On our tours around the
globe we visit dozens upon dozens of aluminium plants. During our site visits
we have the opportunity to learn about the challenges plant managers deal with
on a daily basis. Close to the top of the list of challenges is the recruitment
and retention of new workers. No matter where the aluminium plant is located;
in a rural area vs a city location. Finding good workers is a challenge.
Further complicating this matter is the average age of workers in our industry:
Here is a recent story about how some companies are dealing with this
challenge:
Roger Klug started talking about retirement as he neared age 65 a few
years ago, but his bosses wouldn't hear of it.
Klug had been the
13th employee at the company, Alexandria
Industries, when he joined in 1971. He had unique skills from the
start, when he was the only one who "corrected" aluminum extrusion
molds by grinding away precise slivers — by hand — until the mold met
specifications. Over the years he excelled at picking up the newest technologies.
In a tight labor
market with accelerating baby boomer retirements, his experience made him too
valuable for the company to lose. He eventually agreed to a two-day workweek,
with more days filling in for vacationing co-workers.
Staying "was a
very good thing to do because I enjoyed my job," he said. "I didn't
want to be working full-time on one day and doing nothing the next."
Hanging on to
talented older workers steeped in institutional knowledge has become a critical
issue for many manufacturing businesses. About 78 million baby boomers are
nearing or at retirement, and the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM)
estimates that factories will need 3.5 million new factory workers in the next
10 years just to keep production lines and distribution routes going.
The workers, experts
say, are not there right now. In fact, factories are struggling to grow because
they don't have enough well-trained staffers. The shortages are already acute
in manufacturing.
Manufacturing’s retirement picture
9: Percent of all U.S. workers who are in
manufacturing.
27: Percent of workers in manufacturing
who are 55 and older.
11: Manufacturing human resource
professionals who foresee employee retirements as a crisis or problem.
$81,289: Average annual pay (including
benefits) for U.S. manufacturing worker.
Sources: Society for Human Resource
Management, Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Association of Manufacturers.
The Society for Human
Resources Management (SHRM) found that 19 percent of factory employers like
Alexandria Industries, Harmony Enterprises and Dotson Iron Casting now float
the idea of phased-in retirements by asking senior employees to stay, work
fewer days or adopt more flexible hours. That's up from 12 percent four years
ago.
"There has been
a definite increase in informal phased retirement programs over the last five
years," said SHRM spokeswoman Kate Kennedy.
Lynette Kluver,
Alexandria's organizational development director, said the 550-worker company
has 56 experienced workers nearing retirement and is trying to steer them into
job-sharing or part-time work, even consulting or mentoring.
"Boy, if they
are willing, we sure are willing," she said.
The Sloan Center on
Aging & Work at Boston College found that other firms go further. Some have
started to retrofit production lines with older workers in mind.
They've installed
assembly tools that reduce reaching and moved supplies closer to staffers so
older machinists and assembly workers can save knees and backs. Some trucking
firms have even made ergonomic changes to truck cabs so desperately needed
drivers are comfortable and stick around, said Sloan Center co-director
Jacquelyn James.
Retaining older
workers "is something we have been encouraging for a long time."
A decade ago, BMW
realized a fifth of its German employees would be age 65 by 2020. It started a
pilot program to retrofit one auto plant in Germany. Managers enlarged type on
factory computers, installed ergonomic assembly tools and replaced concrete floors
with wooden ones that were kinder to feet. They bought workers better shoes and
had physical therapists retrain line workers on safer ways to move. With the
changes, pros with seniority stuck with jobs longer. BMW spread the pilot
program to other plants.
"BMW is still
talked about as the shining example of an employer looking ahead and seeing
what was coming down the pike and doing something that was very
effective," she said.
The lesson's not lost
on Dotson Iron Castings. The Mankato foundry recently had 15 of 140 employees
retire and has several more who are approaching age 70. To boost retention,
owner Denny Dotson and CEO Jean Bye recently oversaw the installation of
robotic lifts so workers no longer have to haul 50-pound castings to de-burring
machines. They bought new tools to get workers farther from the 2,400-degree
furnace. They also rotate people through jobs every two hours to lessen
repetitive injuries.
"We invested in
the jobs that are physically hard," Dotson said. "Our goal is to make
sure [our staff] can work as long as they want and retire comfortably without
being [broken]. We have to invest in this. Obviously, when you have people with
talent, you will be accommodating."
Employment pros
predict more factories will follow suit. They may not have a choice. NAM
estimates that in the next 10 years the country will need 3.5 million more
factory workers on top of the 12.3 million that exist today in a labor-stressed
industry that generates $2.2 trillion in revenue a year.
In Minnesota, Abbey Hellickson,
business growth consultant for the Minneapolis-based manufacturing consulting
firm Enterprise Minnesota, said midsize manufacturers are brainstorming to slow
the pace of retirements.
"The labor
shortage is definitely driving this," she said. "Employers once
really had the pick of who came to work for them and didn't struggle to get
workers. But today [the tight labor market has] put a strain on
employers."
That's why Ultra
Machining in Monticello has de-emphasized 65 as a retirement target, said President
Eric Gibson. "We have discouraged workers from retiring," he said.
"We need more qualified employees. We are short of good help."
Ultra Machining has
three employees over 70 and more right behind them in age who run high-powered
robots, lathes and drills that convert chunks of steel into implantable spinal
cages and knee replacement parts. As long as these workers are happy and
productive, Gibson is thrilled to have them, he said.
Enterprise Minnesota
CEO Bob Kill said such thinking marks a shift.
"Owners are much
more cognizant about having these conversations early. ... It's vital to keep
your experienced people longer than you would have historically," he said.
Kill is putting his
money where his mouth is. When his top manufacturing consultant, Dick Pedersen,
77, mentioned retirement three years ago, Kill immediately asked him to go
part-time instead.
Now Pedersen works 20
hours a week, which allows him to travel and take long weekends with his wife
while staying engaged with clients such as Harmony Enterprises, Cardsource and
28 others in Rice and Steele counties.
"I keep telling
them about the demographic shifts we have in Minnesota," said Pedersen, a
former Cybex engineer. "I ask the owners, 'What are you doing about trying
to keep your skilled workers?' … Often the owners say, it's going to create a
really big hole."
The Aluminium Plant Safety Blog is proud that the companies mentioned above are being proactive in mitigating the problems that could arise when seasoned workers retire. We have to admit to the reader that the issue of retaining older workers is dear to our hearts. Several of our coworkers retired in the early and mid 70's. Longer service was our office manager who retired at the age of 89! God Bless her.
Dealing with the retirement of seasoned workers is a challenge today, but how your individual plant responds to this challenge will have a lasting affect far into the future.
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