normal water yield. Managers of the project have warned that the irrigation districts south of the delta will be allocated only 20% of the water for which they have contracted. That could force farmers to pump more water out of the aquifers, which are filled by long, sustained drainage from above. We’re losing those groundwater reserves every month, and with climate change affecting snowmelt, the risks and uncertainties are changing faster than ever. We don’t see that there’ll be any replenishment in the future, so there’s a critical need to improve the way we monitor and regulate groundwater systems now. Perlman, David, “Satellites hint at water depletion, threat to farming,” Houston Chronicle, June 21, 2013 Spray for aphids kills Bumblebees by the thousands Oregon officials say a pesticide is to blame for the deaths of tens of thousands of bumblebees in a shopping center parking lot southwest of Portland. The state Department of Agriculture said Friday that tests on bees and foliage showed the deaths are “directly related to a pesticide application on linden trees” that was meant to control aphids.” “Spray for aphids kills Bumblebees by the thousands,” Houston Chronicle, Around the Nation, June 23, 2013 LEADING THE WAY ON GREEN MEETINGS The Hyatt Regency Trinidad recently hosted the Caribbean Tourism Organization’s 14th Sustainable Tourism Conference, but the resort’s commitment to preserving the planet runs deeper than putting on a good show: The property also has one of the best green meeting programs in the Caribbean. Located on the waterfront in Port of Spain, the capital city of Trinidad and Tobago, the Hyatt Regency is a huge destination for corporate and regional meetings, many of which revolve around the country’s energy industry, and thus a great standard-bearer for raising awareness of eco-friendly meetings and conventions. Specifically, the hotel’s “Meet and Be Green” program offers planners 3% off their master bill when they follow 10 “environmentally thoughtful” steps. The program works hand-in-hand with the hotel’s new food philosophy: Food. Thoughtfully Sourced. Carefully Served. The philosophy focuses on using locally and sustainably-sourced food. “Meeting planners are demanding certain assurances that their meetings be greener—no disposables, no plastics, an energy-conservation plan in order,” says Ewald Biemens, owner of Aruba’s 19-Year GHA PARTNER MEMBER BUCUTI BEACH RESORT, who spoke at this year’s Sustainable Tourism Conference and runs one of the most eco-friendly hotels in the Caribbean. Several of Aruba’s hotels have received environmental recognition for their programs. 10 STEPS TO GREEN: Hyatt Regency Trinidad’s “Meet and Be Green” program 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Use products with 100% recycled content Print materials locally Minimize shipping Recycle during meetings Place meeting materials (such as handouts, notepads, pens, etc.) in a central location so attendees can take July / August 2013 713/789-8889, Fax 713/789-9786 only what they need, rather than placing them at every seat 6. Maintain room temperatures at an appropriate level 7. Eliminate use of disposable water bottles 8. Minimize use of other disposable products such as plates, cups, napkins and utensils 9. Select locally-grown seasonal foods when planning menus 10. Plan ahead for the meeting to make it easier and more economical to keep the meeting green. “Awareness of green and sustainable meetings is there with the larger meeting planners. Professional meeting planners have taken a leadership position on this issue. It’s almost a requirement in the sales process that they want to know what green or eco-friendly processes you have. Our plan can start the conversation,” explained Russell George, general manager of the Hyatt Regency Trinidad. “The hotels are being more environmentally cautious in that they are applying new and innovative recycling procedures, hence Aruba’s being recognized internationally. The Aruba Convention Bureau supports and strongly encourages its partners to consider the environment, and sets an example, as we have reduced our paper consumption down to 20% and moved to an 80% digital format. This new wave of consciousness is being conveyed by our local government through various environmental awareness programs,” said Jerusha Rasmijn, conferences and event manager at the Aruba Convention Bureau. Curley, Bob, “Leading the Way on Green Meetings,” Successful Meetings, June 2013, p. 92 One Bedroom with Central Algae A new apartment building in Hamburg, Germany, uses algae walls to produce all its own energy. Algae don’t cover the building like, say, ivy. Instead, the sun-facing walls sport bioreactors that use sunlight to grow the tiny plants, which will receive continuously circulating liquid nutrients and carbon dioxide. Periodically the algae will be harvested for fermentation, forming a gas-emitting biomass meant to produce all the building’s heat, hot water and electricity. The algae-growing façade panels also harvest solar energy, which can be stored in brine-holes dug more than 250 feet into the ground. “1BR, with central Algae,” The Wall Street Journal, Ideas Market, April 13-14, 2013 Bright Ideas for Those Burned-Out CFLs What to do with those burned-out compact fluorescent lightbulbs or CFLs? They contain a small amount of mercury, so here are some ideas on how to dispose of them properly: • Contact your local waste collection agency about its policies for recycling the bulbs. • Earth911.com is a good place to look for collection or dropoff locations and schedules. This website has information about recycling and repurposing all sorts of materials. • Local hardware stores, especially big-box ones such as Lowe’s and Home Depot, often offer in-store recycling. • Check with your CFL manufacturer. Some sell prelabeled kits so you can mail back your used lightbulbs. • As a last resort, the Environmental Protection Agency suggests putting your old CFLs in a (double? triple?) plastic bag before putting them in with your regular trash to help prevent the mercury from escaping. “Bright Ideas for Those Burned-Out CFLs,” Texas Co-op Power, July 2013 “Green” Hotels Association® Greening Newsletter 5 Internet: greenhotels.com, e-mail: green@greenhotels.com In August 2013 New York City’s largest hotel, the Hilton Midtown, will stop providing room service to its almost 2,000 rooms, at the cost of 55 staff. Attempts will be made to find alternative employment within the hotel for those affected by the staffing cuts, but this will depend upon qualifications and availability. Travelzoo’s editorial director, Andrew Young, admitted that it is both time consuming and costly to cater to over 2,000 guests. The Hilton Hawaiian Village stopped providing room service in October. Young added that similar to recent policies adopted by airlines, hotels are implementing measures to reduce costs. In a similar move to save resources, many hotel companies are providing more rooms without room service, and the Holiday Inn Express line will have 454 new hotels (approximately 52,000 rooms) added to their limited-service brand. Intercontinental Hotels Group president (Americas) reported that guests were not ordering in as often or spending as much on room service, so providing room service was becoming less financially viable. Smith Travel Research senior vice president, Jan Freitag, stated that even hotel restaurants are struggling to make money. Over the past decade the number of hotel rooms with limited service increased by 16%, but there was only an increase of 6% in rooms with full service. Spas, mini-bars and business centers are becoming increasingly unpopular, and there is an increasing desire to have free parking, breakfast and Wi-Fi, as revealed by a TripAdvisor survey conducted recently. While guests see parking, breakfast and Wi-Fi as being a free bonus, many hotels are including the cost into the room price, and the average daily rate for a room, e.g. in Seattle rose 34% to $229 in comparison to last year’s rate, according to Orbitz.com, one of many travel websites. Similarly, San Francisco room rates increased 26% to $265 over the same period. Some up-scale luxury hotels aiming to provide their guests with a premium experience will be adding concierge services to make room prices justifiable, and to qualify for AAA’s muchcoveted fifth diamond. Others are substituting valets, bellhops and room service with breakfast, parking and Internet in their room rates. Getaroom.com’s president of booking, Bob Diener, believes that there is a definite move away from the traditional front desk reception in favor of check-in kiosks and clerks with tablets in the lobby. He went on to say that in addition to staff reductions dynamic pricing is becoming far more commonplace, with prices changing several times throughout the day, giving guests the opportunity to enjoy considerable savings on room rates depending on when they book and for how many nights. 713/789-8889, Fax 713/789-9786 HOTEL BEDS HOTELS ADOPTING “NO FRILLS” APPROACH Hotel guests may be in for a shock next time they check in as many hotels adopt a similar “no frills” approach to service as airlines. Being greeted by a clerk at the front desk may be a thing of the past. Worse still, you may have to haul your own bags up to your room, and forget about calling for room service, as hotels cut costs by doing without bellhops and room service wait staff. Many hotel chains aim to sell a good night’s sleep—at their properties and in their guests’ homes. Starwood’s Westin Hotels initiated the trend of mattresses as souvenirs when it introduced the Heavenly Bed in 1999, a pillow-top model that has sold more than 100,000 units, the company said. It is now for sale in Nordstrom and Pottery Barn. “I was staying at the Four Seasons, New York, and had the best sleep of my life,” said Jeremy Murphy, VP of communications at CBS, who purchased a queen-size Four Seasons Stearns & Foster bed after his visit. Here are queen-size mattress/box-spring sets selling at leading hotels: Hilton Serenity Bed by Serta – $1,695 – Hilton, which sells its beds through its e-commerce site, saw a 4% sales increase in 2012. In addition to the bed and bedding, visitors to hiltontohome.com can buy shampoos, coffee and the in-room bedside clock radio. Westin Heavenly Bed – $1,375 – Westin has seen retail bed sales’ revenues surpass $125 million as of September 2012. The chain sells over 100 Heavenly Beds per month at checkout in its Asian properties. Westin also offers a Heavenly Dog bed for $225. Four Seasons Stearns & Foster Ultra Plush Pillowtop – $2,398 – The Four Seasons doesn’t advertise the availability of its beds and has no e-commerce site for in-room furnishings. But upon request, a property’s concierge will sell the entire bedding package: beds, sheets, duvets and pillows. Marriott 7-inch Foam Bed – $1,850 – Marriott has been selling beds since it introduced the ShopMarriott program in 2006. The hotel chain has used foam mattresses instead of inner-spring beds since 1966. In 2012, the company sold more than 1,000 beds though its website and more than 15,000 pillows. Sheraton Sweet Sleeper – $1,450 – Sheraton redesigned its bedding in 2008 to meet the AAA’s 5-Diamond Award Criteria, eliminating throw pillows. The small pillows were the most popular stolen item from rooms as airlines began eliminating pillows on domestic flights. The W Bed – $1,379 – The W Bed was introduced for sale in 2000 on the success of beds from other Starwood hotels, such as the Westin Heavenly and the Sheraton Sweet Sleeper. W offers three versions of its signature bed—a firm plush top, a pillow top and the Extreme W for a “princess and the pea” night’s sleep. Hyatt Grand Bed – $1,399 – Introduced in rooms in 2004, this bed went on sale in 2006 on hyattathome.com, where 1,000 mattresses have been sold since. But Hyatt offers home and travel products on its website, including wines developed by Mondavi for Hyatt. Rose, Sarah, “The going Rate: Hotel Beds,” The Wall Street Journal, Style & Travel, April 24, 2013 Top Tips To The Safe Cleanup of Bodily Fluids It is not uncommon for messy accidents resulting in blood on surfaces to occur in schools, offices, industrial and other locations. Very often, cleaning professionals are asked to hygienically clean up after such incidents. http://www.tourism-review.com/hotels-no-frills-approach-growing-in-popularitynews3738#1gIkhx0wyGDLdXmQ.99, June 17, 2013 6 “Green” Hotels Association® Greening Newsletter July / August 2013 Internet: greenhotels.com, e-mail: green@greenhotels.com 713/789-8889, Fax 713/789-9786 While these accidents rarely reach the level of “crime scene” cleaning, many of the same steps and precautions taken when performing crime scene cleanup apply to these unfortunate incidents as well. To effectively clean these areas and protect the health and safety of the cleaning worker, kaivac.com offers the following tips and suggestions: cortical correlates of persons actively engaged within differing environments, but new developments in mobile electroencephalography (EEG), however, now allow exactly such measurements to be made. • Blood and tissue at the accident site must be treated as biohazards. Nonporous personal protective gear must be worn and disposed of once the area has been cleaned. In this recent study, a research team from Herriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, United Kingdom, outfitted a group of test subjects with mobile electrodes fastened to their heads. The subjects then took programmed walks in three different environments—an urban shopping district, a park with a lush green environment, and a busy commercial zone. • Biohazard waste must be placed in 55-gallon, heavy-duty liners, sealed and disposed of at a medical waste incinerator; it cannot be disposed of like regular trash. • If the accident occurred on a carpeted area and blood or bodily fluids are noticeable, cleaners should assume more has soaked through the carpet to the subfloor underneath; in most cases, the carpet should be removed and the subfloor cleaned with a hospital-grade disinfectant. • Hospital-grade disinfectants should also be used to wipe clean all nearby surfaces that are splattered, including counters, desks, ceilings, walls, light fixtures and equipment such as computers, phones, etc. • No-touch cleaning systems are often recommended to clean floors and other surfaces, eliminating contact with contaminated surfaces. (Note: the wastewater must be treated as a biohazard.) • If odors persist, it may be because bodily fluids have gotten into air ducts and hard-to-reach areas; industrial foggers that release cleaning agents into the air can often eradicate these odors. “Cleaning workers should also put parameters on this type of cleaning,” says Matt Morrison, communications manager for Kaivac. “If the accident is serious and very messy, a crime scene cleaning professional may be necessary to clean up the accident.” Kaivac Cleaning Systems, kaivac.com http://cleanlink.com/news/article/Top-Tips-To-The-SafeCleanup-of-Bodily-Fluids--15628, May 24, 2013 Nature is Good for your Health! A walk in the park can calm and restore you. This is something we take for granted in parks and recreation, because we have known it to be true ever since we started spending time in nature. But new research reported in the British Journal of Sports Medicine now provides scientific proof that walking in nature and spending time under leafy shade trees causes electrochemical changes in the brain that can lead people to enter a highly beneficial state of “effortless attention.” The UK researchers state with some justifiable academic stuffiness that “. . . happiness, or the presence of positive emotional mindsets, broadens an individual’s thought-action repertoire with positive benefits to physical and intellectual activities, and to social and psychological resources.” They assert that this mental benefit—happiness, if you will— occurs in individuals who are engaged in play, exploration, or other discovery-type activities. They note that until now, technology has not permitted scientists to study the July / August 2013 Dolesh, Richard J., “Nature is Good for your Health!,” The Ecologist, May 14, 2013 JUG HEADS To liven up your laundry room, mount a menagerie of plasticjug trophy heads. Our hunting grounds yielded the makings of a pig, a warthog, and an antelope, but your recycling bin may suggest a different animal collective. What you’ll need: • Masking tape • Clean plastic jug • Craft knife • Scissors • Cotton swab (optional) • Rubbing alcohol (optional) • Cleaner, such as Goo Gone (optional) • Pushpin • Wooden skewer • Floral wire (we used 18-gauge) • Assorted plastic recyclables, such as milkjug caps, twist caps, cutlery and hangers • Glue dots • Duct tape • Adhesive-backed Velcro • Fishing line How to make it: 1. Head: Use masking tape to mark an angled cut line around the jug, as shown. Use a craft knife to puncture the jug, then use scissors to cut off the bottom section. If necessary, rinse the jug again and let it dry. To remove stamped bar codes and expiration dates, rub them with a cotton swab dipped in rubbing alcohol. For sticky labels, try a cleaner such as Goo Gone. 2. Horns: Use the pushpin to punch two holes in the top of the head, then use the skewer to widen them. Cut two lengths of floral wire (ours measure 18 inches). With the pushpin, make a hole in the center of 35-40 milk-jug caps. For each horn, press a glue dot into the tip of an opened twist cap (such as a mustard top), then insert the wire and screw the cap closed. Thread on milk-jug caps, leaving at least 6 inches free at the end. Insert the wire stem into a horn hole and pull it snug. Bend the stem flat against the inside of the jug and secure it with duct tape. Wrap a length of tape around the end of the stem. “Green” Hotels Association® Greening Newsletter 7 Internet: greenhotels.com, e-mail: green@greenhotels.com 3. Ears: Use scissors to cut ear shapes from the discarded bottom section of the jug or from other plastic. To attach them, stretch a length of duct tape vertically down the back of the jug, sticky side out. Tape over the ends of the strip inside the jug to reinforce them. Press the ears onto the tape, then add more tape to secure them. 4. Facial features: Use the Velcro to attach bottle-cap eyes. Use glue dots to add bottle-cap noses and other details, as shown. If necessary, stack multiple glue dots to even out hollows or dips. EYELASH: plastic fork, handle removed EYE: caps from milk jug and sport bottle TUSKS: plastic shoe display hooks NOSE: whipped cream can cap EYE: caps from milk jug, water bottle and tacky glue bottle NOSE: orange-juice carton pull tabs, on a spice bottle cap MOUTH: milk jug cap seal, cut open EYE: gumball machine toy container and a dish soap bottle cap NOSE: vanilla extract bottle cap with plastic sock hooks 5. Hanger: Use a pushpin to punch two small holes at the top of the head. Push a length of fishing line in one hole and pull it out the other, then knot the ends. Brown, Amy, http://spoonful.com/crafts/jug-heads-0 Airlines Jettison a Costly Load of Paper Airline pilots, who fly some of world’s most technologically advanced machines, have long relied on paper navigation charts and manuals, which clutter the cockpit and have to be lugged around in cases that can weigh more than 35 pounds. Now, however, airlines are catching up with the tablet era. JetBlue Airways Corp said it has received regulatory clearance to provide its 2,500 pilots with Apple iPads that will store digital copies of the heavy paper manuals they refer to during flights. AMR Corp.’s American Airlines said its 8,000 pilots had largely gone paperless now that the carrier has completed the rollout of its own iPad program. By storing manuals and navigation charts on iPads, American figures it has eliminated 3,000 pages of paper per pilot. American estimates that removing the pilots’ bags from all its plans saves about 400,000 gallons of fuel annually, worth $1.2 million at current prices. “Green” Hotels Association® P. O. Box 420212 Houston, TX 77242-0212 Return Service Requested Committed to encouraging, promoting and supporting ecological consciousness in the hospitality industry. 713/789-8889, Fax 713/789-9786 Kiersten Morvant, an Alaska Airlines first officer, said the best part of the change isn’t the reduced weight, but rather that the iPad can be “synced” on a secure airline server and take in all the new chart and manual information, notices to airmen and other revisions. Pilots used to have to manually insert those changes into their paper documents, which could take hours. Carey, Susan, “Airlines Jettison a Costly Load of Paper,” The Wall Street Journal, Business Technology, June 27, 2013 CO-OP BUYING! SALE! SALE! SALE! Member Discount on Laminated Towel and Sheet Cards Prices for towel and sheet cards will be discounted about 15% on all member orders until August 15. The sale-priced cards, our laminated Towel-Rack Hangers and Sheet-Changing Cards, are our best selling cards. The recycled-paper cards, printed with soy-based ink are available with English on Side 1. Translations into Spanish, German, French and Japanese are on Side 2. Regular prices are: Laminated Towel Hangers: (Green ink) ea/$0.90, 100/$60, 500/$240 (4-color) ea/$1.40, 100/$100, 500/$400 Laminated Sheet Cards: ea/$0.75, 100/$50, 500/$200 Member Discount on Towel And Sheet Cards: Discounted prices until August 15, 2013 are: Laminated Towel Hangers: (Green ink) ea/$0.75, 100/$50, 500/$200 (4-color) ea/$1.20, 100/$85, 500/$340 Laminated Sheet Cards: ea/$0.50, 100/$40, 500/$160 Order Now and Save! Call 713/789-8889 or send an e-mail to green@greenhotels.com TODAY! FINAL WORDS . . . “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn. Ralph Waldo Emerson