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First Certified EcoRoom Hotels
Embassy Suites Jackson-North/Ridgeland in Ridgeland, Miss., and the Hampton Inn & Suites Chicago Southland-Matteson in Matteson, Ill., are the first two hotels certified One of the consistent complaints about green products and services is that “green” is not an easy concept to define, nevermind measure. Anyone can say their product is green, but it isn’t always the case. This kind of greenwashing often discourages consumers who are looking for legitimately green products, and ends up hurting the overall cause to protect the environment.Since its inception, EcoRooms & EcoSuites (www.EcoRooms.com) has been particularly picky about whom it lets in for precisely that reason. Through the years, EcoRooms & EcoSuites has developed a diverse listing of hotels that meet only the most-stringent criteria for sustainability, earning the praise of hotel guests and hospitality professionals. But understanding that credibility is key to the tens of millions of green consumers, EcoRooms & EcoSuites has begun taking the additional step of auditing hotels that are members of the Web site. Performed by auditors from EcoGreenHotel (www.EcoGreenHotel.com), the Sustainability Audit is a comprehensive review of the hotel’s current environmental initiatives, which also includes meeting the 8 EcoRooms & EcoSuites criteria:
The members of EcoRooms & EcoSuites are some of the greenest and most-progressive hotels in the industry,” says Ray Burger, President of Pineapple Hospitality, which operates EcoRooms & EcoSuites. “Our approved hotels use more sustainable cleaning, paper, and amenity products, empower guests to make a difference with recycling and linen re-use programs, and increase efficiency with better lighting, plumbing, and planning.” “But to assure that our approval goes well beyond greenwashing, our new certification program will use third-party EcoGreenHotel auditors to verify our member hotels meet all our stringent criteria. We understand even one bad guest experience could reflect badly, not just on us, but on all of our members in the mind of a consumer, and our certification program will ensure guests receive exactly the kind of green hotel experience they signed up for when they booked their stays.”First Certified The new 145-room Embassy Suites Jackson – North/Ridgeland is on a journey to go beyond “green” while also promoting Cultural Sustainability and Environmental Responsibility. Along with meeting the EcoRooms criteria, the hotel’s green initiatives include:
A complete listing of the hotel’s green programs can be found at www.greenhotelmississippi.net. Similar plans are being put in place at the EcoRooms-certified Hampton Inn & Suites Chicago Southland-Matteson, as well as the rest of the 13 Kana-managed properties.“We are very excited about the honor of being among the first hotels certified by EcoRooms & EcoSuites, but our staff members are even more excited about the honor,” Patel says. “We believe the hospitality industry is embracing the opportunity and the challenge of sustainable operations, and these two hotels are proving it. “EcoRooms & EcoSuites is the only certification program that requires 100% compliance with all of these criteria,” Patel adds. “It is a very selective process. We believe it will provide us with valuable third-party credibility with our guests and with meeting planners. All the criteria are important, but mandating 100% non smoking rooms is a very important and distinguishing advantage.”New Advisor As the EcoRooms certification program rolls out with the aid of auditors from EcoGreenHotel, it was a natural partnership for EcoGreenHotel President Scott Parisi to join the illustrious EcoRooms & EcoSuites Board of Advisors.Parisi is a veteran hospitality professional specializing in multi-property management. He brings with him more than 15 years of experience with major hotel chains, such as Intercontinental, Starwood, Hilton and Choice Hotels. Parisi served as General Manager of the United States’ first L.E.E.D. certified and "Environmentally Friendly" Hotel — the Sheraton Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia. Through EcoGreenHotel, a firm that performs sustainability analysis of hotels and creates custom plans for properties to develop and implement environmental management systems, Parisi is particularly proficient in finding local, state and government programs that offer loans, credits and rebates available to owners, developers and operators of hotels.“I am honored to be participating as a board member for EcoRooms,” says Parisi. “Every day my team and I are working directly with hoteliers on becoming more sustainable, so we see and hear firsthand what solutions are cost effective to implement in today’s environment.” The EcoRooms Board of Advisors is made up of hospitality industry leaders from every facet of hotel operations. Together, they’ve developed EcoRooms’ criteria for membership, and continuously work to update and enhance it. The Board works to spread the green message and share new ideas and new technologies to push for a greener industry.Along with working together on EcoRooms certification, Burger and Parisi also have teamed up for the EcoGreenHotel.com store, a comprehensive online resource for greening your hotel from events and meetings, to guestrooms, to food-and-beverage operations. “Ray and I are always passing ideas back and forth and networking with strategic partners who share our goals,” says Parisi. “The technology is moving so fast, with new vendors entering the market on a daily basis, it can confuse hoteliers. Through EcoGreenHotel, Pineapple Hospitality and other partners we work with, we can help hotels see through the static and protect them from greenwashing.”Green the World Founded in February 2009 by Shawn Seipler and Paul Till, Clean the World (www.CleantheWorld.org) is a not-for-profit organization that collects, recycles and redistributes soap and shampoo products that are discarded by hotels every day. The recycled soap products are donated to domestic homeless shelters and people in impoverished countries suffering from high death rates due to acute respiratory infection and diarrheal disease often caused by poor hygiene. In 2009, Clean the World collected, recycled and distributed over 230 tons of soap and other bathroom amenities to impoverished people worldwide. With the donations of these discarded soap and shampoo products, Clean the World is one step closer to reaching their goal of preventing the millions of lives lost each year — and they’re doing it one bar of soap at a time. These efforts not only contribute to helping needy people, but it simultaneously has saved more than 4 tons of waste products from going into landfills.In the wake of the devastating earthquake in Haiti, Clean the World has stepped up its commitment to provide basic necessities to the impoverished people of the island nation, and has included medical supplies, food, water and other essentials as well. Since January 2010 Clean the World has delivered over 150 tons of supplies directly to Haiti. In 2009, Clean the World delivered 200,000 bars of soap to schools, orphanages, clinics and churches in Cap Haitien, Haiti. Though its Haitian partnerships and distribution network Clean the World is providing free soap to people desperate in desperate need for proper hygiene. In Haiti alone 8,000 children die annually from diarrheal disease, which is preventable by up to 62 percent with proper hand washing.To promote its mission, and because of the shared goals of caring for the environment and all of its people, Clean the World has become a partner of EcoRooms & EcoSuites. “Even before the tragedy in Haiti, we were just getting a tremendous response from our friends in the hospitality industry,” says Peter Olsen, Communications Director for Clean the World. “Hotels are the cornerstone of our ability to deliver soap and shampoo products to people in need. Even in this terrible economy, people are willing to participate in this important mission.”Partially used amenities are processed by Clean the World at their recycling facility in Orlando, Fla. At the facility, Clean the World employees and volunteers clean the collected soap and sterilize it using a proprietary steaming process. The soap is then packaged and sent by cargo plane or boat for distribution in Haiti and other countries abroad. Currently, Clean the World has plans to open nine recycling centers in major cities around the U.S., which will geographically cover about 65 percent of all hotel rooms in the country. In the long-run, Clean the World would like to be able to cover the entire U.S.“It’s just amazing. Around the world, there’s a desperate need for soap,” says Olsen. “What we’re throwing away today could be saving lives in other countries.” About EcoGreenHotel About Pineapple Hospitality |
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