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658.1 | More questions... | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | Most of an angel is in the inside | Wed Nov 09 1988 08:43 | 19 |
| <<< HUMAN::DISK$HUMAN_WRKD:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 659.0 Salem No replies
BUSY::KLEINBERGER "Most of an angel is in the insid" 12 lines 9-NOV-1988 08:30
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I have heard through the informal DEC network that manufacturing
in Salem is leaving the Salem plant... Since we are in Manufacturing
in Marlboro, we are always looking for good people who are
transferring...
Question: Who exactly is leaving?... Where are they going if
anywhere?... If not anywhere, how many people will be being declared
excess?
Thanks in advance for any help...
Gale
|
658.2 | Some info | CVG::THOMPSON | Election 88: America Wins! | Wed Nov 09 1988 08:55 | 21 |
| For those of you who don't know, Salem (NIO) NH is a manufacturing
plant opened over 10 years ago for FA&T (Final Assembly and Test).
DEC doesn't do (much) FA&T any more so NIOs role in the company
has been changing for the last 5-6 years. Lately it has been a
new product introduction plant. That is, pilot production is done
here and when the manufacturing process is debugged it moves to
a volume plant. The Nautilus and Scorpio production started here.
CSS (Computer Special Systems) is in need of manufacturing space.
They are mostly in leased space now. They are going to be taking
over the NIO facility. CSM (Computer Systems Manufacturing) is
mostly moving out. Some (many) people are now looking for new
jobs. I'm not in manufacturing so I don't know too much detail.
The engineering organizations and the POM qualification groups
in Salem are staying put. No one else has the room for our labs
anyway.
NIO is one of DECs biggest (in size, floor space) facilities in
the world.
Alfred
|
658.3 | From a contributor who wishes to remain anonymous | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | Most of an angel is in the inside | Wed Nov 09 1988 12:38 | 87 |
| ==============================================================================
Note 659.0 Salem No replies
BUSY::KLEINBERGER "Most of an angel is in the insid" 12 lines 9-NOV-1988 08:30
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: I have heard through the informal DEC network that manufacturing
: in Salem is leaving the Salem plant... Since we are in Manufacturing
: in Marlboro, we are always looking for good people who are
: transferring...
:
: Question: Who exactly is leaving?... Where are they going if
: anywhere?... If not anywhere, how many people will be being declared
: excess?
ALL of Salem Manufacturing are now without "jobs".
Plant staff, management, IL, DL, etc. have been notified
that they are "excess" and should begin finding new work.
This means that there are approximately 1300 people who
will become excess over the next 12 months as Salem Mfg.
shuts down and Computer Special Systems (CSS) takes over
management of the facility.
The manufacture of Nautilus and Polarstar will be done
in Phoenix.
Traditional Products (TPL) will remain in Salem and will
become part of CSS.
Custom Systems Integration (Government Mfg. & Clusters
Integration -- both located in WMO, but reporting to NIO)
will cease to exist, but Government Mfg. as a single entity
will become part of CSS and will reside in NIO. It is unknown
what will happen to the Clusters Integration business.
There are many, many, many good manufacturing employees,
and quite a few _excellent_ technicians now looking for work.
Attached below is the memo from CSS regarding the transition:
[ . . . headers removed . . . ]
Subj: CSS SALEM ANNOUNCEMENT
From: NAME: Carl Kooyoomjian @NPO
FUNC: CSS MFG
TEL: 264-6281 <KOOYOOMJIAN AT A1 at WOODRO at MKO>
To: See Below
AS MANY OF YOU KNOW, WE HAVE BEEN DISCUSSING WITH USA MFG THE NEED WE HAVE
IN CSS FOR A NEW MFG FACILITY AND THE OPPORTUNITY TO UTILIZE EXISTING MFG
SPACE. THE CONCLUSION OF THOSE CONVERSATIONS IS THAT THE CSS NASHUA PLANT
WILL RELOCATE TO THE DIGITAL MFG SALEM, NH FACILITY. AS PART OF THAT
MOVE:
- THE SALEM PLANT WILL BECOME A CSS MFG FACILITY
- THE CSS SALEM PLANT WILL MANAGE GSG AND TRADITIONAL PRODUCTS
MANUFACTURING RESIDENT WITHIN SALEM.
- CSS, AS THE PRIME OCCUPANT OF THE FACILITY, WILL PROVIDE HOST
SERVICES TO FACILITY TENANTS. THE TENANTS ARE THE TECH CENTER,
MANAGED BY BILL KENT AND THE MSB GROUP MANAGED BY GEORGE
PLOWMAN.
- WE WILL WORK WITH THE EXISTING USA MFG MANAGEMENT TEAM IN SALEM
AND THE TENANT ORGANIZATIONS TO DETERMINE WHAT TYPE AND LEVEL OF
SERVICES ARE REQUIRED TO THOSE TENANTS.
- USA MFG IS IN THE PROCESS OF REASSIGNING THE WORK AND PEOPLE
LOCATED IN SALEM TO OTHER LOCATIONS.
- THE OVERALL TRANSITION WILL TAKE BETWEEN 12 TO 18 MONTHS. THE
CSS FOCAL POINT FOR THIS TRANSITION WILL BE PAT MCCARTHY, WHO IS
THE CSS MANUFACTURING PLANT MANAGER FOR SALEM.
PLEASE COMMUNICATE THIS MESSAGE TO YOUR ORGANIZATIONS AS APPROPRIATE AND
DO NOT HESITATE TO CONTACT ME IF YOU REQUIRE FURTHER CLARIFICATION.
THANKS
CARL
[ . . . Distribution List Removed . . . ]
|
658.4 | True Facts | HARRY::HIGGINS | Citizen of Atlantis | Wed Nov 09 1988 13:35 | 14 |
|
.2 AND .3 are very correct.
I work for CSS and the announcement was made here (Nashua @NU0)
only last week. CSS manufacturing is very cramped for space and
demand is outrunning capacity. While this is an enviable position
to be in in some regards, it is the opposite of the position DEC
mfg finds itself in overall. DEC has overcapacity.
CSS will be vacating several leased sites in and around Nashua and
establishing itself at NI0 over the next 12-18 months.
|
658.5 | what happens? | WINERY::BOUCHARKE | Ken Bouchard WRO3-2 521-3018 | Wed Nov 09 1988 14:11 | 5 |
| Exactly what happens to "excess" employees who can't find another
organization to take them in? As an employee who's been here awhile,I'm
curious because I know how it was in the old days:DEC would find
another job for that person,even going so far as to "force" a
department to take him/her.
|
658.6 | I survived the reorg of '88 | SALEM::COTE_V | | Wed Nov 09 1988 14:30 | 11 |
|
The NPSU will remain here for some time. I guees that time is
determined by the floor space requirements of CSS.
Nautilus, Polarstar, Skipjack, Scorpio, and Calypso were started
here.
My life with DEC (10 years) has been here in manufacturing and I
for one am going to miss it.
verne
|
658.7 | Last one out, turn off the lights. | SALEM::BLACK | | Wed Nov 09 1988 15:15 | 29 |
| Apparently nobody in management really knows (or if they know, they
ain't sayin') what's going to happen to excess employees. We've
all been cordially invited to look around in other organizations.
Word has it that there are allegedly 2,000 open reqs within 30 miles
of NIO, and there are 900 NIO employees being "redeployed."
30 miles from NIO puts most of us deep into Taxachusetts. There's
no promise of a 5% increase in pay to offset the 5% levy for the
privilege of travelling 30 additional miles. (Didn't we once write
a definition of taxation without representation?)
Supposedly, we'll all be reassigned eventually. I'll believe it
when I see it. Consider this: how many openings are there for
production supervisors? System test operators? Stockkeepers?
Materials handlers? The upper managers most likely all have jobs
waiting. Not so for us peons.
NIO has provided 25% of the gross revenue of this company for the
last couple of years. I personally have a dark brown taste in my
mouth about this whole deal. "Congratulations on fifteen years
of faithful service. Oh, by the way, your job is in Albuquerque
on Monday morning." What are we, capital equipment to be written
off after 5 years of depreciation? Old war horses to be sent to
the glue factory when we can't pull a caisson any more?
I guess I can still sling hamburgers at the local Golden Arches.
-- Don Black
|
658.8 | It hasn't changed | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Wed Nov 09 1988 15:21 | 27 |
| re .5
> ...in the old days:DEC would find another job for that person,even
> going so far as to "force" a department to take him/her.
I don't think the OLDDEC solution was any different from today's
solution of such a problem. Another job will be found for the person.
The catch-22 is that the job might not be in the same location. If
people are willing to relocate, they ALWAYS have the option of
remaining with Digital (assuming they're good performers, etc.). But
often they are NOT willing to relocate, and the company does not
guarantee a job in the same location.
As an editorial aside, I personally have no problem with this, and
consider us lucky to work for a company that doesn't just lay off 1,300
people when it closes a plant such as the Salem facility. I respect
someone's personal decision to refuse relocation, but do not feel
Digital should be obligated to "make a job" for someone just because
they don't want to move.
Someone please correct me if I'm wrong about this. I know it has
been the practice in locations where I've worked, and the memo about
DECwest's disbanding stated a similar policy. But I can't testify
that it's the policy throughout the entire corporation.
Pat
|
658.10 | | DPDMAI::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Wed Nov 09 1988 16:23 | 30 |
| >> Selling a home and taking on a new home, with a new mortgage is just
>> not an option for many, especially those in the income bracket of
>> "manufacturing."
I was operating under the assumption that Digital would pay relocation
for whichever employees find jobs in other locations. If that is not
the case, then I believe Digital is *not* living up to its obligation
to those displaced employees. If it is the case, then the cost of
relocation should be minimal.
>> For many, this means uprooting from one's community, schools, friends,
>> etc.
Almost four years ago, I relocated to Alabama when my Digital job
in North Carolina went away. I was single, alone, and literally
scared to death. I left a strong (20-year-old) network of friends
as well as my family to move to a town where I did not know one
single, solitary soul. It's tough, but it's a choice we sometimes
have to make.
>> My heartfelt sympathy and good wishes to all those who will be
>> dislocated.
I also extend my sympathy, and apologize if my prior note sounded
hard-hearted. Changing jobs is not easy, and moving to a new town
AND a new job is downright stressful. I certainly wish the best
to all those who are affected by this change.
Pat
|
658.11 | Past dislocations | DENTON::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Wed Nov 09 1988 18:04 | 7 |
| Perhaps someone can share with us the successes and failures involved in closing
the board shop in the Mill, or moving manufacturing out of MR1.
I can recall reading job postings for positions in security at Marlboro when I
was in the hallway outside of the Board Shop. Hardly an identical position, but
at least an effort was being made to find jobs for folks.
/AHM/THX
|
658.12 | | HPSRAD::SUSEL | | Thu Nov 10 1988 08:49 | 10 |
| re : FXO ALLUMNI...
Working at FXO was a very good experience,
although.....getting out of manufacturing was the best thing that
could have happened to me.
TRUST DEC.
Bruce
|
658.13 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | Koyaanisqatsi | Fri Nov 11 1988 09:59 | 3 |
| Since the organization moving into NIO will be doing manufacturing there,
and since they intend to expand, I would think that there will be some jobs
right there. Contact CSS.
|
658.14 | Meet DEC Half Way - Be Flexable | CRUISE::JWHITTAKER | | Fri Nov 11 1988 11:45 | 19 |
| Not too long ago, Marlboro Manufacturing suffered the same fate
as Salem Plant. For too long, several individuals rode the
nonproductive program, waiting for a job in the Marlboro area.
This was not fair to DEC or themselves. All of us are extremely
lucky to work for a company like DEC. A company who will allow
an employee to do nothing for months, while they find the right
job in a locaton of their choice, or change careers through the
many programs that retrain or reskill individuals. DEC has absorbed
it's excess people, and has never "shown them the door"; another
local company takes the opposite view, if I don't need you now or
if an operation is not viewed as profitable, goodby. In the same
period that DEC found new jobs and new careers for over 3000 people
in Mfg (WMO, MRO, FXO, MLO), this other company layed off 2500 without
blinking an eye. Who would you rather work for? Think hard about
the difference before you take a position that DEC owes you a job
where you want to work. Free rides hurt DEC and the many people
who are proud to say "I WORK FOR DEC AND IT'S A GREAT COMPANY".
Jay
|
658.15 | | NPOGRP::BRAKE | In Search of the Lost Chord | Tue Nov 15 1988 11:09 | 20 |
| I think the NIO decision is just another in a long line of decisions
that tells me this: If you like working for DEC in Manufacturing,
you cannot live in Eastern Mass or Southern NH.
If you compared tghe DEC snapshot from 5 years ago with today you
would see that manufacturing has essentially stopped in WMO, MRO,
FXO and, to an extent, MLO. That left NIO and BOO as the only mfg
sites left in eastern Mass and southern NH. There's a trend, here
folks, and it seems, to me, that the company has decided that the
cost of manufacturing in the above named areas is too high.
With excess mfg, the choices could have been to close ABO or PNO
or BTO or ASO. But I think the company thought long and hard and
decided it was easier to relocate employees within the eastern Mass
- southern NH area than to do so from the Yukon of Vermont or the
desert of Arizona. I think this was a great decision from a company
faced with hard decisions.
Rich
|
658.16 | From excess to success | APACHE::CLARK | Jander Lives | Mon Nov 21 1988 11:21 | 11 |
|
A simple note on the "desert" and the "yukon".
One may find that ones present salary has much more
buying power in a different geographic region.
Is relo available outside of the 30 mi radius?
cbc
(how bought some "excess" success stories and encouragement)
|
658.17 | opportunity | HPSTEK::LAWRENCE | | Mon Nov 28 1988 17:54 | 12 |
|
Originally from Massachusetts, I attempted for almost a decade
to settle in peacefull, picturesque Maine. I found employment
sporatic, seasonal, and low paid. I threw in the towel and came
to southern New Hampshire where I eventually took a job at NIO.
If I were: a) on excess, and b) not seeking a technical degree,
I would relocate in a minute to Maine, Vermont, or better yet,
Puerto Rico. All are excellent, affordable places to live, and
the permanent Digital job helps. I hope to do this some day.
/sl
|
658.18 | Sic transit gloria mundi. | SALEM::BLACK | | Thu Dec 01 1988 14:50 | 117 |
| Gentlepeople:
Kindly understand that I make no apologies for what I have said in this
Notesfile. I have received mixed opinions for what I have said concerning the
goingson at NIO. It ranged from "Give it to 'em!" to utter ridicule. Now
even the bullying has started. It seems I am not supposed to be the wheel
that squeaks or the nail that sticks up.
What I had the giblets to express are feelings that are felt by numerous
people in this facility, who fear reprisals if they say it themselves, or who
do not have access to Notesfiles. I placed in writing feelings of many which
need to be expressed, which need to be vocalized, which need to be transmitted
one way or the other to management. Management at all levels needs to be
receptive and understanding to those feelings. Those of you outside of NIO
who will be experiencing this same process should be prepared to deal with
these exact same human reactions.
Those of you who know me, you know that quite often I have the tact of a
caveman. Well, folks, guess what -- Value My Differences.
Back in the 1960's, we all thought it was the greatest thing in the world
that the Hippy college students should express their opinions so eloquently
about social injustices. History praises the Bread and Roses strikes in the
Merrimack Vally mills, when the women of the textile factories wanted better
working and housing conditions. Today a man named Lawesa -- a shipyard worker
-- is the most highly regarded man in all of Poland.
What do these people have in common? Lawesa, the millwomen, the students
of Harvard and Kent State? It's obvious, people! They all have enough
intestinal fortitude to speak out against an unjust, unfair, or otherwise
intolerable status quo. They are not content to Laissez-Faire (Let it be).
I live in a small town in New Hampshire, on the Maine state line. It's a
mill town. My neighbors work in shoe shops, the tannery, the Bleachery, or
the navy yard. $6.50 an hour is big money, and $9.00 is unheard of. Working
two jobs just to pay the rent is the rule rather than the exception. Yet,
there's a ingrained sense of self-pride and common respect in the people. Men
are not afraid to be men in the old sense of the term; women are not afraid to
be women in the old sense of the term. Being outspoken is another rule,
rather than the exception. If my neighbor doesn't like something that I'm
doing, I get told about it, and shame on me for not doing something about it
before he spoke up.
So, like it or not, I speak up.
The "redeployment" of some 900 workers out of NIO makes sense for the
Corporation from a business standpoint. It makes good business sense to
consolidate CSS under one roof. It makes good business sense to "trim the
fat" in terms of headcount. Reducing costs increases profit.
But at whose expense?? If 1,500 people leave jobs in New Hampshire, and
take jobs in Massachusetts, who loses?
The 5% tax comes right out of my net pay, not out of gross wages. That's
5% less cash that I have to spend in my own community. That's 5% more going
to somebody else's wallet. Do I gain benefit from taxes paid to Massachusetts?
Not one iota.
So what's the big deal? Multiply a ballpark figure of $1,000 per
taxpayer by 1,500 redeployed people. The Commonwealth gets $1.5 million in
additional tax revenues, without passing a single piece of legislation. The
other side of the coin is that the State of New Hampshire is the loser of that
same $1.5 million in revenue. That's $1.5 million that filters through a
healthy New Hampshire economy before it gets to the state coffers. In
Massachusetts, it goes directly to a welfare state.
Hey, why complain? You still have a job, but now it's in Shrewsbury, or
Lancaster, or Boxborough, or Concord, or Franklin. And we'll pay relocation.
Well, maybe that's not the point. Maybe the point is that my mortgage is
almost paid off, and I don't want to finance another house at higher interest
rates. Banks love it when people relocate -- interest income, rather than the
repayment of principal. Landlords love it too -- new tenants mean higher
rents.
Thus, the real loser is the State of New Hampshire and all the people
therein. This is just one more step in a process that has dried up New
Hampshire industry since the turn of the century. This state used to boom
with textile and wood mills, tanneries, shoe factories, clothing
manufacturers, even railcar and locomotive shops. High-tech came in the 60's
and 70's. One by one the mills moved south, the shoe shops overseas, and the
whole country forgot how to build a locomotive. So now it's High-Tech's turn
to scuttle back across the state line.
Where will it end? Will it end when New Hampshire is one massive
Time-Share Condo? Will it end when the indiginous population has been
replaced by seasonal tourists? Should Salem and Pelham apply for admission to
Middlesex County? Should Portsmouth look for an 021 ZIP Code? Can
Winnepesaukee expect to be part of the Metropolitan District Commission?
Tell me, should I not speak up? Should I not be disturbed? I'm not
particularly worried about my own situation. I'll survive. I've been poor
before, and I can be poor again. But I firmly believe that Management is not
considering the total social consequences of this redeployment. It would
appear that the almighty buck takes precedence.
The present NIO plant manager and his staff is going all-out to make our
transition as easy as possible. At least in this time frame somebody knows
what's going on, and what our options will be. The plans are being vocalized
decently. This was not being done a couple of weeks ago. As time goes on, I
am confident that the future will be a little clearer. Then perhaps the
stress levels will drop.
The current problem as I see it is that there are too many
Honeywell-Raytheon-Western Electric headsets in the lower levels of
management. I get mixed messages, one from a doom-and-gloom group who tell us
that we're on our own, and another message from upper management that says
we're being taken care of. Without clear signals, what should we think?
It would help if all levels of management would walk to the same drummer.
It does not help when one level offers us the world and then a lower level
tells us it ain't necessarily so.
It would help if people at all levels would get out of the us-versus-them
mode. I see friends back-stabbing friends over open jobs. If only people
could see beyond the end of their noses.
-- Don Black
|
658.19 | So what is the answer? | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Thu Dec 01 1988 15:01 | 18 |
| So what should DEC do Don? Should we pay 900 people to do
nothing so they can continue to work in Salem? Should we
move all the CSS people to MA from NH and give the NIO
people their jobs? I'm not saying this to jump on you
believe me. I think most of us understand the problem and
what it means to people. I've got a lot of friends in this
building (NIO) who are looking for work right now.
But I don't have a better answer for the problems. Were you
here in NIO about 6 years ago when we went through this before?
DEC went over backwards trying to find people jobs. Yes some
people left the area but not all of them went to MA. Some
when to areas in the country where housing and living costs
are a lot less then they are around here.
Give us an answer Don. What should DEC do?
Alfred
|
658.20 | | HAMER::JILSON | Door handle to door handle | Thu Dec 01 1988 16:20 | 6 |
| Just a nit to .18. You *>DO<* use services in the state in which you work
and those service are for YOU not the corporation. You use the police,
fire, and medical serivices every time you travel into the state you work.
You wouldn't want to be in an accident and have these services denied you
just because you were from out-of-state.
Just a nit.
|
658.21 | more nits | MPGS::BUSWELL | why is the buz in the TEM lab @2396 | Fri Dec 02 1988 07:12 | 3 |
| re.18 That would be
Lech Walesa, b. 1943, Polish labor leader.
|
658.22 | RE .18 | HJUXB::SCODA | | Fri Dec 02 1988 07:28 | 2 |
| It takes a lot of guts to say what Don Black just said in .18 -
Daniel Webster was from NH too wasn't he?
|
658.23 | For what it's worth... | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | | Fri Dec 02 1988 08:04 | 18 |
| re .18 :
For the second consecutive year, New Hampshire has been determined
to be the "most manufacturing-intensive" state in the Union.
Though I no longer have the entire news article, (and can't quote
the source -- one of the manufacturing trade magazines), I do remember
that this was determined by some organization that took into account
the percent of the population employed in manufacturing, the tax
structure, the wage levels, and the percent of state's economy coming
from manufacturing (among other factors).
So, while you see NH as becoming a hostile environment for
manufacturing, there are national organizations believing exactly
the opposite. I suppose (like anything), the truth lies somewhere
between the two extremes.
-Don-
|
658.24 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | Koyaanisqatsi | Fri Dec 02 1988 12:28 | 5 |
| DEC moving manufacturing out of NIO does not mean that NH is a bad place
for manufacturing. DEC had other reasons.
In fact, NH is the third-fastest growing state in the country. (Which does
not bode well for the environmental situation.)
|
658.25 | where it's going | TAZRAT::CHERSON | well you needn't | Fri Dec 02 1988 12:55 | 10 |
| NH may be the third-fastest growing state (according to whom?),
but the overhead costs of running a manufacturing plant in NH aren't
any less than in Mass., despite the 5% fewer taxes, etc.
The future of manufacturing in DEC and other companies lies in selected
sun belt states (not surprisingly those that border on Mexico) and
in far-flung off-shore locations. Like it or lump it, that's the
situation.
David
|
658.26 | | HARRY::HIGGINS | Citizen of Atlantis | Fri Dec 02 1988 16:32 | 8 |
|
Before you all go crazy exporting manufacturing to who knows where,
CSS is a manufacturing organization that is taking the Salem site
for a number of reasons, among which is CSS's need for more
manufacturing space.
|
658.28 | rat hole flag raising | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Fri Dec 09 1988 11:16 | 8 |
| RE: .27 The fairness or unfairness of the Massachusetts income
tax is really outside the scope of this conference. It fits very
well in RAHAB::SOAPBOX though.
If someone wants to provide comments on .27 or give technical
corrections please do so by mail.
Alfred
|
658.29 | Why is he doing that? | DR::BLINN | Eschew obfuscation | Fri Dec 09 1988 12:22 | 11 |
| RE: .27 -- I can't think of any reason why your husband would
pay taxes to MA on your NH income when you both live in NH.
To the best of my knowledge, there is no MA state law that
requires you to do this. But, as Alfred suggests, this is
not an appropriate topic for this conference. Perhaps you
should raise the question of the justification for paying these
taxes with your husband and your accountant. The question
of "injustice" or "fairness" probably belongs in SOAPBOX or
in ISWS::MASSACHUSETTS.
Tom
|
658.30 | Try NH Tax Office | IAMOK::DELUCO | Jim DeLuco, Corp VTX Prog | Fri Dec 09 1988 12:37 | 2 |
| Also try your NH tax office, check the white pages under New Hampshire.
|
658.31 | What's happening today... | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Fri Dec 09 1988 12:42 | 28 |
| In case people are wondering how DEC trys to help people find new
jobs here are a few things I've picked up on from signs here in
NIO and talks with people in groups affected by the reorg.
o Wed of this week there was a job fair sponsored be a manufac.
group with facilities in NH and MA.
o Today there is a job fair sponsored by manufacturing in Augusta ME
o Next week is a two day job fair sponsored by the field organzation.
This will include presentations on relocation assistance to which
spouses and SOs are explicitly invited.
o In the area of relocation, the plant has committed *in writing*
to fund relocation for employees that find jobs in other areas.
What this means is that the hiring manager can hire and relocate
an NIO employee even if they are not funded to relocate for the
job. NIO will pick up the relocation. It's a great deal for a
hiring manager and means that NIO people can look at any job
without worring about relocation funding.
I believe that there will be more job fairs in the near future.
There are some really top rate people here so if you've got openings
this is a great place to look.
Alfred
PS: My group is *not* moving or I'd prabably have more detail.
|
658.32 | Resumes available! | WMOIS::D_MONTGOMERY | | Fri Dec 09 1988 12:48 | 14 |
| : o Wed of this week there was a job fair sponsored be a manufac.
: group with facilities in NH and MA.
:
Not exactly. It was an engineering group: United
States Manufacturing Engineering and Technology, located mainly
in Tewksbury, but with "satellites" all up and down 495 and 93.
The Salem plant management are doing a very good job at managing
this "transition" well. Still, it is, and will continue to be,
a very difficult thing to pull off (redeploying 1300 manufacturing
personnel in a company with ever-dwindling manufacturing).
-Don-who-is-one-of-the-1300-
|
658.33 | | NPOGRP::BRAKE | In Search of the Lost Chord | Fri Dec 09 1988 15:06 | 38 |
| re .18
Don, I got the feeling from your note that DEC was showing favor
towards Massachusetts and discriminating against NH with it's decision
on NIO.
First off, manufacturing in Mass within DEC has been devastated.
Franklin, Marlboro, Westminster and Maynard are shells of their
former selves. Many more than 1,000 employees have found other jobs
when these organizations closed in Mass and in places like Merrimack,
Salem and Nashua.
Secondly, your reference to textiles and shoes hit Massachusetts
even harder. Look at Lowell, Lawrence, Haverhill and Maynard for
that matter when you want to see what impact the textile pullout
did. Check out Brockton and Stoughton and Fall River and New Bedford.
Then there's Taunton and Holyoke and Northampton. Fact is that
Massachusetts suffered as much or more pain as NH when the leather
and textile industries moved south or overseas.
Finally I am sympathetic to your plight. I lived through it when
Marlboro went belly up. It was disconcerting to me that many high
level manufacturing managers seemed to be jumping ship and getting
jobs "just" prior to the announcement. The mixed messages hurt.
But in the final analysis, DEC did do everything possible to ensure
we all had jobs - jobs that paid well. Many of us were retrained.
Many were relocated. But we kept our jobs.
I've been too familiar with people who worked for companies that
thought so little of their workforce that they never hesitated to
lay off people when the going got tough.
When the smoke of the NIO situation clears I think you'll feel better
about what kind of company you work for.
Rich
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658.34 | Salem Notes Conference | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Wed Dec 14 1988 13:57 | 4 |
| For those people in NIO, moving to NIO, or are otherwise interested
there is a notes conference at CVG::SALEM (KP7 etc to add).
Alfred
|
658.35 | Pull yourself together - FAST | TYCOBB::C_DENOPOULOS | | Tue Dec 20 1988 09:39 | 19 |
| One thing that the people of NIO must do is take hold of themselves
and start looking at this as an opportunity. Did you ever thing
that you might want to be a computer operator or maybe a programmer?
Now is the time to make *and I repeat- MAKE* that happen. Don't
sit around and wait for DEC to hand you a job like many people did
when MRO mfg went away.
Manufacturing as we knew it is going away. I see DEC becoming heavily
involved in chip mfg. Everything else; boards, cabs, cables, etc.,
will all be buy-outs. It just wont be worth it anymore for use
to build cabs when there are so many small companies out there willing
to do it for us at a price probably cheaper than we can do it for.
So, now is your chance to get out of mfg. I spent over a year as
a Stride supervisor and saw the difference peoples attitudes had
on their final outcome. I had over 40 people reporting to me at
one time or another that changed careers succesfully.
Just wanted to throw in my .02
Chris D.
|
658.36 | BTW | TYCOBB::C_DENOPOULOS | | Tue Dec 20 1988 09:41 | 6 |
| re: ? Oh yes. By the way. For some reason or another, supervisors
tend to have to worst attitude in this situation. I would say that
listening to upper management is your best bet. The people managing
know what they are doing.
Chris D.
|
658.37 | REORG=OPPORTUNITY | PONDVU::GAGNON | AS USUAL, PATS CHOKE | Tue Jan 03 1989 13:13 | 20 |
| RE;>< Note 658.35 by TYCOBB::C_DENOPOULOS >
>......I had over 40 people reporting to me at
one time or another that changed careers succesfully.
And I was one of those 40. DEC was willing to retrain me and I changed
careers, work closer to home and I could not be happier. When STRIDE
came along I saw that as an opportunity to change careers.
The question is, are the folks at NIO be offered similar training
opportunities that Stride was able to offer? If so, then theses
folks should be looking for the opportunities.
I know of many individuals that changed carreers from manufacturing
to Technical Illustrators, Technical Writers, Computer Operators,
Computer Programmers, Financial Analyst, Finance clerks, CAD Detail
Draftpersons. These are just some of the one I know from experience.
I am sure there are may more that Chris could tell you about.
Rick
|
658.38 | NIO still setting up?!?! | TYCOBB::C_DENOPOULOS | | Wed Jan 04 1989 11:42 | 11 |
| Hi Rick, how've you been?
I think NIO is still in the planning stages. The idea though is
that you have to be a "go-getter". The more you help yourself,
the more others will offer to help you. I've had people that said
"I want to change my career to ....." and I've had some that said
"Oh well, I guess I'll try this". Guess which ones made it.
You will only be successful through this transition if you want
to be.
Chris D.
|