EnviroFocus Technologies recently held a groundbreaking event for its $100-million-plus battery recycling facility in East Tampa, with help from Bayview Public Relations.
Working with our advertising partner Schifino Lee and ably assisted by EventMakers Corp., we recommended and coordinated the speakers, timeline, talking points, guest list, and logistics involved in the event. Held for those most important to EnviroFocus Technologies’ business, attendees included government officials, environmental regulators, industry leaders, economic development officials, leaders of neighboring businesses, and EFT employees.
Tampa Mayor Pam Iorio and Tampa City Council Chairman Tom Scott made remarks, along with Jerry Campbell of the Hillsborough County Environmental Protection Commission, and Mark Kutoff, head of Gopher Resource, EFT’s parent company. They were joined by Tampa City Councilman Charlie Miranda and EFT execs John Tapper, Innocent Chikunya and Larry Eagan for the groundbreaking pictures.
EnviroFocus also announced its support of Tampa Bay Technical High School’s alternative energy program, which includes a financial gift for much-needed equipment, along with plans for EnviroFocus employees to serve as guest lecturers at the school.
Hats and shovels are ready at EnviroFocus Technologies’ groundbreaking. See more photos on Bayview PR’s Flickr photostream.
The Tampa Tribune covered the groundbreaking: Plant expansion will provide 125 new jobs in East Tampa.
When completed, EnviroFocus’ state-of-the-art battery recycling plant will process more than 10 million used auto batteries annually with an additional 125 well-paid, green jobs.

Some thoughts as we launch
Thursday, March 18th, 2010 by MissyOf 21 top public relations agencies listed in the Tampa Bay Business Journal 2010 Book of Lists, only three have opted to use “Public Relations” or “PR” in their company name. Those words simply conjure bad thoughts for some people – a bit of that is deserved, much of it isn’t.
For one, anybody can slap a ‘PR’ on their business card – there are a fair share of slick-talkers, spinmeisters, yes-men, and schmoozers claiming a share of the industry banner.
Other misperceptions are gleaned from film and TV – at best portraying a very narrow segment of the business, and often misrepresenting it entirely (internal meetings on strategies and objectives aren’t usually compelling entertainment).
A few negative perceptions might be earned – any profession has bad apples. Some agency bull artist pulls out all the stops for a fancy new business pitch, but then half-baked strategies are passed along to less-experienced staff. Or a flurry of substance-less press releases are blasted to carelessly compiled lists of media and constituents. The activity reports might look impressive, but needles aren’t moving.
Despite and because of these things, we ultimately decided that ‘Public Relations’ will be front-and-center in our branding. We’re going to embrace opportunities to address negative perceptions head-on, and help spread the word that public relations is an important and credible profession.
Good public relations not only generates measurable bottom-line value for clients – it benefits all parties because it guides organizations to be helpful, to be honest, and to offer useful information to people. Good PR helps organizations listen and respond, identifying key areas and addressing them. Good PR fosters communication that is clear, candid, and productive – to help move organizations forward, in line with the needs and wants of society.
And society is changing rapidly, so as is our industry – we’ve got new and emerging ways of communicating, a very different news media landscape, plus reset economic standards. As the industry reinvents itself, we hope it collects more positive connotations – we’ll be here doing our small part to help.
This blog is a forum to discuss issues and trends impacting public relations, along with sharing client and agency news and other things we or you may find interesting…
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