Waste Management, Inc

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Waste Management, Inc.
Type Public (NYSEWMI)
Founded 1894
Headquarters Flag of the United States Houston, Texas
Key people David P. Steiner, CEO
Lawrence O'Donnell III, COO
Robert G. Simpson, CFO
Industry Waste Management
Products waste management, methane recovery, recycling, trash collection, portapottys
Revenue $13.36 billion USD (2006)
Employees 50,000 [1]
Website wm.com
A Waste Management trash collection truck in Toronto, Ontario.
A Waste Management trash collection truck in Toronto, Ontario.

Waste Management, Inc. (NYSEWMI) is a waste management, comprehensive waste, and environmental services company in North America. The company's network includes 413 collection operations, 370 transfer stations, 283 active landfill disposal sites, 17 waste-to-energy plants, 131 recycling plants, 95 beneficial-use landfill gas projects and 6 independent power production plants. Waste Management offers environmental services to nearly 21 million residential, industrial, municipal and commercial customers in the 48 contiguous United States, Alaska, Canada, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. With 22,000 collection and transfer vehicles, the company has the largest trucking fleet in the waste industry.[2]

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[edit] History

In the 1890s, Ham Huizenga, a Dutch immigrant, began hauling garbage at $1.25/wagon in Chicago. In 1968, Wayne Huizenga, Dean Buntrock, and Larry Beck founded Waste Management, Inc. and began aggressively purchasing many of the smaller garbage collection services across the country. In 1971, Waste Management went public, and by 1972, the company had made 133 acquisitions with $82M in revenue. It had 60,000 commercial and industrial accounts and 600,000 residential customers in 19 states and the provinces of Ontario and Quebec. In the 1980s, WM acquired Service Corp of America (SCA) to become the largest waste hauler in the country.

In 1998, in a pivotal development point, WM merged with USA Waste and moved its headquarters from Chicago to Houston. The merged companies retained the WM brand. However, that year also brought trouble for the newly expanded company, in the form of an accounting scandal.

In November 1999, turn-around CEO Maury Myers was brought in to help Waste Management recover. The company has since implemented new technologies, safety standards, and operational practices, and is on a steady upward climb.

In 2003, the company had generated $1 billion in free cash and was returning profits to shareholders in the form of dividends.[3]

[edit] Corporate structure and leadership

Waste Management is structured into the following units:

  • Midwest Group
    • Jeff Harris, Senior Vice President
  • Western Group
    • Duane C. Woods, Senior Vice President
  • Eastern Group
    • Brett Frazier, Senior Vice President
  • Southern Group
    • James E. Trevathan, Senior Vice President
  • Waste Management Recycle America
    • Patrick J. DeRueda, President

Current members of the board of directors of Waste Management are: John C. "Jack" Pope, David P. Steiner, Dr. Pastora San Juan Cafferty, Frank M. Clark, Jr., Pat Gross, Thomas I. Morgan, W. Robert Reum, and Steven G. Rothmeier.

David P. Steiner is also the chief executive officer of the company (since 2004), succeeding A. Maurice Myers.

[edit] Subsidiaries

  • Wheelabrator Technologies Inc.
    • Mark A. Weidman, President

[edit] Corporate issues

[edit] Anti-trust allegations

In 1987 the US Government accused Waste Management of violating antitrust laws.[4] They were specifically accused of colluding with other waste haulers to allocate customers in Florida.

[edit] Accounting scandal

In 1998, an accounting scandal led to a major drop in stock price and led to the replacement of top executives, when the new CEO ordered a review of the company's accounting practices. The company had augmented the depreciation time length for their property, plant, and equipment, making their after-tax profits appear higher. The net result was $1.7B in inflated earnings. WM paid $457M to settle a shareholder class-action suit and the SEC fined WM's independent auditor, Arthur Andersen, $7 million for their role.[5][6]

[edit] Environmental Record

Waste management specializes in environmental protection, groundwater protection,environmental engineering, and air and gas management. Waste management has helped to create new land fills called, bioreactor landfills, that better the environment[citation needed]. The Bioreactor landfill is a waste treatment landfill with technology that accelerates the decomposition of organic wastes in a landfill. This is accomplished by controlling the addition and removal of moisture from the waste mass, the collection and extraction of landfill gas, and in some instances the addition of air.[7] Like wind and solar power, landfill gas is a natural resource that can be harnessed to produce clean energy[citation needed]. Waste Management's landfill gas-to-energy program is a vital and important part of North America's drive to develop alternative energy sources and promote environmental sustainability.[citation needed]

Waste Management currently operates ten full-scale waste treatment landfill projects in the U.S. and Canada.Waste Management is one of the largest private holders of greenhouse gas emission reduction credits in the United States. In 2005, W.M. reduced greenhouse gas emissions by about 3.8 million tons.[citation needed] They have also replaced nearly 500 diesel-fueled trucks with vehicles that run on 100 percent clean-burning natural gas. These new garbage and recycling trucks comprise one of the nation’s largest fleets of heavy-duty trucks powered exclusively by natural gas.[8]

[edit] Marketing

WMI used aggressive marketing to try to turn the company around in the 1990s, with slogans like: “What business do we have saying we help the environment? That is our business.“[citation needed] and "Waste Management, helping the world dispose of its problems."[citation needed] The current slogan is “From everyday collection, to environmental protection, think green. Think Waste Management.“

[edit] References

  1. ^ (2007) Standard and Poor's 500 Guide. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.. ISBN 0-07-147906-6. 
  2. ^ Waste Management, Inc.. About WM. Retrieved on 2007-06-03.
  3. ^ The Motley Fool. Talking Trash. Retrieved on 2007-06-03.
  4. ^ New York Times. Waste Hauling Antitrust Case. Retrieved on 2007-06-07.
  5. ^ PBS. Waste Management: System Breakdown. Retrieved on 2007-06-07.
  6. ^ CNN. Waste Management settles suit. Retrieved on 2007-06-03.
  7. ^ Bioreactors | Waste | US EPA
  8. ^ Layout 1

[edit] External links

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