Glatfelter

Glatfelter is a global manufacturer of specialty papers and engineered products, headquartered in York, Pennsylvania. U.S. operations include papermaking facilities in Spring Grove, Pennsylvania; and Chillicothe and Fremont, Ohio; as well as woodyard operations in Washington, West Virginia; Piketon, Ohio; and Delmar, Maryland. International operations include facilities in Germany, France, UK, Canada, the Philippines and representative offices in China and Russia.

Glatfelter
Public
Traded asNYSE: GLT
S&P 600 Component
ISINUS3773161043 
IndustryPaper
Founded1864
HeadquartersYork, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Key people
Dante C. Parrini (CEO)
Timothy R. Hess
Revenue US$1.19 Billion (FY 2009)[1]
US$163 Million (FY 2009)[1]
US$123 Million (FY 2009)[1]
Total assets US$1.19 Billion (FY 2009)[1]
Total equity US$510 Million (FY 2009)[1]
Number of employees
4,200
Websiteglatfelter.com

The company was started by Philip Henry Glatfelter in 1864. As of 2010, Glatfelter's sales exceeded $1.4 billion annually,[2] and its common stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol GLT. Glatfelter and its subsidiaries employ more than 4,200 people worldwide.

History

  • As early as 1880, Glatfelter led the industry with the installation of the world's largest paper machine.[3]
  • Glatfelter switched to making paper using wood fiber instead of rags in the 1880s.
  • In 1934, Glatfelter began its forestry management initiative, encouraging farmers to plant more trees and prevent soil erosion.
  • In 1947, Glatfelter launched a tree farm managed for the growing of sustainable forest crops in Pennsylvania and Maryland.
  • Glatfelter's previous President and CEO, George Henry Glatfelter II, is the great-great grandson of the founder, Philip Henry Glatfelter (1837–1907), who also founded York Ice Company, which became York Heating and Air Conditioning.[4]
  • Glatfelter's work with sustainable tea packaging was highlighted in the September 2009 issue of the Tea & Coffee Trade Journal.[5]
  • In August 2018, Glatfelder announced an agreement to sell its Specialty Papers division to private investment firm Lindsay Goldberg for $360 million, with the sale to close before 2019.[6]
  • In February 2020, Glatfelter announced it would relocate its corporate headquarters from York, Pennsylvania to Charlotte, North Carolina later in the year.[7]

Environmental Concerns

In 2016, Glatfelter's Spring Grove paper mill was listed just outside the top 1% of toxic air pollution sources in the United States, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, ranking 160 out of 15,461 sites evaluated.[8] The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection cited the company for two significant violations since 2013, and the company has been federally cited for significant violations of the Clean Air Act. In response to these violations and subsequent press coverage, a Glatfelter representative stated to the York Daily Record that the company maintains a commitment to improving its environmental performance. Glatfelter sold the Spring Grove mill in 2018.[6]

Products

gollark: This is very annoying. I'm trying to make a (mostly pointless, yes) IPv6 multicast chat thing, and after struggling with the mysterious errors from the socket syscalls, got it to bind properly (I think?) so that `socat - "udp6-sendto:[ff02::aeae]:44718"` makes it work, but apparently it won't work from my other device, even though they can ping each others' link local IPv6 addresses.
gollark: Or it could download more RAM temporarily.
gollark: Just disable those, simple.
gollark: Well, keep them happy by just overwriting a random data structure or part of the kernel's code when it needs the space.
gollark: You can apparently use userspace OOM killer daemons in the meantime.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.