How chef Peter Merriman fosters a culture of excellence

Pacific Business News
By A. Kam Napier

There are a couple of reasons why Peter Merriman is our Business Leadership Hawaii 2020 Career Achievement honoree. First, there is his decades-long work as a legend in the industry, as one of the founding members of the Hawaii Regional Cuisine movement in 1991, in which he not only established consistently excellent Neighbor Island restaurants, but played a key role in helping to grow the farms that could supply the entire industry. Second, is his willingness to take chances. We thought it noteworthy that Merriman, who might well have rested on these accomplishments, took the leap of becoming a partner in Handcrafted Restaurants in 2011.

At their peak, before the Covid-19 economy, the four restaurants of Meriman’s Hawaii and five restaurants of Handcrafted employed about 1,200 people. Handcrafted was honored in PBN’s 2015 Hawaii’s Best Workplaces. It’s a long way from his Hawaii debut in 1983 when the Pittsburgh-born Merriman accepted a job as the cook for the Mauna Lani Bay Hotel. Two years later, he was named executive chef of the resort’s new Gallery Restaurant. In 1988, he went out on his own, opening Merriman’s in Waimea on Hawaii Island.

The Mauna Lani is also where he learned some business advice that has stayed with him, from customers who have been successful with large businesses. One such informal mentor was Larry Dean, who had grown and sold an early Internet check- cashing business. By the time he sold it, Dean told him, the software was beyond him but he had people for that, it was more important that he “foster the culture.”

Merriman said his team can attest to the fact that, “to this day, I still walk around saying, ‘I’m gonna fostah the cultah!’” as Dean, a Southerner, used to say it. “That’s really fundamental to the way I approach business because I like to delegate a lot of responsibility and authority, making an environment where smart people can do well — in this way, I will do well.”

The other advice came from Robert Holder of the Atlanta-based Holder Corp., a builder and developer whose enterprises had grown enormously through that city’s boom. “Bob told me, ‘When you own a business, only do what only you can do’,” recalled Merriman. “I had to take myself out of the kitchen to be successful at the business part, so that advice has been really, really valuable. And I find it really useful down the chain, too, in that I can tell my managers the same thing — you have somebody else who can do that job, let them do that and you do the job they cannot do.”

Merriman said he still struggles with letting go, but he recently made his biggest delegation yet when he appointed Christina Schenk, his former controller, as CEO of Merriman’s Hawaii, the first CEO who wasn’t Merriman himself. “And she does a better job than me, which is very cool,” he said. “She pretty much runs everything on the Merriman’s side of the business, and I am really fostering the culture. On the Monkeypod side, Sarah Hill runs everything over there.”

Merriman’s partnership with Handcrafted is a 50-50 ownership deal founded with Bill Terry, whom Merriman had become friends with when Terry was with TS Restaurants, and it presented Merriman with an opportunity to see through an unrealized dream — owning a café, offering what he calls “accessible food.”

“When I opened in Waimea, I started out with a café but the only way to make it succeed was to push it upscale because we didn’t have the volume of customers,” Merriman said.

When PBN caught up with Merriman in late September for this article, the Covid economy was an unavoidable subject. He had used Paycheck Program Program money to keep people on as long as possible, but has had to do furloughs and some layoffs. When asked what the industry will need to do to survive, he went immediately to business fundamentals.

“We need to figure out where this market is going to settle, we’re talking about 80% swings in volume and no business can plan for that,” he said. “I think there’s going to have to be a total reset on the structure of how restaurant deals work between tenant, landlord and lender in the state of Hawaii, maybe the entire country. What has been in place to this day is no longer reasonable and that is, minimum rent, plus CAM plus percentage of revenue. That minimum rent turned out to be a killer because basically, that was using the tenant to guarantee the landlord against any downturns in the market like we’re having. The landlords of course say, ‘we owe our lenders, so we need that money’ and there’s some truth to that too. Banks, too, could help by offering small businesses longer terms on loans.”

“It’s a dead run, we’re all driving on debt, Alexander Hamilton would be happy,” he said. “For restaurants, we know the demand is not there now, we know it’s not going to be where it used to be, and our models were so incredibly tight — if 7% is the average profit then even a 10% loss can collapse the whole thing.”

We talked about the farming community as well, given the tight tie between his industry and theirs, and whether or not agriculture can be viable as one of the replacements for tourism, as is sometimes suggested when people talk about what else Hawaii could be doing. The challenge there, he said, is that the farms are quite dependent on the numbers of visitors we’re used to, supporting the number and kinds of restaurants that buy from farmers, ranchers and fishermen.

“I can pay more, and I do pay more, for grocery items than people who shop at grocery stores,” he said, “We’re the high-end outlet for farmers, which is especially good if they haven’t hit their volumes yet. If they can get a high price for the items they’re selling from us, it’s very useful. The farmers have done better than I expected up to this point, and some have been able to sell to the grocery stores but at a reduced rate. For the smaller farms, for those just starting out, they’re the ones who are really damaged.”

While money concerns are top of mind for the industry right now, it isn’t something Merriman generally allows to be the sole focus of his companies. Each restaurant is led by a general manager and a chef, in tandem, as opposed to restaurant companies that put only a general manager at the top.

“Chefs are very powerful in our organization,” he said, noting that he still designs about 75% of the dishes himself. “We don’t want to become bean counters, our origin story is from cooking, not from counting dollars and while we can maybe get good at that, at accounting, it doesn’t mean that’s who we are. We make a conscious effort in our company meetings to talk about food, even if it’s just down to the level of, ‘where did you eat that was really great?’ We believe the culture of a company is what it talks about, so if all we do is run around talking about dollars and cents, that’s who will be.

“I feel we are in the food business, but most importantly, we’re in the guest experience business, which the food supplies,” he said. “If we don’t remember that on a regular basis, our culture will change despite our best thoughts.”

And that is what “fostering the culture” looks like, in action.

Maui Land & Pine suffers bigger third-quarter loss

Star Advertiser
By Andrew Gomes

A financial loss widened for Maui Land & Pineapple Co. in the third quarter largely due to COVID-19 mitigation impacts that reduced revenue for the owner of 23,000 acres of land on Maui.

Maui Land reported a $633,000 loss in the July-September period, compared with a $9,000 loss in last year’s third quarter.

The Kapalua-based company also noted that a planned sale of 46 acres at Kapalua Resort for $43.9 million did not close as expected in September because of COVID-19 restrictions. This sale, arranged in February, is now expected to close in March.

Maui Land, which quit farming pineapple in 2009 and now derives income largely from leasing land to others and operating real estate brokerage firm Kapalua Realty Co., has relied in recent years on asset sales to generate significant income. The company did not sell any assets in the recent quarter or the year-ago quarter.

Operating revenue for Maui Land dropped to $1.7 million in the third quarter from $2.7 million a year earlier.

The company said in a financial report that property rent revenue declined in large part due to tenants paying less rent that is based on a percentage of the tenant’s revenue. Maui Land received no such percentage rent in the third quarter, compared with $488,000 in the year-earlier period.

Maui Land also said it reserved $108,000 in the third quarter to cover doubtful rent collections and that it returned a potentially forgivable $246,500 federal Paycheck Protection Program loan earlier this year based on guidance from the U.S. Small Business Administration that intended for the program to help small businesses that lack significant access to capital.

As a company with publicly traded stock, Maui Land has the capability to raise capital in the stock market.

Shares of Maui Land stock closed at $10.61 Thursday, following the earnings report released Wednesday after shares closed at $10.79.

Third-quarter loss

$633,000

Year-earlier loss

USAJOBS Daily Search Results for Agriculture jobs in Hawaii for 11/5/2020

Some jobs listed here may no longer be available-the job may have been canceled or may have closed. Click the link for each job to see the full job announcement.

Administrative Operations Specialist
Department: Department of Agriculture
Agency: Forest Service
Number of Job Opportunities & Location(s): Many vacancies – Multiple Locations
Salary: $43,251.00 to $83,897.00 / PA
Series and Grade: GS-0301-7/9
Open Period: 2020-11-05 to 2020-11-12
Position Information: Permanent – Full-Time
Who May Apply: Career transition (CTAP, ICTAP, RPL), Competitive service, Land & base management, Veterans, Special authorities

Arbor Day expo culminates with drive-thru tree giveaway

The Maui News
In partnership with Hawaiian Electric and Kaulunani Urban and Community Forestry Program, Maui Nui Botanical Gardens and the Maui Association of Landscape Professionals will host an extended and virtual Arbor Day Garden Expo from Wednesday to Friday, culminating in an Island wide Nursery Open House and Drive-Thru Tree Giveaway from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 7 at the War Memorial Gymnasium parking lot in Wailuku.

This year’s event will feature online lectures, presentations and webinars from certified arborists, landscaping professionals and local conservations organizations. Topics include everything from proper tree planting and care to seed starting and storage for native plants.

The annual 1,000 Hawaiian Tree Giveaway will be a socially-distanced, drive-thru event. Residents are asked to reserve their trees at arbordayexpo.com.

Trees are limited to one per email address and must be reserved online. To reduce traffic on Nov. 7, reservations are in one-hour increments and residents are asked to enter the event by turning right from Kanaloa Avenue onto Halia Nakoa Street. Left turns will not be permitted.

USAJOBS Daily Search Results for Agriculture jobs in Hawaii for 11/3/2020

Some jobs listed here may no longer be available-the job may have been canceled or may have closed. Click the link for each job to see the full job announcement.

Consumer Safety Inspector
Department: Department of Agriculture
Agency: Food Safety and Inspection Service
Number of Job Opportunities & Location(s): 1 vacancy – Kapolei, Hawaii
Salary: $49,390.00 to $70,918.00 / PA
Series and Grade: GS-1862-8/9
Open Period: 2020-11-03 to 2020-11-16
Position Information: Permanent – Full-Time
Who May Apply: Career transition (CTAP, ICTAP, RPL), Internal to an agency

Fire Management Specialist
Department: Department of the Interior
Agency: Interior, US Fish and Wildlife Service
Number of Job Opportunities & Location(s): Many vacancies – Multiple Locations
Salary: $64,009.00 to $85,801.00 / PA
Series and Grade: GS-0401-11
Open Period: 2020-11-03 to 2020-11-16
Position Information: Permanent – Full-Time
Who May Apply: Open to the public

Matson profit soars on goods shipped from China

Star Advertiser
By Andrew Gomes –

Hawaii’s largest ocean cargo transportation firm continued to capitalize on expanded service from China to the mainland and nearly doubled its third-quarter profit.

Matson Inc. said in a financial report released today that it earned $70.9 million in the July-September period, up 96% from a $36.2 million profit in the same period last year.

The Honolulu-based company said the primary reason for the surge was continuation of a move it made in the second quarter to more than double service from China by chartering several containerships in response to strong customer demand for personal protective equipment, cleaning products, home improvement supplies, electronics for working from home and many e-commerce goods.

Matt Cox, Matson chairman and CEO, said it is estimated that at least four to six years worth of growth for e-commerce sales is occurring this year and raising demand for shipping.

“Since the start of the pandemic in the U.S. in early March, there’s been a seismic shift in e-commerce activity, and we expect the key drivers behind the shift to remain for some time,” he said on a conference call with stock analysts.

Cox also said travel and leisure spending by consumers has largely been replaced by spending on home appliances and electronics that benefit Matson’s business.

“Demand for key household items such as dishwashers, refrigerators, washers and dryers has been so strong since the pandemic hit (that) there are key shortages in many models, and those shortages are expected to last into 2021,” he said.

Matson said its enlarged China service is operating at full capacity and carried 125% more containers in the recent quarter compared with a year earlier before expansion.

To make better use of its ships returning to China from California after delivering goods, Matson in August began stopping in Dutch Harbor, Alaska, to deliver seafood to Asia as a new “backhaul” business.

The company also said average freight rates are up for its China service in the face of reduced trans-Pacific air cargo service by passenger airlines dealing with travel bans and fewer travelers.

For its Hawaii cargo service, Matson reported only a slight decline in container volume in the third quarter compared with a year earlier — a 0.8% decrease it said was primarily related to statewide COVID-19 mitigation efforts including restrictions on tourism and a second shelter-in-place order that took effect in August while consumers continued essential spending supported in part by government aid.

In two other major markets served by Matson, Alaska and Guam, container volume in the third quarter rose 1.5% and 2.1%, respectively, compared with a year earlier.

Overall revenue for Matson rose 13% to $645.2 million in the third quarter from $572.1 million a year earlier.

Cox said Matson, which has served China for 15 years, aims to make its expanded service permanent. He said the company is investing $30 million in equipment as part of this goal.

Shares of Matson stock closed at $52.15 today before the earnings announcement. That was short of a 52-week high reached on Thursday at $53.21. Matson shares were at a 52-week low of $24.92 on May 15.