Clay-Val not source of Westside trouble
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Martin W. Pickett
Enough already. The direct attacks on Cla-Val as some sort of
non-caring, poison-spewing evil empire are not only inaccurate, they
are false and unfair.
Over the past few months as Costa Mesa has been considering
redevelopment, Cla-Val has been repeatedly maligned in public forums
and the media as some sort of out of control, toxic-producing company
that employs illegal workers at minimum wage with no benefits. The
most recent example is in the “Community Commentary” in the Sept. 11
edition of the Daily Pilot. Over the weekend, a large parking area on
the corner of 18th and Placentia was repaved. This is a good thing
for the area but does not necessarily smell pleasant. Cla-Val was
blamed for “belchings of burnt plastic/rubber” on Saturday night. Not
true, and in fact we do not deal with either plastics or rubber
manufacturing and we had no one working Saturday night.
We recognize that we are a large employer in the Westside of Costa
Mesa and take seriously our responsibility to be a good neighbor to
nearby residents. This applies to everything from air, water and
noise pollution to traffic congestion and the impact we have on the
city with our employees that work, live, shop and frequent local
businesses in the city.
Now for some facts:
Cla-Val employs 370 people at our Costa Mesa facility. More than
120 of our employees live in Costa Mesa. This is the world
headquarters of a very well-respected company that manufactures
automatic control valves used by municipal water companies (including
Costa Mesa), airport fueling valves used in most major airports
(including John Wayne and Los Angeles International) as well as most
U.S. Air Force bases, valves used by the U.S. Navy on most ships and
many other uses. We have subsidiary companies in Canada, England,
France and Switzerland supplying our valves in many countries around
the world.
Our firm has been located here since 1954 and we have an awesome
employee base of highly trained people who work very hard to produce
great products with great service at reasonable prices to our
customers. This is not an easy task. We do not employ illegal
workers. We do not have any minimum wage jobs. We do have full
medical coverage and dental benefits. We do have a 401k retirement
plan with company matching funds. We do have a profit-sharing bonus
program. We employ people from many diverse ethnic and geographical
backgrounds and are proud of our team.
Cla-Val cares about the environment and we care about the
community of Costa Mesa. For the past nine years we have spent
several million dollars improving our facility. We have addressed
issues of air, noise and storm water runoff. We are in full
compliance with South Coast Air Quality Management District (AQMD)
and the federal EPA and OSHA regulations. We are inspected annually
by several regulatory agencies and are in compliance with all
relevant rules and regulations. We have permits to operate our
business and currently have 59 permits and comply with local, county,
state and federal regulations. We believe that continual improvement
is not just a goal but also a reality over the past many years and
will continue into the future as well.
We have installed some 22 new and reconditioned (permitted)
baghouses that collect particulates from the atmosphere and enclosed
operations that produce these byproducts. We have changed processes
that formerly caused pollution problems. For more than 10 years we
have been chlorofluorocarbon-free by changing methods of
manufacturing. (This is the chemical CFC that dry cleaners have
recently had to eliminate.) We have changed our painting process to
eliminate VOCs (volatile organic compounds) by changing to water
based paints. Our foundry has changed the additives whereby furan and
oil based additives have been replaced by ester cured phenolic based
resins that are more environmentally safe as well as less odorous.
Many other operational changes have been made to address smaller
issues of odors and we continue to identify additional changes and
improvements that we will make. Http://www.scorecard.com tracks
release of chemicals to the environment. For the year currently on
the Web site, Cla-Val (Griswold Industries) is No. 95 on the list of
Orange County companies with eight pounds of “total environmental
released” inventory. This is very small in comparison to the top of
the list, with hundreds of thousands of pounds. This number has been
reduced since the year published and we are striving to reduce this
number further.
Cla-Val has made many changes to improve the cleanliness of our
storm water runoff, including structural changes as well as process
and work flow changes. The result is a continual improvement for each
successive year in the quality of our storm water for each of the
past five years.
We operate around the clock and have had to implement this work
schedule due to the cost of electricity. We have instituted many
changes as a result of our desire to be sensitive to noise issues for
our neighbors. We have built buildings, insulated areas and changed
locations in an attempt to mitigate this problem.
We are not claiming perfection, but we are claiming significant
intentional and ongoing improvement. This claim is a pledge to our
highly valued employees who work here and the residents who work
and/or live nearby that we will continue this process. The people at
Cla-Val take pride in what they do and this includes an ever
improving company, including an awareness and responsibility for
environmental concerns. The changes noted above have been ongoing for
many years and are not some sort of cosmetic reaction to recent city
politics. We have been operating in Costa Mesa for 49 years and will
continue to do so for many years to come.
Cla-Val is not the only business in town and falsely gets accused
for any odor, smoke or nuisance in the area. We manufacture valves
yet the complaints for plastic odors, burned rubber, tar, burnt
coffee etc. are inaccurately attributed to our operation. There are
other businesses in the area that are inattentive to problems they
create for our neighbors. We have and will address this situation
with the businesses we identify but cannot accept the role as the
producer or the cure all for Costa Mesa air, water or noise problems.
Cla-Val ownership, management and employees are committed to doing
our part. We urge the other businesses in the area to be proactive in
their own cleanup. We urge residents to try to understand that all
industry is not evil and that we provide valuable jobs and that the
solution for Costa Mesa problems is to work constructively together
toward improvement, not destructive, improperly uninformed attacks.
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Martin W. Pickett is the president and CEO of
Clay-Val.
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