The Green
Scene
In 1972, Syd Weisberg, a chemist and founder of
PortionPac, a Chicago-based cleaning supply
manufacturer, published "Know It Like It Is," a
pamphlet that summarized his views on pollution
of various kinds and showed him worried about
looming environmental collapse.
"Man has created forces which
are hostile to his well being. He must
understand how these forces have arisen and how
they can be controlled," Weisberg wrote in the
introduction. "Unless he alters his conduct and
practices in accordance with this understanding,
he may come to a gasping halt."
While some of the concerns in
the pamphlet ring oddly more than 30 years since
its initial publication ("If city noises
continue to rise at one decibel a year, everyone
will be stone deaf by the year 2000," Weisberg
wrote), other concerns expressed in it-about
global warming, for example-are now
broadly-recognized issues. The pamphlet says the
company would follow Weisberg's philosophy in
"every phase of our product, program and
system."
Few companies distribute
environmental manifestos. But PortionPac does,
as if it were an environmental activist passing
out literature outside a university dormitory.
The company tries to integrate environmental
values into its business operations. It has
contracted with Hunter Lovins, a founder of the
Rocky Mountain Institute, one of the nation's
foremost think tanks on "natural capitalism."
Lovins said PortionPac is winning new business
because of its environmental standards.
"PortionPac is ahead of the
game," in terms of environmental sustainability,
Lovins said. "They've always been innovative."
PortionPac is a 44-year-old
privately-owned firm that makes concentrated
cleaning supplies and sells them to elementary
schools, hospitals, prisons, government
buildings and other institutions from an
unassuming building at 400 N. Ashland. They
employ 51 people. Their products cover the gamut
for institutional needs. There is a line of
cleaning solutions for mopping, scrubbing,
stripping and finishing floors, a solution for
cleaning toilet bowls and pots and pans,
polishing glass, and freshening the air.
Each product comes in a
polyethylene sleeve customers' janitorial staff
mix with water to create the cleaning product.
The company has about 30 service techs who train
staff to use the product correctly. Each
concentrate is color coded to an instruction
sheet and one sleeve is used for each mix,
keeping the usage simple and waste to a minimum.
By concentrating the
solution-the company says their formulations are
more than 10 times more concentrated than
competitors-and packing them in sleeves instead
of ready-to-use spray bottles or jugs,
PortionPac keeps chemicals and other waste of
out landfills.
By the company's estimate, one
case of its glass cleaner saves 56 pounds of
cardboard and 100 pounds of plastic versus
pre-filled, ready-to-use bottles of the same
product.
"Instead of using a bottle
that's filled with 31 ounces of water and one
ounce of chemical, you put the packet in the
bottle and reuse the bottle," said Burt Klein,
the company's chief of operations.
"You use each bottle 500 times,
easy. You're not making the solution, or
transporting the bottle. You're not transporting
water, not heating and cooling storage space or
using space to store it," Klein said. "That's
the concept and the beauty of it."
While the actual concentrated
goo sold by PortionPac is certified by Green
Seal, a non-profit group that labels products
according to environmental impact, Marvin Klein,
a co-founder and president of the company (and
Burt's father), said the object is to sell only
what a customer needs. PortionPac, Marvin Klein
said, actually wants customers to use less of
its product, not more. To that end, its sales
staff is not paid by a commission on how much
cleaning product they sell. No chemical, he
said, is safe.
"We absolutely can't stand to
see chemicals going into the waste stream," he
said. "The point is every chemical that goes
into the waste stream is pollution down the
line. There are no safe chemicals. The object is
to use our products correctly and use as little
as possible."
PortionPac tries to build
environmental values into its operations in
other ways too. Burt Klein said they are
purchasing carbon offsets for company cars, for
example.
At their headquarters, every
effort has been made to create a pleasant
working environment. During a recent tour,
enough sun came through the winter gray to light
a glass atrium and paintings, sculpture and
plants that filled the red brick space.
In the warehouse and area where
the concentrates are mixed, the company uses
radiant heat fixtures that turn on and off.
There is natural lighting, and small lamps
provide spot lighting for workers. Stacks of
cardboard, wood and metal are neatly placed
throughout the shop, waiting to be recycled or
reused. An oasis of plants sits in the middle of
the mixing area.
"The company is not just about
the stuff that is made," Burt Klein said.
Marvin Klein, the company
president, sees expanding opportunities for
PortionPac, especially now that more and more
individuals and businesses are demanding
environmentally-friendly products. Klein said
the company used to hide its environmental
sensibility. He recalled being literally carried
from a room once during a sales call in the
south.
"I started talking like an
environmentalist. They thought I was crazy," he
said. "I was talking about the whole concept of
using things properly and the impact you have on
rivers and streams."
That attitude is changing.
"We think the demand for an
environmentally-friendly product will grow
rapidly," Klein said. "We have one of the most
practical systems in the world that can make a
change in a basic and huge industry."
Contact:
mmaidenberg@chicagojournal.com