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Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Wednesday, 9 July 2014 [View all]antigop
(12,778 posts)39. Losing Sparta (good read)
The Bitter Truth Behind the Gospel of Productivity
http://www.vqronline.org/reporting-articles/2014/06/losing-sparta
The humming Sparta plant had it all. For one thing, the town is within a days haul of most US marketsfrom New York and Chicago to Atlanta, St. Louis, and Dallas. Tennessee has decent, well-maintained highways. The plant was uniona new experience for Norrisbut this IBEW local was steely-eyed about keeping and creating jobs; it had, for example, accepted a two-tier pay scale and surrendered contract protections in order to attract a highly automated production line from New Jersey. The press for that new line, known as a Bliss, was nearly three stories high (so big it had to be anchored twenty feet underground) and could stamp out eight or ten massive commercial fluorescent fixtures every minute. It attracted lucrative contracts from hospitals, prisons, grocery-store chains, and Walmart supercenters. Norris called it a monument. Brent Hall, the union rep, described it as a beating heart. Every time that press rolled over, he said, the whole building would shake.
Other production lines at the plant could push out smaller, custom products tailored to the needs of a specific buyer. A whole swath of the maintenance crew had been sent, on the plants dime, to get certified as industrial electricians and welders and millwrights so that they could retool machines on the fly, switching production from one job to the next in a matter of minutes. Anything they wanted, wed build it for them, Scott Vincent, one veteran electrician told me. With Uhrik and Norris at the helm, the plant started buying steel and other inventory on consignment, and trimmed turnaround times to the point that its invoices would be getting paid before the bills on raw materials were even due. Tasked with cutting costs by $4 million, the management team tapped employees to identify inefficiencies in the assembly process, worked with suppliers to reduce components costs, and drastically reduced the number of products with defects. The plant boosted productivity by 7 percent and kept labor costs low, at around 4 percent. Still, thanks to the union, most workers were earning $13 to $15 an hourreal decent money around here, as one maintenance worker told me, especially for a workforce where many had never graduated high schoolwith two to three weeks of vacation and a blue-chip health plan. Employees stuck around for years, knew their jobs inside and out, and had a rare esprit de corps. When they faced tight deadlines, fabricators would volunteer to come in as early as 4 or 5 a.m. so they could get a head start before the paint crew arrived at six. In December 2009 the Sparta facility was named by IndustryWeek as a Best Plant of the year, one of the top ten in North America. In the months that followed, it won Best Plant within Philipss global lighting division as well as the firms global Lean Challenge. That summer, plant managers invited state officials and legislators to Sparta to celebrate.
Then, one morning in November 2010, a Philips executive no one recognized drove up and walked into the plant, accompanied by a security guard wearing sunglasses and a sidearm. He summoned all the employees back to the shipping department and abruptly announced that the plant would be shut down. Though the workers didnt know it at the time, most of their jobs would be offshored to Monterrey, Mexico. The two of them then walked out the door and drove off. It was a shock, Ill tell you, Ricky Lack said more than two years later. Still brawny in his late fifties, hed hired on at the plant in 1977, when he was nineteen years old. My dad worked there, he said. Half the plants mom or dad or brother worked there. We still dont know why they left.
Other production lines at the plant could push out smaller, custom products tailored to the needs of a specific buyer. A whole swath of the maintenance crew had been sent, on the plants dime, to get certified as industrial electricians and welders and millwrights so that they could retool machines on the fly, switching production from one job to the next in a matter of minutes. Anything they wanted, wed build it for them, Scott Vincent, one veteran electrician told me. With Uhrik and Norris at the helm, the plant started buying steel and other inventory on consignment, and trimmed turnaround times to the point that its invoices would be getting paid before the bills on raw materials were even due. Tasked with cutting costs by $4 million, the management team tapped employees to identify inefficiencies in the assembly process, worked with suppliers to reduce components costs, and drastically reduced the number of products with defects. The plant boosted productivity by 7 percent and kept labor costs low, at around 4 percent. Still, thanks to the union, most workers were earning $13 to $15 an hourreal decent money around here, as one maintenance worker told me, especially for a workforce where many had never graduated high schoolwith two to three weeks of vacation and a blue-chip health plan. Employees stuck around for years, knew their jobs inside and out, and had a rare esprit de corps. When they faced tight deadlines, fabricators would volunteer to come in as early as 4 or 5 a.m. so they could get a head start before the paint crew arrived at six. In December 2009 the Sparta facility was named by IndustryWeek as a Best Plant of the year, one of the top ten in North America. In the months that followed, it won Best Plant within Philipss global lighting division as well as the firms global Lean Challenge. That summer, plant managers invited state officials and legislators to Sparta to celebrate.
Then, one morning in November 2010, a Philips executive no one recognized drove up and walked into the plant, accompanied by a security guard wearing sunglasses and a sidearm. He summoned all the employees back to the shipping department and abruptly announced that the plant would be shut down. Though the workers didnt know it at the time, most of their jobs would be offshored to Monterrey, Mexico. The two of them then walked out the door and drove off. It was a shock, Ill tell you, Ricky Lack said more than two years later. Still brawny in his late fifties, hed hired on at the plant in 1977, when he was nineteen years old. My dad worked there, he said. Half the plants mom or dad or brother worked there. We still dont know why they left.
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