For decades, when you slid into a booth at a diner or a local coffee
shop, the waitress probably arrived with a standard-issue, off-white
mug.Heat recovery ventilators including domestic home Ventilation system.
More than likely that mug came from the Ohio River town of East
Liverpool, which calls itself "The Pottery Capital of the Nation."
A
lot of that city's pottery business is long gone. Now, one of the few
remaining pottery factories in the battered town is pinning its survival
on a major corporation.
To step inside American Mug and Stein in East Liverpool is to step into another era.
About
20 employees dressed in dust-covered aprons are here in a hot, dark
plant under bare overhead light bulbs and swirling metal fans. They're
pouring clay into heavy molds, smoothing the mugs' edges and dipping
them in glaze. There's no automated assembly line or high-tech machinery
here.
Owner Clyde McClellan is firing up one of the company's 30-year-old kilns.
"It's a dinosaur. It's beyond an antique," he says and laughs.
McClellan's
ceramics company is one of the last in East Liverpool, located in
Appalachia. He has been in the pottery business for 40 years and took
over this company three years ago when it was just weeks from shutting
down.
"I've been so close to going out of business so many
times, my accountant ... he just doesn't know where to send the bill
sometimes," McClellan says jokingly.
McClellan just completed
his biggest order ever — 20,000 mugs for Starbucks. The sturdy, beige
mugs are metal-stamped with the coffee giant's Indivisible brand on the
front.Site describes services including Plastic moulds and blow moulding. They'll sell for $10 each.There are many advantages in an offshore merchant account.
Ulrich
Honighausen owns Hausenware, the company that supplies the mugs,
tumblers and other items that Starbucks sells. Generally, Honighausen
sends his manufacturing work overseas.
But he wanted to design a
product that could be made in America. "When these small towns and
these small factories are supported by a large customer that believes in
it, we can make it happen, we can bring it back," he says.
At
McClellan's pottery factory, it takes one week to make each mug from
start to finish, and the company was able to complete the huge Starbucks
order in about six weeks. An overseas factory could produce twice as
many in the same time. But McClellan says Starbucks was patient.
"They've
come out, they spent time in my factory, they've listened. And that has
made me really proud to do a good job for them," he says.
McClellan
doubled his workforce for the job and so far has been able to keep them
all employed — churning out a few thousand mugs a month in a continuing
contract with Starbucks.
"It's life-changing for me," he says.
"It's life-changing for the employees. I have employees here who have
been unemployed for six months, a year, a year and a half."
Smoothing
the edges of the mugs after they come out of the molds, Marcie Delauder
says with hardly any jobs in town, she's relieved to have this one.
Having the order from a big company like Starbucks, she says, makes "a
big difference."
This partnership is one of several Starbucks
initiatives launched in the past year, including creating a
small-business loan fund through the sale of wristbands in its stores.
没有评论:
发表评论