September-October 2007

Total Backup Generation

Supermarkets in southern Florida prepare for the next hurricane.

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By George Leposky

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The second Milam’s store, in a standalone 17,558-square-foot building, was constructed in 1962 in the heart of Miami Springs, a working-class community north of Miami International Airport. This store also received a new total backup diesel generator; the installation was completed in October 2006.

The Miami Springs store is a few blocks from the Miami Canal, an artifact of the early 20th-century effort to drain the Everglades. “The canal is not a major problem,” says Brian Haggerty, Reagan Equipment’s regional sales manager. “The generator sits on top of the fuel tank, and is higher than some of the electrical wiring in a major panel inside the store that would go out before the generator if flooding occurred.”

The third Milam’s location occupies space in the Grove Gate Shopping Center on the edge of Miami’s eclectic Coconut Grove community. Milam’s took over this store in 1999 after several other supermarket companies had abandoned it. Milam’s is remodeling and upgrading the store and intends to install a total backup generator there as part of that project, which should be complete during 2008.

The fourth Milam’s store opened in 2001 in a two-story strip shopping center, RK Plaza, built in 1990 in Sunny Isles Beach, FL. The building is in a hurricane evacuation zone that is subject to flooding. “We hope to install a new generator to meet that entire store’s backup power needs in the next two years,” Max Milam says.

Hurricane Planning
Milam’s has an 18-page hurricane preparedness document that includes a five-phase emergency plan and a checklist. “Our employees know their responsibilities,” Milam says. “We meet before every storm and review our plans.”

The firm’s early hurricane preparations begin each May 1, before the start of hurricane season, at the corporate office. Items that must be completed before the season starts on June 1 include:

  • preparation of a hurricane order for Associated Grocers, a supplier;
  • pre-ordering truckloads of bottled water;
  • testing of generators;
  • topping off fuel;
  • checking employees’ rain gear;
  • updating management’s emergency phone list;
  • stockpiling enough heavy plastic to cover refrigeration cases;
  • verifying that the stores have enough wet-floor signs; and
  • reviewing supplies in the hurricane tools supply box.

“When the National Hurricane Center issues a tropical storm warning four to seven days before a storm is expected, we schedule a department managers’ meeting and make sure everyone learns what needs to be done and who should do it,” Milam says. “Other lists are maintained and checked for each subsequent alert level announced by the Hurricane Center.”

This list includes sending hurricane supply boxes to all four stores and canceling frozen-food orders (but not orders for ice).

Inventories in the Miami Springs store’s coolers and freezers are reduced so that, if necessary, it can store inventories from the other stores. Employee phone lists for the stores also are updated, and managers are instructed to schedule refrigeration trucks to hold products in case power goes down.

“After the 2005 storms passed, one of our suppliers sent us refrigerator trucks with ice for our customers,” says Norm Orths, president of retail operations for Milam’s Markets. “We will always be grateful. Ice was a commodity in short supply, and Milam’s customers appreciated that they were able to get it.”

“In 2005 we lost power at two stores following Katrina and at all four stores following Wilma,” says Milam. “Our product loss for all four stores was in excess of $500,000. Nothing like this had happened in Milam’s Markets’ 20 previous years in business. Just like automobile insurance, perishable product loss insurance carries a high deductible, and with two power losses in three months it’s now very difficult to get such insurance. We had to be proactive, even before our insurance renewal, and tell our provider what we are doing to mitigate losses and ensure our doors could reopen as soon as possible after a storm had passed. The year 2005 was very stressful for us as well as our customers. Hurricanes can’t be stopped, but hopefully we can prevent our loss of power and position ourselves to better serve the community.”

Fuel Arrangements
The original generators used by Milam’s were propane-powered, but the new ones run on diesel fuel.

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“We chose to go with diesel because diesel generators are more efficient,” Milam says. “Concern for gas interruption due to storm-damaged trees also helped to influence our choice of generator fuel. The areas around our Coconut Grove, Miami Springs, and Redbird stores have heavy tree canopies, and uprooted trees can break gas lines. In 1999, Hurricane Irene, a minimal Category 1 storm, caused our Miami Springs store to be without power for three or four days, and we had a significant loss of perishables.”

Through Reagan Equipment Co. Inc., Milam’s contracted with a supplier of fuel for commercial and industrial clients, Port Consolidated Inc. in Fort Lauderdale, FL, to replenish diesel fuel supplies as needed for the generators’ standby operation and for prime-power operation in the wake of a hurricane. Next Page >

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