|
Sunny K. Park
Acceptance speech: JA's Atlanta Business Hall of Fame, 2004

I¡¯m
not sure I deserve to be inducted into the Atlanta Business Hall
of Fame. Maybe the selection committee had a few beers before
deciding, but don¡¯t get me wrong, I am not going to give up this
honor of a lifetime. I just want to thank the selection committee
for the poor job.
I came to
America in 1974 and worked day and night, often seven days a week
and 16 hours a day ? the typical immigrant workload. My first
job here was cleaning the kitchen of a steak house in Indianapolis.
Almost ten years later I started a cleaning service business,
General Building Maintenance, to make money. Now the work is not
about the money, but about responsibility.
Our first
contract was for cleaning an office park. Eight years later, we
bought the office park. The Atlanta Business Chronicle and the
Atlanta Chamber of Commerce selected me as the small-business
person of the year in 1992. Twelve years later, Junior Achievement
calls with news about the Hall of Fame. I¡¯m not lucky, nor particularly
smart. I just followed the rule of success from my Lord like my
hero, Mr. Truett Cathy: ¡°It Is Easier to Succeed Than to Fail.¡±
Before I go
on, I want to take the opportunity to thank my God, to whom this
honor truly belongs. I want to thank to my family. My wife Kay
molded me and helped me stay on track. My lovely daughter Kathy,
who works for the New York Times, and my gracious son Jimmy ?
both endured while I was busy focusing on work. My stepdaughter,
charming In-Young, is here with us, and I am glad she is a part
of this ceremony. I wish my late father were here, and I really
wish my late mother Chung Pyung-nim could be here. She was a great
person, and the one who was most responsible for creating the
Sunny Park who accepts this award today. I¡¯ll tell you a little
story.
Decades ago,
my mother was selling hen eggs in a muddy street market in Korea.
A customer asked her the price, and would she give a discount
if he bought a large quantity ? three dozen? My mother replied
with a smile and offered him a discount. Then the customer asked
if he could buy all her eggs. She told the customer she can¡¯t
sell all of them. Even though she is there to make money, she
can¡¯t abandon her responsibility to supply eggs to her regulars.
The customer walked away without the eggs, and she missed a big
sale.
Two years
ago WorldCom, a client of my company General Building Maintenance,
was three weeks away from filing for bankruptcy. Our dilemma:
Should we keep sending our crews to their jobsites? We stood to
lose $5,000+ daily if we did the work but didn¡¯t get paid. Other
service providers for WorldCom were already walking off their
jobs to protect themselves.
We decided
to continue providing the cleaning service. Our responsibility
overrides the money we get from our work, and our responsibility
is to deliver clean work spaces by dawn every day. Some of the
people who make sure we live up to that responsibility are here
today. Please help me recognize the leadership of GBM: Don Kim,
president; Hans Foraker, vice president; and Donovan Wolf, controller.
I am so proud of them and all of our teammates.
Ladies and
gentlemen, responsibility and pride in workmanship are everything.
I am proud to be a janitor, as my mother was proud to be a street
merchant.
Americans,
regardless of their heritage, are here now to live and work together
. . . for a better future for our community, our nation, and the
world.
I came to
America because there is no place on earth like it. We are a country
of freedom, plenty, and opportunity. We all have the responsibility
to make America the best country it can be. Regretfully today,
I feel as a nation we are lacking a sense of responsibility.
America today
is sick and needs our care. Every American ? from the classroom
to the workplace to the boardroom to the halls of government ?
should start helping the nation recuperate from cultural chaos
and individualism and excessive self-interest. We can¡¯t afford
to turn our backs on our nation or each other.
I am excited
to be associated with Junior Achievement and the Atlanta Business
Chronicle. Your contributions to the business community and the
classrooms are remarkable, and I want to commend the programs
you have for our future leaders. I would like to offer my service,
Ms. Buchanan, to be a part of your continuing effort to heal this
country. Call me, please.
And thanks
again to the selection committee, Don Chapman and Ed Baker, for
this great honor. I want to accept this recognition to show the
immigrant community what can be done when we realize our responsibility
as citizens.
By the way,
WorldCom paid in full for our services before they filed for bankruptcy.
They met their responsibility, as we met ours to them.
Thanks to
all of you, my guests, and the leaders of the community. May God
bless all of you, and God bless America.
|