Cleaning the air of perc
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Jenny Marder
Beach Cleaners, on Beach Boulevard, has stepped up as the first and
only dry cleaning business in the city to use the Green Earth
machine, one of the industry’s few environmentally safe alternatives
to perc, a cancer-causing chemical that state regulators are trying
to ban.
“The customers are thankful to me,” said Deok Lee, owner of Beach
Cleaners . “Other cleaners who use Green Earth raised the price, but
I kept the same price, so the customers are happy.”
The South Coast Air Quality Management District enacted the first
ban on perchloroethylene, or “perc,” on Dec. 6, 2001, when all dry
cleaners were told they would have to convert to alternative means by
the year 2020.
Perc has been designated as a cancer-causing chemical by the state
of California.
Green Earth representative Don Dallons boasts that the system is
the most affordable, and one of the only completely environmentally
safe alternatives, other than a carbon dioxide-based cleaner, which
is limited in its cleaning capabilities.
“It’s a really neat technology,” Dallons said. “It is odorless,
nontoxic, and where the customers benefit is, it does not pull color
out of their clothes. The perc solvent that traditional dry cleaners
use is really aggressive.”
Also, certain fabrics -- such as leather, suede and items with
sequins and beading -- can be cleaned with the Green Earth machine,
whereas at a cleaners that used perc, these items would have to be
sent out to specialty cleaners.
“It’s nontoxic for me and for our customers,” Lee said.
Not only is perc unhealthy, but it has a very bad smell, Lee said.
The transition to new technology is not cheap. The Green Earth
system costs between $55,000 and $65,000, according to state
regulators.
But the air quality management district is providing some help.
The district’s governing board has set aside $2 million to help dry
cleaners obtain grants to aid in replacing their machinery with safer
alternatives.
Beach Cleaners is among many businesses in the state to receive a
$5,000 grant to toward its purchase of the new cleaning system.
Grants are also available for a water-based technology and other
hydrocarbon machines.
The district also provides bank loan assistance to cleaners who
might otherwise have trouble qualifying for a bank loan.
“This does a wonderful job,” Dallons said of the Green Earth
system. “White colors come out whiter as compared to perc.”
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