What To Do When A Superstorm Strikes? Says The Wall Street Group: “We Never Really Asked the Question”

Partners Philip J. McGee (left) and Alfred J. Basile in the pressroom of The Wall Street Group.

Imagine everything in ruins.

Not some of it. All of it: production equipment. Paper. Press bays and workspaces. Lights and HVAC. Telephones and computers. Jobs in progress. Literally every material item housed within a printing plant either damaged beyond repair or knocked completely out of commission.

Now, try to imagine surveying this overwhelming devastation and vowing—without knowing how or even if the vow can be fulfilled—to re-emerge from the dead zone into which a vast wall of black water has brutally shoved your printing business.

The Wall Street Group of Jersey City, NJ, recently reported exactly this kind of phoenix-like rise—not from ashes, but from the waterlogged detritus that its plant and equipment had been turned into by superstorm Sandy on October 29, 2012.  Metro Graphics Reporter visited the company this week to hear first-hand what one of the owners described as “more a story of survival than of disaster.”

Outwardly, there’s nothing to indicate that the printing building at 1 Edward Hart Drive had been lying squarely in the path of one of the worst natural disasters to strike the NY-NJ metro region in a generation. Inside, fresh slabs of sheetrock and the smell of new paint speak of a cleanup—but not of the gigantic task confronting partners Alfred J. Basile and Philip J. McGee as they began to comprehend the full extent of the harm that the killer storm had done.

What they did when they were able to regain access to the darkened, still partially flooded plant a few days later was simply to tackle whatever was in front of them.

The owners and their 30 employees immediately pitched into the bailing, hauling, salvaging, and scraping with no more guidance than the knowledge that these things desperately needed to be done. Moving just as quickly, Basile and McGee brokered out whatever work was ready for production or had to be rerun. Having satisfied themselves that obligations to customers wouldn’t be compromised, they then turned the somber job of inventorying damaged equipment and determining what could be saved and what would have to be replaced.

Basile and McGee aren’t the only printers in the metro area to have taken a body blow from Sandy, but we don’t know of any others who have faced up to a greater loss with more resilience and perseverance. Those virtues are the products of a decades-long partnership between two print professionals who epitomize all the qualities of endurance associated with the printing industry in this region.

On October 29, 2012, water surging from superstorm Sandy breached the plant’s front doors and destroyed or damaged nearly everything inside the building.

The story of The Wall Street Group begins with the small Multilith shop that Basile started at 27 Whitehall Street  in Lower Manhattan in 1966. About four years later, he moved the business to 11 Broadway where McGee, a former print buyer for Western Electric and sales manager for Xerox, was working for another printing firm. Joining forces, the two men went on to acquire a Mountainside, NJ, printing company that had offset presses larger than the small-format Multis they were running.

They moved the Broadway and Mountainside operations to Harborside, NJ, in 1981. Five years later, everything was consolidated in the Jersey City plant near Liberty State Park that The Wall Street Group now occupies. After refurbishing the building—a former metalworking plant—the partners installed 40” presses, a full bindery, and, eventually, digital presses and mailing equipment.

As the name suggests, printing for investment houses and financial institutions has been the traditional mainstay of the company since the days when Basile began producing buy-sell pads for stock market traders. Because documents such as research reports for equity firms have shifted from printed form to electronic distribution, some of this traditional volume has declined. The partners make up the difference with work for medical, educational, and not-for-profit customers and, as McGee says, for “anyone else who wants ink put on paper.”

Now that the company is just a few years shy of the 50th anniversary of the founding of the seminal business on Whitehall Street, the partners are clear about what has been most responsible for carrying them toward the golden milestone: their absolute commitment to customer service and to meeting what others might regard as impossible deadlines.

“We try not to have one-shot customers,” says McGee of his and Basile’s belief in making all customer relationships last. This they accomplish primarily by refusing to say no. They refrained from saying it, for example, in the case of the customer who one afternoon sent in an order for 50 Wire-O bound booklets with UV-coated covers that had to be in someone’s hands in Boston the next morning.

Thanks to vertically integrated production assets that included digital presses for the inside pages, an offline UV coater for the cover, and a Wire-O machine for the binding, The Wall Street Group was able to turn around in hours what might have taken another printer days.

“Nobody wants to wait for anything today,” says McGee, adding that being equipped for same-day production gives The Wall Street Group a significant edge over rivals lacking the capabilities it has. Another key to longevity, he says, is the fact that the company doesn’t do and thus has never had to depend on low-end commodity work.

It also pledges to optimize for printing everything its customers send it, correcting errors and doing whatever else it takes to make the job run problem-free. This is a habit developed in the old days, says McGee, when “customers used to give us a bag of paragraphs” and expect the hodgepodge to be turned into crisp, coherent documents.

The plant typically operates on two shifts, five days a week. Nowadays its output is about half digital print and half conventional offset. Such was the state of affairs last October 29, when Basile, McGee, and their staff battened down the plant for the bad weather they knew was on the way.

But, like nearly everyone else in the storm’s path, they had no idea of how bad it would turn out to be. Basile and McGee sandbagged the loading dock doors, double-skidded the paper in the storage area behind them, sent everyone home, and hoped to avoid the worst.

That night, storm surge in Upper New York Bay reportedly lifted the sea level high enough to obscure the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty. Some of it swelled into the inlet facing Edward Hart Drive, leaping over the low pier of the marina there and pouring straight up the street toward the plant, only a few hundred yards from the water’s edge.

The misplaced curtain of water struck the building with so much force that it literally tore the massive loading dock doors from their frames. Their wreckage, along with tons of spoiled paper, lay strewn across the parking lot outside. Within the plant, a flight of stairs leads from the mezzanine to the ground-floor pressroom. A faint stain just below the level of the fifth step from the bottom indicates the depth of the inundation that occurred when the water boiled through.

Located a few hundred yards below the plant, this shoreline scene looks peaceful now—but on the night of the storm, it turned into a floodgate of devastation.

Before it receded, the water had crested at a point where it submerged press motors and flooded nearly every other piece of equipment in the production area. Basile and McGee were able to recover and rebuild the press motors—about 50 of them—but what had happened to many of the other machines was much worse.

Now junk and in dire need of replacement were the plant’s digital presses, its CtP platemaker, its paper cutters, and one of its saddlestitching lines. The flood’s only unequivocal survivor was an envelope tabbing machine that had been placed on an elevated surface at some earlier point.

The hard work of reclaiming the plant—including drying, repainting, tearing out and rebuilding walls, and treating the entire 32,000-sq.-ft. building to prevent mold—went on for months, often in miserably cold and dark conditions. Basile and McGee reckon that the damage to plant and equipment came to about $2 million. They estimate that payments from FEMA flood insurance will cover a little less than one-third of the losses they sustained.

The partners’ quick reaction, both in attending to the cleanup and in making sure that production of customer work wouldn’t be interrupted, undoubtedly is what saved the business from extinction. The storm hit on a Monday, and by Thursday, McGee and Basile were brokering work and assuring clients that all would be well. As McGee says, “if you claim to be a service provider, you’ve got to provide service.”

Brokering went on for about three months until production could resume. The partners are under no illusions about the difficulties they will continue to face as they try to put Sandy and the losses it inflicted permanently behind them. But, the mere fact that the plant is back open and producing represents one of the most remarkable stories that the metro area printing industry has been able to tell in Sandy’s aftermath.

McGee relates it in his own words at his personal blog, where this remark sums up the extraordinary grace under pressure that he and Basile have shown ever since the day the skies darkened so ominously over Upper New York Bay:

“What to do? We never really asked the question. We’re going to rebuild and restore and make it better than it was.”

 

 

GCSF Presents a Record Number of Scholarships and Salutes Howard Weinstein as “Champion of Education”

Its name—the Graphic Communications Scholarship, Award, and Career Advancement Foundation, Inc.—may be a mouthful, but this education-promoting industry group has a heart even bigger than its moniker. The breadth of its generosity was on full display last night as GCSF presented a record number of scholarship grants to students training for careers in all areas of graphic communications.

The ceremony, hosted by Hearst Magazines at its atrium and theatre in Manhattan, also featured the presentation of GCSF’s Champion of Education Award to a metro area print company president described as someone “who never stops in his pursuit of helping the kids.”

Last night’s “kids” were 37 high school seniors and college students who collected $47,000 in scholarship grants from a network of private funds coordinated by GCSF, a 501(c)3 not-for-profit corporation started by a small group of industry professionals in 2002.

Initially meeting in borrowed space and keeping handwritten records, the founders raised and distributed $5,000 worth of grants in the first year. They also consolidated a number of existing scholarship funds that were not being actively managed.

Since then, the program has awarded more than $360,000 to 95 students enrolled in or about to enter graphics studies degree programs at schools including New York University, Rhode Island School of Design, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Parsons School of Design, University of Michigan, Pratt Institute, New York City College of Technology, Fashion Institute of Technology, University of Pennsylvania, and Rochester Institute of Technology.

The most important thing to know about the grants, said David Luke, GCSF president and last night’s MC, is that 100% of all money donated goes directly to the recipients and their schools. GCSF, operated exclusively by volunteers, has no formal management structure and does its work entirely without overhead.

GCSF accepts scholarship applications from metro area residents pursuing studies in graphic communications at any college or university offering such a program. To qualify for grants, students must submit portfolios, academic transcripts, and letters of recommendation to a GCSF scholarship selection committee. More than a third of last night’s recipients were in their second, third, or fourth years of receiving assistance from GCSF.

Two of the students were the beneficiaries of something special: grants from cash raised by a former GCSF recipient and a friend who organized their own scholarship fund, “Big Apple Big Hearts,” as a way to assist those whose lives and career plans were disrupted by superstorm Sandy last year. Another of the evening’s highlights was the unveiling of the results of a student design competition sponsored by Trend Offset Printing (see related posts below).

At the annual award ceremonies, the stipends traditionally are supplemented by gifts from companies and organizations that support GSCF. Last night, the students went home with certificates entitling them to receive free copies of QuarkXPress, color specification tools from Pantone, and one-year memberships in IDEAlliance.

GCSF also announced the launch of a mentorship program designed to offer scholarship recipients practical career guidance from freshman through senior year. Those taking part will gain real-life experience and exposure to varied disciplines within the graphic communications industry, said Jerry Mandelbaum, GCSF treasurer.

Howard Weinstein (left) accepts the Champion of Education Award from GCSF president David Luke. (photo: GCSF’s Thaddeus B. Kubis)

Howard Weinstein, honored with the Champion of Education Award, provides that kind of experience when he hosts visits by student groups to Candid Litho, the large commercial printing firm that he and his family operate in Long Island City. He also is a prodigious fundraiser on behalf of GCSF and other industry causes.

At one point during his acceptance remarks, he brandished a fistful of envelopes containing donation checks and said of the givers, “I don’t give these people any choice—they have to support the industry.” For this relentless activism, Luke called him “incredibly deserving” of the Champion of Education Award.

Weinstein thanked numerous family members and colleagues for helping him succeed as a printing company president and as a friend of the industry. Among his pieces of advice for students was a warning against becoming complacent or being satisfied with results that are merely good enough.

“Never be comfortable. Always be uncomfortable,” he said. “The minute you get comfortable, you’re screwed.” Weinstein also announced that Candid Litho will host a career day and open house in September in a joint effort with GCSF and the Advertising Production Club of New York. (Watch Metro Graphics Reporter for additional details.)

GCSF Gets a Helping Hand from “Big Apple Big Hearts,” a Sandy Relief Fund for Students

Jessie Murphy (left) and Danielle Greenstein, founders of “Big Apple Big Hearts”

Two students who received stipends at the event staged last night by the Graphic Communications Scholarship, Award, and Career Advancement Foundation (GCSF) were paid out of a fund that didn’t exist last year—and wouldn’t exist today except for the unusual efforts of two childhood friends determined to do something for those whose lives were disrupted by superstorm Sandy.

The benefactors are Jessie Ann Murphy and Danielle Greenstein, founders of “Big Apple Big Hearts.” This fund helps students in need of aid in the aftermath of the storm. Last night, it was the source of two $2,500 grants for Shannon Berry and Hillary Sells, both currently studying at Parsons the New School for Design.

Murphy and Greenstein have raised a total of $15,000 for the fund, including $3,000 from the sale of T-shirts and $10,000 in a contribution obtained from Quad Graphics. Murphy, a former GCSF scholarship recipient, is a freelance graphic designer and a recent graduate of New York City College of Technology. Greenstein is the principal designer at Midtown Studios LLC, an interior design firm.

Friends since summer camp, both knew people in neighborhoods hit hard by the storm. A week after Sandy passed through the metro region leaving $50 billion worth of damage in its wake, Murphy and Greenstein resolved to make up some of the loss to their peers even if on a small scale.

Murphy turned for advice to the seasoned fundraisers of GCSF, whom she credits with being unstintingly supportive of her education and the development of her career. “I learned a lot about giving back,” she says. Murphy’s continuing connection with GCSF includes serving as one of its trustees and as a member of its newly formed mentoring committee.

She and Greenstein applied the example of GCSF to their own fundraising plans, and thus was “Big Apple Big Hearts” conceived and launched. The drive continues with a planned “spa gala” in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, in August, aimed at raising awareness of “Big Apple Big Hearts” and attracting donations to it.”

“The more money we continue to raise, the more people we’re going to help.”  Murphy says.

For more information about “Big Apple Big Hearts,” e-mail BigAppleBigHearts@gmail.com.

Trend Offset Printing Sponsors GCSF Marketing Design Competition

From left: Joshua Martinez, Mark Andriella, Nick Patrissi, Monique Sterling, Maggie Nielsen, Natalie Alcide, Jessie Murphy, Jerry Mandelbaum.

This year, the annual presentation ceremony of the Graphic Communications Scholarship, Award, and Career Advancement Foundation (GCSF) showcased something new: a design competition that brought together five motivated and talented students to work on a real-world marketing project.

With the sponsorship of Trend Offset Printing, design students from Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT), Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT), Hunter College, and SUNY Purchase worked with Nick Patrissi, Trend Offset’s director of marketing, and professional designer Michelle Ratzlaff on the project under normal deadlines. After several rounds of review based on submitted designs, work created by Joshua Marz FIT was selected for use in a live marketing campaign.

According to Patrissi, Trend Offset was impressed with the quality and professionalism shown by all of the students. “We got  a lot more than we expected,” he said. “A beautiful poster design to use for a promotional campaign for clients and staff, and a chance to work with some very motivated and gifted young professionals.”

Patrissi said that GCSF is considering making the competition part of its new mentoring initiative. This program aims to provide a venue for career-focused learning experiences by connecting students and industry professionals.

Sandy Alexander Brings Second HP Indigo 10000 On Line, Expanding Its Capabilities in 1:1 Marketing

June 18Sandy Alexander (Clifton, NJ), a leading direct mail and commercial print provider, announced today that it has concurrently brought on line its second HP Indigo 10000 Digital Press while also expanding its capabilities in 1:1 marketing.

Sandy Alexander was one of the original beta sites for the HP Indigo 10000 and the first in the U.S. to be operational with the new press.  Since the system is primarily used for 1:1 marketing / variable data printing campaigns, the company also has expanded its team of experts and its capabilities in variable data composition, data management, and custom workflows.

“The demand for the new, larger sheet size provided by the HP Indigo 10000 in combination with our variable data printing capabilities has been phenomenal,” said Mike Graff, CEO and president of Sandy Alexander. “The HP Indigo 10000 allows us to transform our offerings, created by the unique combination of format size and image quality. That capability in combination with our industry-leading 1:1 and cross marketing capabilities lets us support new programs for our Fortune 500 clients in the automotive, retail, financial and travel industries.”

The HP Indigo 10000 Digital Press is the first B2-format (29.5″ x 20.9″) sheetfed solution from HP Indigo.  According to Graff, combining the new sheet size with expanded content management offerings enables clients to more easily implement and manage personalized communications with highly targeted messaging.

“This has provided our clients with increased creativity and efficiency and has resulted in more impactful marketing campaigns,” he said.  “This has generated a competitive advantage in the marketplace for our clients while also dramatically increasing their marketing ROI.”

The two HP Indigo 10000 Digital Presses are complemented by an HP Indigo W7200 digital web press and an HP Indigo 7000 sheetfed press. The company has also applied its proprietary cross-platform color management solutions to these systems.

Sandy Alexander Inc. is the largest independently owned, high-end commercial graphics communications company in the nation, serving the needs of Fortune 500 companies and many other enterprises from coast to coast.  Sandy Alexander’s broad array of services ranges from digital solutions, sheetfed and web capabilities, webs with in-line finishing and personalization, and wide- and grand-format printing for retail visual merchandising.

Sandy Alexander is also a leader in protecting the environment with 100% wind energy; Sustainable Green Partnership (SGP) certification; carbon-neutral facilities for digital, wide- and grand-format production; and tri-certification for chain-of-custody paper.

For more information, call Doug Hazlett at (973) 470-8100 or visit www.sandyinc.com.

Passion for Graphics Education Burns Brightly at Gamma Gold Key Award Ceremony

The Gamma Chapter of Gamma Epsilon Tau held its Gold Key and Founders Award ceremony in New York City on May 29. The annual event salutes outstanding achievement in graphic communications and promotes the value of higher education in the field.

This year’s honorees were Mike Connors, managing director, production department, The New York Times, who received the Gamma Gold Key Award; and Frank Romano, professor emeritus, Rochester Institute of Technology, selected for the Founders Gold Medal and Citation Award.

Gamma Epsilon Tau is a national fraternity for students of graphic communications, and Gamma chapter is its branch at New York City College of Technology (City Tech). The school’s department of Advertising Design and Graphic Arts (ADGA) has an enrollment of more than 1,000.

The event, organized by ADGA Professor Frank Adae, was held in its customary venue, the 101 Club on Park Avenue in midtown Manhattan. The evening’s master of ceremonies, Jack Powers, noted that the ceremony was taking place in a “big week” for graphics studies at City Tech, a week that also included ADGA’s annual student portfolio review and design competition.

When it comes to education for graphic communications and other high-tech disciplines, “no place in the city is more on top of that than City Tech,” Powers declared. Russell Hotzler, president of City Tech, said that it wouldn’t be possible to provide the quality of education that the school offers without the support of industry members who back its efforts on behalf of students.

Mike Connors (left) accepts the Gamma Gold Key Award from Jack Powers (center) and Prof. Frank Adae (right).

Exemplary among them is Connors, who assists students by hosting plant tours for them at the newspaper’s production facility in College Point, Queens. He also operates a student internship program there, raises funds for learning and physically challenged children, and is active with public-private educational initiatives like PENCIL.

Nick D’Andrea, manager of the College Point plant, cited Connors’s “driving passion to get things done” both professionally and in support of education.

“When you have a task that needs to be done, give it to Mike,” D’Andrea said.

Referring to students in his Gold Key acceptance remarks, Connors spoke of “our obligation as business people and adults to take care of them.” Most important to impress upon young people in graphics studies programs, he said, is that “in our world, it comes down to one word, quality.”

Powers and Adae present the Founders Gold Medal and Citation Award to Frank Romano (left).

Frank Romano, the recipient of the Founders Award, arguably is the most widely known and highly regarded of all specialists in graphic communications. This blogger, called upon to make Romano’s introduction, noted that his name “has become synonymous with higher education for the graphic arts.”

“it doesn’t stretch the truth to say that because of the enormous amounts of source material that he has created for the rest of us to use, he is an invisible presence in every classroom where graphic communications is taught,” we observed.

Romano spoke bluntly both to students and to educators and industry members who are trying to help them build the foundations of their careers.

He told the students that as products of an educational system that graduates 40,000 people trained in graphics every year, “you’d better be really good at making something print.”

But in some cases, Romano warned educators and their industry supporters, “we’re not teaching the right stuff. We’ve failed at that.” He urged everyone with responsibility for educational programs like ADGA’s to be sure that what they are teaching touches all of the bases covered by graphic communications as the industry practices it today.

In the induction ceremony for new student officers of Gamma Chapter, Gamma Epsilon Tau, the lighting of the candles symbolizes the light of knowledge overcoming the darkness of ignorance.

The program concluded with a candle-lighting ceremony that marked the induction of new student officers into Gamma Epsilon Tau’s Gamma Chapter.

The fraternity’s name comes from ancient Greek words representing its purposes and ideals: Gamma for letter, literature, or alphabet; Epsilon, for science or knowledge; and Tau, for art or craft. Thus translated, Gamma Epsilon Tau means “the science or knowledge of the art and craft of letters.”

The Wall Street Group Rebuilds, Endures, and Thrives in the Wake of Hurricane Sandy

Editor’s note: the following was provided by The Wall Street Group, a full-service offset and digital printing company in operation since 1966.

This video shows the extent of the damage done to plant and equipment of The Wall Street Group by superstorm Sandy last October.

Jersey City, NJ – On the morning of October 29th, 2012, the paper was loaded onto double skids, sand bags were placed by the large overhead doors of the plant’s loading bay, the lights turned off, and employees sent home where they waited, for Sandy. That night, she hit.

The next morning, Al Basile, Sr. and Philip J. McGee of The Wall Street Group arrived at their plant of 43 years to find an overhead bay door to their building bent and lying in the parking lot. Skids of wet paper were broken and strewn all over the area: in the road, in the grass, on the fences. Inside, the building was dark and wet, pallet skids were knocked over, coating the floor with wet paper. The devastation that Sandy brought upon the building was astounding, including the visible four-foot water marks left behind by the flooding. There was no power, no heat, and no phones.

What was truly remarkable was that their first order of business in rebuilding was to off-load the customer work they had in-house so that deadlines would be met and schedules maintained.  The projects that had been printed and waiting to be delivered prior to the storm were destroyed and had to be reprinted.  All of this work was sent to four or five printer partners in the area that were not as adversely affected by Sandy, and after two weeks the network was up, allowing jobs to be sent electronically. A good start, but such a long road to go.

While these pressing jobs were taken care of they acquired pumps and generators and dumpsters so that they could start to clean, repair, and rebuild.  Long-term relationships with service companies and mechanics paid off as these folks pitched in with employees to get the plant back on line. Never once did they think about closing the doors and retiring. These seasoned men, the true salt of the earth, thought about getting their plant and their business back to the place it had been—where both their customers and employees depended on them.

January was the start of everything coming together, but it still remained a bumpy ride. All stored materials needed to be replaced. The mechanics, working with the pressmen, pulled out and replaced about 50 motors of varying sizes from the salvageable presses that were damaged by the flood waters. Their digital presses were completely ruined and so new state-of-the-art machines were purchased that today make up half of the business at Wall Street Group.

Little by little all of the equipment was either replaced or fixed.  All of the printed material that was stored at the plant was reprinted and today is safe and ready for customers. Despite having no electricity for two and a half weeks and no heat for five months, they got the job done. If not for the fortitude of their staff, their very loyal vendors who helped rebuild the motors and the printing presses, and their empathetic and understanding customers, the presses would remain silent.

As with every piece of equipment that needed to be rebuilt, so too the company and its owners and employees were rebuilt and today The Wall Street Group endures.  After a long delay in receiving assistance from FEMA and still battling with insurance providers, the nature of the owners of The Wall Street Group remains and endures as well: that toughness, that grit that got them through the worst storm to hit the Northeast in recorded history. They not only survived, but now they thrive. Everything is new again, and growing. As Phil McGee says, “We’re better than ever.”