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PCMA Goes Green

PCMA held its 51st Annual Meeting in Toronto Jan. 7-10, with approximately 3,100 delegates meeting at the Metropolitan Toronto Convention Center (MTCC) as part of the association’s first “zero-waste” major event.

“For industry organizations, it’s incumbent on us to give information to industry members on how to conduct green meetings,” said PCMA President and CEO Deborah Sexton. “I do believe that this industry itself can be very influential. [PCMA] will incorporate certain guidelines at sites.”

Sexton said that although the next two locations for PCMA’s Annual Meeting have been contracted—Seattle in 2008 and New Orleans in 2009—the association will be reworking its RFP to include green meeting guidelines as part of the selection process for the site of its 2010 convention.

To make sure the Annual Meeting was indeed “zero-waste,” Sexton said PCMA spent anywhere from $35,000 to $50,000 to remove compactors from the convention center and on other zero-waste logistical concerns.

To be a truly zero-waste event, a convention must produce absolutely no garbage, meaning that all products used at the convention center must either be recycled or composted.

As it has done for other meetings, PCMA redistributed unused food items to the needy in the local community; food that was partially consumed or otherwise perishable was turned into compost.

Other methods to achieve zero waste included the removal of all waste bins at the convention center, leaving only three recycling options: paper, mixed drink containers and organic waste.

In other Annual Meeting news, PCMA announced the launch of its participation in the MeetingMetrics program, in conjunction with Starwood Hotels and Resorts.

Developed by GuideStar Research, MeetingMetrics offers an online meeting performance measurement service analyzing Return on Event, or ROE, information. Sexton said PCMA members will have exclusive access to MeetingMetrics for one year.

Sexton said MeetingMetrics, which is owned by GuideStar, was being road tested at the 51st Annual Meeting. The set-up cost for the system would range from approximately $5,000 to $6,000, including three to four hours of consulting services, Sexton said, comparing that price to a current cost ranging from $50,000 to $75,000 to study a major association event.

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Tyler Davidson | Editor, Vice President & Chief Content Director

Tyler Davidson has covered the travel trade for more than 30 years. In his current role with Meetings Today, Tyler leads the editorial team on its mission to provide the best meetings content in the industry.