Becoming California’s ‘Printer of Choice’

From left: State Printer Lou Butera stands with Assistant State Printer Norma Kreider and Administration Manager Tonya Said next to the in-plant’s eight-color Harris M-1000B web offset press. | Credit: All photos courtesy California OSP

Visiting California’s Office of State Publishing (OSP) can be an overwhelming experience. Unlike the more modest facilities of a typical in-plant, OSP’s 128,000-sq.-ft. main plant rivals most commercial printers in size and scope.

The country’s second largest in-plant, behind only the U.S. Government Publishing Office in Washington, D.C., OSP is one of the few in-plants with a web offset press: an eight-color Harris M-1000B. The press consumes an average of 20,000 lbs. of paper each day to churn out millions of voter information guides, driver’s license handbooks, tax forms, and other essential documents.

Inside the pressroom at the California Office of State Publishing, Dwayne Moore operates the hoist on a roll lift for the in-plant’s eight-color Harris M-1000B web offset press.

OSP’s six-color, 40″ Heidelberg Speedmaster sheetfed press stays busy printing unemployment claim forms, DMV driving manuals, calendars, booklets, brochures, posters, and newsletters. Drent and Muller Martini web forms presses print driver’s license renewal forms, tax forms, newsletters, invoices, and certificates, and two Halmjet presses turn out roughly 33 million envelopes per year.

The 252-employee in-plant has a substantial digital printing operation as well. In its main plant, three Canon varioPRINT 6330 monochrome digital presses print high volumes of legislative materials, usually late at night, after the legislative sessions end. OSP may get 200-300 bills a night and must print 500 sets of each by the next morning. Some legislative books can be 800 pages long.

Read the rest of this article on In-Plant Impressions, a publication of PRINTING United Alliance, ASI’s strategic partner.

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