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Content about Georgia

May 16, 2012

ATLANTA — Fraud ring offered services to illegal aliens frequenting laundry

ATLANTA — Four members of a Cobb County document fraud ring that made counterfeit Social Security cards, permanent resident cards, and other fake identification documents and then sold them from a Smyrna Laundromat have been sentenced to federal prison on a charge of conspiring to produce fraudulent identification documents, United States Attorney Sally Quillian Yates reports.

The defendants, all from Mexico, received sentences ranging from nine to 28 months, plus two years supervised probation. Four additional co-defendants in the scheme have also pleaded guilty and await sentencing on various dates over the next three months.

The organization used a coin laundry located in Smyrna to facilitate the sale of the counterfeit documents and offered their services to illegal aliens who frequented the Laundromat.

Between March 2010 and August 2011, Homeland Security Investigations agents, U.S. Secret Service agents and investigators with the Governor’s Office of Consumer Protection purchased counterfeit identification documents at various locations in Cobb County, Ga., as part of an undercover operation.

The documents included Social Security cards, permanent resident cards and State of Georgia driver’s licenses. Using physical and video surveillance, agents determined the location of the organization’s counterfeit document production facility.

In September 2011, agents executed a search warrant at an apartment complex in Marietta, Ga. Agents recovered document-making equipment, including computers and printers, and recovered electronic files containing more than 2,000 images of fraudulent identification documentation, including Social Security cards, permanent resident cards, birth certificates, driver’s licenses from more than 20 states, and various other documents. Firearms were also recovered.

“Manufacturing counterfeit identification documents is a serious problem in our community,” Yates says. “These defendants ran an operation that enabled many illegal aliens to get their hands on identification that made it appear as if they were legally in the United States. This crime impacts our community in many ways, not the least of which is the negative impact on the credit history and financial well-being of people whose Social Security numbers were unlawfully used on the counterfeit documents.”

“This case demonstrates the wide-reaching effects of the manufacturing and selling of counterfeit identification documents and its impact on innocent victims and our communities,” says Reginald Moore, special agent in charge of the U.S. Secret Service Atlanta Field Office. “The importance of cooperation among our law enforcement partners remains paramount to our ability to catch those that are involved in these types of fraudulent activities.”

October 4, 2011

NASHVILLE — Star Distributing Commercial Laundry Equipment is now offering the Wascomat, Electrolux and B&C Technologies product lines in Georgia and Alabama, the distributor says.

“We are excited to be expanding our operations to Georgia and Alabama with the B&C Technologies, Electrolux and Wascomat lines,” says Michael Davis, president of Star Distributing. “The expansion of our product lines will position us well for growth in Georgia and Alabama.”

Laundrylux distributes both Wascomat and Electrolux products. Wascomat creates economical machines found in neighborhood Laundromats. Its coin-operated machines help laundry owners save on water, energy and gas, the company says. Electrolux is well known for its high-end commercial washers and dryers.

B&C Technologies provides an array of on-premise laundry equipment from washer-extractors to tumblers to commercial ironers.

“We are looking forward to speaking with commercial laundry businesses in Georgia and Alabama about these great new products,” Davis says. “This is a great opportunity for us to help commercial laundry owners invest in and optimize their return on investment.”

September 26, 2011

CHICAGO — With large-capacity washers and dryers more common in today’s coin laundries, offering some type of commercial service seems to make more sense than ever before.

But taking on commercial accounts is a much different animal than running a vended laundry. There are staffing and equipment issues to consider, contract and billing matters to attend to, and you can’t sit back and wait for customers to come to you.

IDENTIFYING OPPORTUNITIES THAT MAKE SENSE

Someone new to commercial work might think the best approach would be to seek out any and all accounts. And while there are a variety of businesses that can benefit from hiring a laundry service, the distributors believe that a focused approach would serve you best.

“The biggest accounts out there that I see coin laundries being able to go after are on the lower end,” says Andy Wray, sales manager for ACE Commercial Laundry Equipment, a full-service commercial laundry distributor headquartered in Westminster, Calif. “We’d be looking at schools, barber shops and beauty salons, day spas, things like that. Basically towels or limited items.”

Doctors’ offices and physical therapists are other potential clients, says John Sugg, president/CEO of SAMCO, a Fayetteville, Ga.-based commercial laundry distributor serving the coin laundry, multi-housing, hotel, education and healthcare markets.

“Start off by concentrating on one type of commercial business,” he says. “People that we’ve seen be successful have keyed in on these segments. Or they will key on beauty and barber shops and just do towels.

“You can expand beyond your base, but it’s always best to identify the market you’re going after.”

You never know where opportunities may come from. Sugg recounted how a Birmingham, Ala., laundry owner solicited subcontractors staying in the area as they worked to rebuild tornado-torn Tuscaloosa 40 miles away. At its peak, the laundry was turning out about 1,200 pounds of wash-and-fold business a day.

“You can crank out pretty good business if you have the people to do it,” he says.

Some laundries have hired additional staff to work on their commercial accounts overnight, Wray says.

MAKING THE MOST OF YOUR OPPORTUNITIES

It’s not unusual for a coin laundry owner to do some marketing—store signage, ads in the Yellow Pages and the local newspaper, direct mail, etc.—but making a go at offering commercial service means taking things to a whole new level.

One of Sugg’s customers has had success by setting up a website, running specials, and accumulating the e-mail addresses of potential customers. Another customer takes a personal approach, traveling to potential clients to introduce her business to them.

“You’ve got to market it,” he says. “You can’t just hang a sign and expect people to come to you.”

“A lot of these people, just like in our industry, know each other,” Wray says of potential commercial accounts. “As long as you get in with one account, whether it be a small hotel, a day spa or something of that nature, you might do a great job for them. Word of mouth, as you know, is the best advertisement.”

Once you have landed a client, it’s important to provide them with consistent service, Sugg says.

“If you’re doing towels and you quad fold one week and the next week you roll them, that’s unacceptable to most people. Every towel should look the same every week.”

Deadlines drive commercial service. If you start offering the service but can’t deliver on time, then you’ve got problems.

“The biggest thing would be starting off slow, obtaining accounts, the pickup and delivery of the product, and not biting off more than you can chew,” Wray says.

“I’m not saying you can’t do a lot of volume. You could have 10 or 15 salons you do.”

Whatever decisions you make regarding offering commercial service, be mindful of how they may impact your self-service business, Sugg says.

“You don’t ever want to discourage your paying customers that are coming in the door. That should always be the main thrust of your business.”

Click here for Part 1.

September 22, 2011

CHICAGO — With large-capacity washers and dryers more common in today’s coin laundries, offering some type of commercial service seems to make more sense than ever before.

But taking on commercial accounts is a much different animal than running a vended laundry. There are staffing and equipment issues to consider, contract and billing matters to attend to, and you can’t sit back and wait for customers to come to you.

“(Running a) Laundromat is more of a consumer business, a retail service, whereas commercial is more business to business,” says Andy Wray, sales manager for ACE Commercial Laundry Equipment, a full-service commercial laundry distributor headquartered in Westminster, Calif.

And a coin laundry owner must be intimately involved for their commercial service venture to be successful, advises John Sugg, president/CEO of SAMCO, a Fayetteville, Ga.-based commercial laundry distributor serving the coin laundry, multi-housing, hotel, education and healthcare markets.

“You have to be hands-on,” says Sugg, who is a store owner and route operator himself. “If the owner is actively involved in that segment of the business, it can be very profitable.”

To fine-tune your commercial laundry service, it’s important to coordinate it properly from the get-go.

BUSINESS CONSIDERATIONS

You must have the proper equipment and facility to handle such an endeavor, the distributors say.

“Some of these places are so tight and cramped, to bring on any more work, they might have to adjust to (working) after hours,” says Wray, a third-generation laundry professional. “Obviously, where there’s a will, there’s a way.”

Most of the standard 40- to 60-pound washers will “get you by,” he says. “Depending on some of the cycles that you require, you can make it up a lot in chemicals, using quality products.”

Equipment design and operational capabilities also factor in, according to Sugg.

“You can’t do one size fits all and make it work,” he says. “You need versatility as far as your equipment is concerned. … If you just have a basic machine that has hot, warm and cold as a selector, then you don’t have a very effective model for doing good commercial account business.”

“It might be that you have idle machines sitting there, but if they’re all top loaders, it’s going to be difficult to do some of the requirements from some of the hotels and stuff like that,” Wray adds.

With the right equipment in play, there should be no need for you to segregate machines for commercial accounts, Sugg says.

But there are limitations to the scope of commercial service that a traditional self-service laundry can offer. When you make the decision to take on commercial work that involves ironing or other special treatment, it’s probably time for you to branch out.

“Then you really are getting into a whole other segment of business,” Sugg says. “We’ve seen it done, but at the point that you’re going to bring in a roll ironer, you probably should be looking at setting up an industrial laundry to do that.”

“When you start getting into pressing and stuff like that, you step into the commercial/industrial arena,” Wray says.

From a management standpoint, serving commercial accounts requires knowledge in contract negotiations, invoicing and other areas. You may also want to review your insurance coverage to make sure it’s sufficient for the changes you’re looking to make.

“Somebody who doesn’t have organizational tools in the first place probably should shy away from (commercial work),” Sugg warns.

Monday: Identifying opportunities that make sense...

February 19, 2007

November 4, 2006