Scottsdale, Arizona (PRWEB) June 20, 2007 -- Joe C. Holmes, National Director of Sales & Marketing for EDM, a firm specializing in environment management software was the featured guest on the daily Better Process Podcast presented by Ken Rayment to share insights into how mid-sized industry is affected by increasing publicity and public awareness of environmental issues.
Listen to the interview:
http://www.podcasternews.com/programs/87/better-process-podcast/4147/
The Better Process Podcast is hosted by Ken Rayment. "American manufacturing is the engine of our economy," says Rayment. "As a Six Sigma Black Belt working in industry, I got tired of hearing only bad news about American manufacturing. I launched the Better Process Podcast to share the success stories and be the voice of the small and mid-sized manufacturing firm." Recent product releases by Environmental Data Management directed at small and midsized industry to help them manage their environmental impact was a great fit for what the better process podcast is trying to accomplish. EDM Provides tools and insights that help these companies remain competitive in a very difficult and ever changing marketplace.
"Environmental health and safety compliance has been an ongoing challenge for companies of all sizes for years." says Holmes. "Our focus is on delivering solutions that have typically only been available to the big corporations. Now, smaller manufacturing companies can operate like the big guys."
Environmental Data Management is in the business of helping regulated industry establish management system to help address their environmental impacts. This is accomplished through a software tool called Comm-Trac supported by compliance consulting support.
http://www.edm-usa.com
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Help Solve Global Warming: Non-Profit Offers Public Free Personal Carbon Impact Calculator
Holistic Management International offers the public a a free Personal Carbon Impact Calculator card that helps people determine and offset their ecological effects on the planet. The 9" x 4" card carries a simple chart that translates individual impacts on global warming into dollars and cents, using the same principle that the Climate Exchange industry uses in paying carbon credits to farmers. Reviewing the chart, people can calculate their personal carbon impacts, and then decide whether or not to use the dollar value of their impacts to support alternative energy projects.