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Manufacturing Industry

Prairie phenom: Firstar Fiber Corp., Omaha, Neb., has risen from its great plains location to handle a healthy amount of recycled tonnage

Recycling Today,  Oct, 2007  by Brian Taylor

Without the forest resources of states such as Wisconsin, Georgia or Washington, the state of Nebraska has never been a paper industry giant.

During the 1980s and 1990s, however, recycling advocates and economic development officials were determined to jump start the Cornhusker State's paper industry, with an eye toward helping fund a paper mill.

Before a mill could be built, however, planners determined that the state's scrap paper collection system would need a boost. Striving to be a part of that process, the Gubbels family founded Firstar Fiber Corp. in 1997.

[ILLUSTRATIONS OMITTED]

In the ensuing decade, the company has grown from a minor processor to a large, vertically integrated company that recycles a variety of materials and also runs a paper converting operation.

QUICK STARTER

With its more than 200,000 square feet of plant space and its ability to process more than 8,000 tons per month of recyclables, Firstar Fiber has the footprint of a recycling company that has been decades in the making.

But the company was created just 10 years ago when brothers Dale and Howard Gubbels and Howard's son Brian founded Firstar Fibers, working from a 9,000-square-foot building located in Fremont, Neb.

Previously, Dale had gained recycling knowledge in his jobs with the Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality, as a recycling consultant and in his tenure as president of the National Recycling Coalition (NRC).

The Gubbels family's entrepreneurial efforts yielded steady growth, as Firstar outgrew its initial location in 1999 in favor of a different 25,000-square-foot building in Omaha.

After the recycling company added tissue and towel converting operations, it required even more space, which it found in leased space near downtown Omaha.

Firstar's biggest geographic move came in 2004, when it acquired a 330,000-square-foot former retail distribution center located on a 26-acre parcel in Omaha.

Currently, Firstar uses about 90,000 square feet of this space for paper recycling and materials recovery facility (MRF) operations, some 110,000 square feet for its paper converting processes and another 10,000 square feet as office space. (Other space in the building is leased to tenants.)

The company has grown in volume and has also added key personnel throughout this decade, such as recycling market manager Lee Cornell and Jay McDowell, commercial sales director for the company.

Firstar has also reached into the towel and tissue industry with some recent hires, including new Chief Financial Officer Jim Goffi and board members Bob Schragel and Bob Antonucci, all of whom are veterans of the Scott Tissue organization.

PAPER PLUS

With the word "fiber" in its name, Firstar's focus on paper traces back to its origins and the vast majority of its early activities.

Paper recycling and the commercial towel and tissue converting businesses remain the large volume and large revenue aspects of Firstar.

Additionally, though, the company has set up a MRF within its spacious plant to handle curbside recyclables including aluminum and steel calls and plastic bottles and jugs.

Haulers serving the municipal recycling programs ill Omaha bring material to the Firstar MRE as do haulers from throughout Nebraska and western Iowa.

On the commercial collection side, Cornell and McDowell indicate that material makes its way ill from as far as Kansas City, southern Minnesota, South Dakota and even Chicago.

In an era of high fuel prices, bringing in material from far afield can require strategic thinking, says Cornell. "The transportation costs will kill you, but if you find the right way to incentivize your customers, you call overcome that," he comments.

One way Firstar does this is by offering single-stream collection for commercial customers, who can recycle their bottles and calls along with their office paper, their cardboard or anything else recyclable that might be generated at their workplace.

"With our commercial customers, we call endear ourselves with them by taking additional material like shrink and stretch wrap," says McDowell. "They generate a lot of that."

Handling containers from municipal programs and commercial customers can be good for business, especially when secondary commodity prices are strong. "There is good revenue with the plastic and the aluminum," says Cornell, who adds that the incoming volume of such material has also been healthy. "From Nebraska, the volume is very good, and even in Iowa (which has a deposit and return law) we will get a lot of HDPE and PET that still ends up in the recycling bin."

By collecting the additional commodities, Firstar still makes progress toward its original goal of harvesting more paper from its Midwest market region.

"We felt we could adapt the single-stream equipment to handle this single-stream commercial material we were collecting," Cornell says. "We knew we could get more office paper that way, but we've been shocked by how much office paper has not been captured by any recycler," he adds.