North American Material Handling & Logistics Show (NA 2010)
Wednesday, April 28, 2010, 10:00am – 2:00pm, I-X Center Room 7
Cleveland, OH (Directions Below)
$30.00 Members / $35.00 Non-Members / $20.00 Students and In-Transtition / $40.00 at the door regardless of affiliation
Attendees will get access to the CSCMP All Ohio Event as well as passes to attend the NA 2010 show and educational sessions.
Already have plans to attend NA 2010? Then show your support for CSCMP by registering for this special luncheon event.
Program Description:
Are You Talking About Greening Your Supply Chain in 2010, but You Are Having Problems Connecting the Dots between Green and Savings?
Many professionals are, so the Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, and Toledo Roundtables of the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP) are joining forces at the North American Material Handling & Logistics Show (NA 2010 – www.nashow.com) to provide you a joint CSCMP Roundtable event that will give you up to date and actionable knowledge on making Green and Sustainable projects a reality in your company.
You will be learning from leading industry professionals about:
- Current Trends in Green Warehousing and Logistics
- What Shippers are Doing to be Sustainable
- Green Initiatives in Intermodal and Rail
Who Said Warehousing and Logistics Can’t be Green!
Want to learn how to be environmentally sensitive and sustainable while saving big dollars working with large logistics / warehouse campuses? We will explore two major sustainable initiatives on Murphy campuses with actual financial numbers and ROIs, plus a few other interesting activities, including LEED. We also will view other environmental trends and opportunities influencing the logistics industry.
Richard Murphy
Richard is the President / CEO of Murphy Warehouse Company a supply chain logistics services organization that provides distribution, transportation, warehousing and value-added services for domestic and international clients. He is the 4th generation of Murphy to run the enterprises since the founding in 1904.
Richard is a past Chair of the global Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP), a member of the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management’s Supply Chain & Operations Advisory Board and most recently Executive Committee Chair of the Center for Transportation Studies (CTS), and Board Member of the International Warehouse Logistics Association.
He is also a licensed Landscape Architect, President of the American Society of Landscape Architects – MN Chapter, and just started his 23rd year teaching in the College of Design at the University of Minnesota. Richard’s expertise ranges from logistics and transportation to design and real estate development. He has combined his unique background by ensuring that his facilities are as green as possible by planting acres of native prairies, pursuing LEED certifications, adapting existing systems to make them more environmentally sound, and addressing stormwater issues on company properties. In January 2009, Murphy’s new voluntary stormwater management system for its 22-acre Minneapolis logistics campus was given an honor award by the American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC) of Minnesota Engineering Excellence Awards program. Murphy also won The Business Journal’s 1999 Best in Real Estate Award for a 26-acre Brownfield redevelopment project it completed in Fridley, Minnesota.
The Warehouser’s Almanac
This session will wrap sound bites from articles the speaker has published into guidelines for warehouse performance improvement every manager can use. Attendees new to our profession and old will leave the session with guidelines that will be referenceable for years to come.
John M. Hill
John Hill has served as COO/CEO of three automatic data collection and supply chain execution systems firms with over 100 successful AIDC (bar code, RFDC & RFID) and warehouse (WMS) and transportation management (TMS) systems installations. He was a co-founder of the Automatic Identification Manufacturers (AIM) Trade Association, former president of the Material Handling Education Foundation, Inc. and the Material Handling Institute, Inc. and a current member of the Board of Governors of the Material Handling Industry of America (MHIA). A co-founder of MHIA’s Supply Chain Execution Systems & Technologies and Integrated Systems & Controls groups, he is also a member of the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP) and the Warehouse Education & Research Council (WERC). The recipient of the 1997 Norman L. Cahners and 2004 Reed-Apple awards for contributions to the U.S. material handling industry, Hill was inducted into Modern Material Handling magazine’s 20th Century material handling Hall of Fame and named to DC Velocity magazine’s roster of Logistics Rainmakers and World Trade magazine’s Fabulous 50. Widely published in trade and professional journals in the U. S. and overseas, he has given over 350 professional seminars and presentations in North and Latin America, Europe, Asia and Australia and has also been a faculty member at Georgia Institute of Technology’s Supply Chain & Logistics Institute.
Direction to the IX Center
From the South
Take I-71 north to Exit #237 (Snow Road).
Freeway signs will identify this exit as the I-X Center Exit.
Turn left (West) on Snow Road, follow Snow Road until it dead-ends, then follow directions for Route 237 South.
The I-X Center is located on the right side, past the traffic signal.
From the Southeast
Take I-77 north to the Ohio Turnpike.
Follow turnpike west to Exit #161.
Follow I-71 north (Cleveland) to Snow Road.
Turn left (west) on Snow Road, follow Snow Road until it dead ends, then follow directions for Route 237 south.
The I-X Center is located on the right side, past the first traffic signal.
From the West
Take the Ohio Turnpike East to Exit #161.
Follow I-71 north (Cleveland) to Snow Road Exit.
Turn left (west) on Snow Road, follow Snow Road until it dead-ends, then follow directions for Route 237 south.
The I-X Center is located on the right side, past the first traffic signal.
OR:
Take I-480 east to Grayton Road exit; turn right on Grayton Road and left at the next intersection (Route 17). Follow signs to Route 237 south.
From the Northeast
Take I-90 West to I-71 south.
Take Airport Exit (Route 237) south.
The I-X Center is located one mile south of Hopkins Airport on the right side past the traffic signal.
From the East
Take the Ohio Turnpike west to Exit #161.
Follow I-71 north (Cleveland) to the Snow Road Exit.
Turn left (west) on Snow Road, follow Snow Road until it dead-ends, then follow directions for Route 237 south.
The I-X Center is located on the right side, past the first traffic signal.
OR:
Take Route 422 west to Interstate 480 west to the Airport Exit (Route 237) south. The I-X Center is located one mile south of Hopkins Airport on the right side past the first traffic signal.