Taken to the cleaners
Paul Clinton
If a regional air-quality board’s ban of a widely used dry
cleaning chemical stands, Sam Chirco is out of business.
Chirco, who has handled harbor-area residents’ laundry for more
than 30 years, said he would close Harbour Cleaners instead of
spending at least $50,000 to replace his equipment.
“This is the end of it for me,” Chirco said. “I’m not going to
fight it. I’m not going to go through this.”
Chirco and many other Southern California cleaners bit their lips
on Dec. 6 when the South Coast Air Quality Management District’s
board enacted the nation’s first ban on perchloroethylene, or “perc”
for short.
No dry cleaning machines that use the chemical will be permitted
in Orange County beyond 2020. More than 2,000 cleaners in four
Southland counties are affected by the ruling.
For Chirco and other cleaners, perc is the lifeblood of their
business. It’s a high-powered solvent that removes heavy soil and
stains from clothing. When the chemical zaps a stain, however, a puff
of pollution is released.
The chemical is a carcinogen and should be eliminated, said Norma
Glover, a South Coast Air Quality Management board member and former
Newport Beach councilwoman.
“We believe, based on the science, that it is harmful,” Glover
said. “Do you want a cleaner environment? If you do, you make the
hard choices.”
The board also set aside $2 million to help cleaners pay for new
equipment.
While environmentalists have pushed for the ban, Chirco and other
cleaners say claims of the chemical’s hazards are overblown.
Air-quality officials required cleaners to modernize their
equipment a decade ago. Before that,, Chirco used between 50 and 100
gallons of the chemical per month. Nowadays, he uses less than 100
gallons per year.
Chirco owns one perc machine.
Without perc, Chirco said the time it takes to clean garments,
especially silk and other delicate fabrics, will quadruple.
“Labor is your biggest expense [in dry cleaning],” Chirco said.
“That’s going to get turned over to the customer.”
Al & J’s Cleaners in Costa Mesa has already decided to raise
prices. In January, the price of cleaning a garment will go from
$1.75 to $2, owner Joanne Rivera said.
Instead of revamping his entire operation, Chirco is opting for an
early retirement.
To buy a new environmentally friendly machine would cost $50,000,
Chirco said. That would essentially wipe out his modest profit
margin, which is less than 10% of his gross sales.
“This used to be a good business,” Chirco said. “It isn’t
profitable anymore.”
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