Spiraling retirements and shrinking unemployment in rural Minnesota are driving worried factory owners to get creative so that current workers stay and future workers come. After years of chronic worker shortages, plants statewide are taking aggressive action.
With operations in the western Minnesota cities of Morris and Hancock, Superior Industries recently bought a $300,000 apartment building and now spends another $250,000 a year on housing and plane tickets so 40 to 47 workers can migrate from Mexico to work at its concrete plant seven months each year.
In central Minnesota, Alexandria Industries' business grew 20 percent last year at the same time that 26 percent of its workforce neared retirement age. So the company scrambled to add 60 workers and is now converting part of a strip shopping mall into a $300,000 employee health clinic one block from its aluminum extrusion plant. It is also paying workers' tuition for degrees in engineering and machine tooling and automation.
South of Alexandria sits Glenwood, a town of just 2,500 people and lots of cornfields. That's where the airfreight equipment firm WASP Inc. took drastic measures to get more workers. It bought another company.
Last year WASP — which makes massive conveyors, cargo dollies, stairs and containers for airplanes, FedEx, UPS and Amazon — paid more than $10 million for FAST, a maker of crop sprayers in Windom that fell on hard times amid depressed crop prices. WASP gained FAST's 100 workers, factory and product diversity.
"We were really happy to add workers," said WASP CEO Dane Anderson, who renamed the merged entity Fast Global Solutions. The deal closed last spring. Now the 100 workers in Windom are being trained to make the conveyors.
The outcome is a relief. WASP struggled for two years to get up to 375 workers in Glenwood. It dangled $1 million in incentives such as employee stock, double overtime pay and quarterly bonuses, and still "we could not add more workers," Anderson said. "Without this acquisition, we would have been short. Our customer demand levels exceeded our capacity."
These days, manufacturers say the name of the game is creativity as desperate factories around the state are trying to combat Minnesota's worker shortage problem. With state unemployment at 3.7 percent (and with some towns closer to zero), manufacturers are aggressively opening purses to boost staff retention and help recruitment get a little easier.