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July 19, 2004
The Muskegon Chronicle
Johnson Technology honored for its safety record
By Dave Alexander
Chronicle Business Editor
Michigan occupational health officials
like to say that safety pays.
The workers and managers of the Johnson
Technology Inc. plant in Norton Shores can attest to that. The
plant has earned the state's highest workplace
safety and health award.
And as Michigan Occupational Safety
and Health Administration Director Dough Kalinowski earlier this
month awarded the jet engine parts maker a Michigan Voluntary
Protection Program Star Award, company President David Yacavone
announced a $3 million equipment purchase that will create up
to
15 jobs.
Yacavone credits the management team
and plant workers for saving money and becoming more efficient
through improved safety. That has allowed the plant to be competitive
and continue to grow since it went into operation in 1998 with
an initial 30 employees.
"It has been the involvement
of everybody," Yacavone said. "Safety does pay. It reduces
your overall business costs for disability and worker compensation.
You don't have business interruptions nor lost time."
The 90 workers at the Norton Shores plant worked 88,300 hours
in the last year with only one "recordable accident."
Yacavone said a worker got a metal shaving in his hand using a
shop rag.
The $3 million investment in the plant
at 600 Norton Center will bring in new equipment to increase production
of jet engine nozzles. Up to 15 new employees will be needed to
fill orders for a General Electric aircraft engine going on a
new 70-seat Bombardier regional jet. Johnson Technology parts
are already on the new 50-seat regional jet now being flow by
Northwest Airlink out of Muskegon County Airport, Yacavone said.
Johnson Technology also has a plant
in Muskegon's Port City Industrial Park, which also a year ago
won the state's star safety award.
"We are feeling very fortunate
having been as successful as we have been in creating jobs,"
the company president said. Johnson Technology's success is in
contrast to other Muskegon County and West Michigan manufacturers
that have been in recession in the past three years.
Johnson Technology has been fortunate
to be in a particular type of aircraft engine since the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, which was a huge setback to the aviation
industry. Johnson Technology provides new and spare parts for
both military jet engines and new fuel-efficient commercial aircraft
-- two aircraft
segments doing well since Sept. 11, Yacavone said.
Johnson Technology won the eighth
and now the 13th star award granted by MIOSHA since it began the
voluntary safety audit program in 2000. Another recent winner
was Howmet Castings in Whitehall.
Johnson Technology is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of General Electric Co. but the Muskegon operation
stands on its own financially, separate from the huge family of
GE companies.
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