U.S. companies discover the dark side of a COVID-19
business boom
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[May 15, 2020] By
Timothy Aeppel
(Reuters) - Kevin Kelly has discovered the
many ways a deadly pandemic can be both a boom and a burden on some U.S.
businesses.
As the nation clamped down with stay-at-home orders, Kelly said his
company, Emerald Packaging Inc. in Union City, Calif, saw demand for the
factory’s output explode. Emerald churns out plastic bags for produce,
like baby carrots and iceberg lettuce, and Kelly attributed the growth,
in part, to the perception that packaged produce is a safer alternative
to unwrapped items.
Emerald represents the other side of the current novel coronavirus
crisis, which has seen unemployment surge to levels not seen since the
Great Depression. The jobless rate hit 14.7% in April. While many
companies face a slump, some are rushing to add workers, including
delivery services like Instacart. A recent survey by the Atlanta Fed
concluded there have been three jobs added to the U.S. economy for every
10 layoffs.
Eric Schnur, CEO of specialty chemical maker Lubrizol Corp., owned by
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Corp, said he anticipates "many
millions in extra costs associated with responding to COVID-19."
Lubrizol's business boom includes a three-fold increase in its output of
the gelling agent used to make hand sanitizer.
Schnur said the extra costs go beyond stepped up cleaning and safety
equipment and includes "significant increases in supply chain and
logistics costs as we work to get our materials to those who have the
greatest need."
Another company facing added costs is Calumet Electronics Corp., in
Calumet, Mich., which said it has spent $80,000 on everything from soap
to mobile desks to keep workers safe through the crisis. For more on
Calumet, click here:
For Emerald, orders surged 150% in March and were up another 7% in
April. But there’s a dark side to that surge, both in terms of cost and
complexity.
All the steps the company has taken — both to boost output and keep
workers safe — are expected to add at least $350,000 to costs by the end
of the year. This doesn't include the lost production time, which adds
up to at least an hour each day, that machines have to be shut down for
cleaning. Kelly, Emerald's chief executive officer, said he hasn't
figured out what this will do to his profits, but he expects a big hit
to his margins. Emerald is a family-owned business with annual sales of
about $85 million.
One of the biggest costs for Emerald was $50,000 Kelly spent on an
automated temperature scanner. When the crisis first hit, Emerald
implemented a regimen that included workers getting their temperature
taken at the start and end of each shift.
But Kelly soon realized there was a problem having 40 people at the
start of each shift waiting to be checked, one by one, by someone
standing close to each employee as they were screened.
"It also just isn’t comfortable," he said. "You know it’s a temperature
gun, but you basically are holding a gun up to someone else’s head. It
just made everyone uncomfortable."
The new system will be a scanner that flashes a red warning signal if
someone walks by with a body temperature over 100.4 degrees.
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COVID-RELATED COSTS
Another big-ticket item is the cleaning, which accounts for $75,000 of the added
costs. This includes assigning six workers — two on each shift — to constantly
scrub and sanitize surfaces and $10,000 for six backpacks that these workers now
use to hose floors with cleanser. The company, which was founded in 1963 by
Kelly’s father, has added 10 workers to its staff of 240 and is heaping on
overtime as well to get the orders out the door.
Even the company’s rag bill exploded. They used to buy 2,000 rags a week. Now
it’s 7,000. The cost of that one item has jumped from $300 a month to $1,000,
while disposable glove use has tripled.
Michael Rincon, Emerald's director of operations, says each week brings new
twists. For instance, they’ve discovered that having workers constantly wiping
surfaces with isopropyl alcohol erodes signs and buttons — but they only
realized that after it was too late. On one machine in the factory, the word
"danger" printed in bright red has blurred.
Rincon said the faded labels will be repainted. But he’s also had to replace
buttons on machines that have had the lettering rubbed away. The cost of a new
button isn’t much, but the repairs mean costly shutdowns on lines that run
around the clock. Some buttons can be replaced in a few minutes, but others take
longer, said Rincon.
Kelly said he even thought about trying to put through a price increase to
offset some of these expenses. But a few weeks ago, his biggest customer let him
know that was a non-starter. The customer told Kelly he was going to see who
else might be able to supply him with produce bags, presumably at a better
price.
Besides the costs, there are also plenty of unpredictable management challenges.
The company made masks mandatory eight weeks ago, at the very beginning of the
crisis, but Kelly and other managers still find workers in the plant who aren’t
wearing them or are wearing them incorrectly.
One problem is the nature of their factory, which is dominated by large, noisy
machines. The only way to communicate in many parts of the factory is to lean
your head right next to your coworker. "I’m constantly walking through the
factory — throwing my arms apart — to remind people," said Kelly.
Emerald has had three false alarms, with workers either calling in sick or
falling sick at work and being sent home. However, none tested positive for
COVID-19, the illness caused by the novel coronavirus.
Kelly said that in a country that regulates so many things, there’s still no
good government guidance beyond general guidelines.
"The toughest thing is that there isn’t much direction from the state or the
federal government," Pallavi Joyappa, Emerald's chief operating officer, said.
"You are kind of making it up as you go along."
(Reporting by Timothy Aeppel; editing by Diane Craft)
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