Who’s to blame for 21 pages of new COVID-19 regulations in California? Look in the mirror

Is President Trump “undermining democracy” by failing to cooperate with the Biden transition team? I have my doubts. The drama is unseemly, but our institutions are strong, weathered by much worse.

What’s more troubling is the years-long paralysis in effective governance. Anger and self-pity may appeal to certain voters, but business requires action, results. We send people to Washington, Sacramento, and Denver to make a difference, not bemoan our condition. Compromise and inclusion are the requisite ingredients for progress in American federalism. Our failure to demand either from those we elect poses a larger threat than an embattled one-term president.

Consider the dysfunction in government on display in California, where last week Cal/OSHA rolled out 21 new pages of COVID-related regulations for business to chew on. To read the regs is adventure enough. To contemplate their implementation, for small manufacturers, is almost unthinkable.

But for those ready to pounce and scream government overreach, especially voices on the right, consider this: we’re all culpable. For their part, conservatives in California have marginalized their own influence. Is it a mystery why California Republican candidates lose? Of course not. Much of their platform is out of touch with Californians. Those things that business value, articulated in many cases by more conservative voices, are often thrown out with the proverbial bathwater.

More, those out of power today make the case that the state is not worthy of rehabilitation. These voices root for California to fail. And in doing so, they lose even more credibility and influence with voters. It’s a death spiral, increasingly difficult to escape.

I know this to be the case because my own industry is also intent on self-destruction. For many personalities, to be popular today is to be first a scathing media critic. Fortunes are made by ridiculing and belittling other media. Imagine a banker or lawyer sending daily emails to customers and colleagues, undermining the profession, belittling competitors. They’d soon be searching for a new profession.

Our self-loathing also spreads the false narrative that our customers don’t value our product. Some media outlets relish the chance to beat up on “the media” at every opportunity; you don’t see Coca-Cola bashing soft drinks. We can’t get our story straight. As a result, we’re as guilty as the California GOP in undermining our own success.

California business would instead benefit from a conservative coalition that’s earned more influence over the legislative and regulatory agenda. If this were the case, small business wouldn’t be staring down 21 pages of new COVID regulations that stand to hamstring, among others, companies in California’s brilliant manufacturing ecosystem; that leave businesses responsible for doing what’s right, because they do; and shift the burden back to those responsible for managing the pandemic at the end of the day: you and me.

Our 244-year grand experiment in self-governance will endure, but we’ve been reminded of a lesson along the way: An outsider who gets things done in Washington is an asset. One who grinds the legislative gears to a halt, is a, well, you get the point.

Bart Taylor is publisher of CompanyWeek. Reach him at btaylor@companyweek.com.

No endorsement for president here, just a reminder that small business teeters on the edge

Years ago, I learned the perils of endorsing a political candidate in a business publication. In October 2008 I was traveling with a group of companies and was met in the DIA concourse by the CEO of my largest advertiser and sponsor of the trip. Our magazine had endorsed Barack Obama the same week. Needless to say, it was a lively conversation.

Fast forward a dozen years. Today, CompanyWeek readers are flooded with political opinion, shilling for either side. Our endorsement, my endorsement, wouldn’t change a thing, even if manufacturing is an entirely appropriate filter to judge each candidate.

Sidestepping an endorsement also saves me from the blow back from annoyed readers. “I don’t read your publication for political opinions,” always meant, “you picked the wrong candidate.”

Some of those readers would also be the same folks who today use their own platform to advocate for a preferred candidate. No doubt I’d have heard from Daniels Manufacturing Corporation (DMC) President George Daniels, based in Orlando, Florida, who last week fired an employee for publicizing Daniel’s internal memo stating, “If Trump and the Republicans win the election, DMC will hopefully be able to continue operating, more or less as it has been operating lately.” The letter continued, “However, if Biden and the Democrats win, DMC could be forced to begin permanent layoffs beginning in late 2020 and/or early 2021.”

Daniels may be right, but for the wrong reason. Whoever wins will face the reality that today, in the midst of a pandemic, small business teeters on a knife’s edge. It’s a story lost in this election cycle; or too remote. It may not be much longer. We’ve yet to find a “new normal” — a work-life balance that includes COVID. Until we do, a new economic crisis is as likely as an extended recovery.

If I were to be pressed for an opinion, I’d say, as I have for months, that both Trump and Biden have at times been effective in promoting manufacturing: Biden as vice president in an Obama administration that orchestrated key federal investments in manufacturing infrastructure; and President Trump through more unconventional means, using both carrot and stick to compel companies to favor domestic production.

On the flip side, neither candidate has been able to articulate a strategy to shore up our domestic supply chain — the key to U.S. manufacturing — or demonstrate a deep understanding of the industries that will drive sustained growth. In other words, if manufacturing were the lens through which CompanyWeek would endorse a candidate in next Tuesday’s election, neither would get full throated affirmation.

Instead, despite the duplicity, we’re rooting for Daniels Manufacturing Corporation. And demanding the party that emerges from next week’s election immediately set to work to undergird small and middle-market manufacturing, to support communities with the vision of San Leandro, California, or Fort Collins, Colorado, towns that value “job-dense, 50-person, high value-added employers”, i.e. manufacturers.

Delivering on that promise might compel me to again endorse a candidate. It’s never too late.

Bart Taylor is publisher of CompanyWeek. Contact him at btaylor@companyweek.com.

Inside the Tesla supply chain: Hale Foote and Scandic

We first interviewed Hale Foote in 2017, and Dan Sanchez’s profile of Foote’s spring and stamping company, Scandic, has stuck with me ever since. Scandic is a Tesla supplier, and Foote’s description of how the upstart automaker was bringing a Silicon Valley ethos to the manufacturing ecosystem in the Bay Area was fascinating.

I caught up with Foote again last week. He first asked about CompanyWeek, and agreed with my thought that things continue to line up for U.S. manufacturing. “Before COVID hit us, I was seeing more work come in from China in January,” he said. “There’s growing sentiment that we need to reshore some work.”

Here’s my Q&A with Hale Foote, owner of Scandic, a CompanyWeek Best of California manufacturer.

CompanyWeek: How’s life in the Tesla supply chain these days?

Hale Foote: Unchanged, but we’re kind of a unique animal here, we’re locked in to Model S and Model X, the first two big ones. The Model 3 and Model Y, we have not been heavily involved in. Tesla emerged as a more mature company and they were able to get Detroit suppliers to play ball, Chinese suppliers to play ball. But we’re locked in where we are, and we’re in a good spot.

CW: You’re in a unique position — you’ve been with Tesla through uncertain and volatile times, only to see it evolve into an industry phenomenon and Wall Street darling. What changed?

HF: Two things changed, one with Tesla internally, and two, with the world market.

First, Tesla began to get volume, and the traditional Detroit auto parts suppliers who had written them off as a California flake, started to see numbers that made sense, and that was largely due to Model 3, when they started selling hundreds of thousands of cars a year instead of 20,000 or 30,000, or even 50,000. So Tesla finally got it right, and not just with Model S and X, which were expensive, but Model 3 got people’s attention. That was the one.

Then externally, various governments around the world started seeing that EV is the way to go and decided, “Yes, we’re going to incentivize people to do it.” Everyone from GM to Ford started coming out with EVs that gave Tesla a whole lot more credibility.

And frankly, no one can touch them on infrastructure. The supercharger network and their batteries are their secret weapon, not the cars. So it was a combination of their own smarts, engineering and instinct for survival, and externally, governments around the world saying, “We need to go electric.”

CW: During their real volatile period, I recall there also being a lot of discussion around people and the loss of key production executives. Was Tesla focused on workforce all along?

HF: Yeah, I think a lot of that talk was driven by the auto establishment, saying, “Look, they’re just a Silicon Valley startup churning through people,” and there was some of that, but that’s Silicon Valley. They did start getting people coming in from the midwest, auto industry veterans who knew what they were doing. But it’s fascinating, since we’re here in the area, I see people now circling from Google to Apple to Tesla constantly. And what do Google and Apple have in common with Tesla? Smart engineers. There’s a huge cross-pollination of talent here.

CW: You made a comment in our interview three years ago that stuck with me, that “Bay Area companies like Tesla and Apple want to fail faster to succeed sooner.” So they’re doing more than that. They’re creating their own ecosystem of shared talent?

HF: So California has very strong protection for employees — non-competes are very disfavored here. California has always had strong worker protection, to say that “Hey Apple, you can’t shut this engineer down from going elsewhere.” And we’re seeing the upside of that here.

CW: So tell me about your company. Three years is a long time in your business. What’s new at Scandic?

HF: Yeah, so we just passed the 50-year mark last year, now in our second half-century, so we’re happy about that. On the people front, our big news is that our oldest daughter has just come back from Ohio to join the company and she’ll be taking over for me. Third-generation ownership, and we’re very excited about that.

CW: Was that in the works for a long time?

HF: No! She was like me, a liberal arts major, a different career, but saw the writing on the wall that this family business thing has worked pretty well. And it seems most of your readership is in the same position, a lot family businesses.

CW: Definitely one of the great attributes of manufacturing. So how’s the California business scene? The national narrative isn’t always the most positive.

HF: Yeah, the trade associations I belong to tend to be populated by more conservative business owners, and they always give me grief about, you could divest in California, why don’t you leave, taxes and regulations, et cetera, et cetera. You know, there’s a reason why people own companies here. There are thousands of businesses doing well here.

CW: I hear it all the time: “We love doing business here, we’d never leave, but man, it’s hard sometimes.”

HF: Yeah, we love doing business here, we’d never leave, and it’s not that hard!

CW: Do you think economic developers in California are supportive of manufacturing?

HF: Very much so. For example, the city where we’re located has always been a manufacturing city. They very much value companies like us — really job-dense, 50-person, high value-added employers. They’re not crazy about big-box warehouses. They want companies like us, that pay people well, people can buy houses and live that kind of life.

Is there environmental regulation? Of course there is. Is our water and air getting cleaner? Yes it is. So there are definite benefits to it. Yes, sometimes you’re going to be a little more expensive than someone in Nevada, but you know, they’re in Nevada and I’m in California.

CW: Where do you see opportunity going forward for Scandic? Where does Tesla fit?

HF: Tesla’s an important part of our business, but by no means the major part. They’re important, they’re solid, they’re steady, and at this point we’re a legacy supplier. It’s predictable, and it’s a good fit. But we’re not really an automotive supplier — they’re our only automotive customer, as opposed to my friends in Cleveland who have three customers. They work for the Big Three. That’s it. They live and die by how many F-150s sell that quarter.

We’re medical, we’re aerospace, we’re transportation, we’re safety systems.

CW: Will new technology open even more verticals for you? How about 3D printing?

HF: We make money on high-volume stuff, and additive manufacturing, in my experience, is not quite there. Making a product that takes 12 minutes to print is really not our market.

What is changing, and what’s going to change in my lifetime, is when we can print tooling, instead of building tooling over a period of months. When we can print the die, that will be a game changer for us.

For more coverage of California manufacturing, visit the CompanyWeek archive.

When the sound of winning is silence: Manufacturing quiets its critics

After launching CompanyWeek in 2013, I fought a running editorial battle with a cadre of business writers about the state of U.S. manufacturing. The narrative from the national writers was that manufacturing was no longer essential, a quaint vestige of an earlier economic era. Columnists from Forbes, Fortune, the Wall Street Journal — most all had bought into the narrative that globalization had won the day, that it didn’t matter where America’s uber-talented tech and engineering class manufactured their products. China? Sure. Vietnam? OK. Anywhere but here.

I hit back in columns like A report proclaims the manufacturing “renaissance” a hoax, and the national media follow suit; and Is manufacturing great again? Don’t ask. We stopped counting.

It’s not that my adversaries were wrong; U.S. companies had indeed chased cheap labor overseas. Vast sums of capital followed as American brands built a manufacturing ecosystem offshore, employing millions of foreign nationals to work in factories entirely removed from the communities where products were inspired and headquarters based.

In retrospect, we could have guessed this was a model that inevitably would develop leaks. But the mistake of my adversaries was a fixation on the numbers. At the time, they were staggering. As we’ve documented, America lost millions of manufacturing jobs — about 4 million from 2006 to 2012 alone — leaving total U.S. manufacturing employment around 12 million jobs, or about half the number at its peak.

Even today, there’s still an “enthusiasm gap” among the business intelligentsia because many of these jobs won’t come back — here or anywhere. Technology is transforming the sector. And without high employment numbers, manufacturing will continue to be underestimated.

But it’s a reasonable guess that manufacturing employment, at its current level of 12 million jobs or so nationally, has found a new equilibrium. Losses to automation will be offset by gains from growth industries powering today’s manufacturing economy and a new national enthusiasm for domestic production. In Colorado and elsewhere, the sector is also proving uber-resilient in today’s “crisis” economy.

The fixation on numbers also never took into account the societal implications of sending the production of American-inspired products offshore. We’re a country of builders, of makers, of doers. If Main Street wasn’t home to a factory, it provided a direct path to one. Along with our lunch boxes, we shipped our national identity offshore when we decided others could make our products for us.

But just as the crowds that return to ballparks will raise the roof and replace the strange silence that today attends a touchdown, so too will the business punditocracy celebrate the return of America’s manufacturing ethos, in loud and boisterous terms. Watch for it.

For today, their silence speaks volumes.

Bart Taylor is publisher of CompanyWeek. Reach him at btaylor@companyweek.com.

“Are manufacturing jobs Cory Gardner’s path to the Senate?” Why a column from 2014 resonates today

In a March 2014 column, I encouraged Cory Gardner to run on manufacturing to win a Colorado Senate seat. Six years ago, a Republican hadn’t won a statewide election for governor or U.S. Senate since 2002, and from my vantage point, the GOP was fishing about for a compelling electoral strategy:

“Gardner’s yet to articulate a platform but early pronouncements from the gubernatorial field provide strong clues. They suggest the GOP ticket will run on the repeal of Obamacare, Dem overreach on gun legislation, opposition to same-sex marriage and economic sluggishness — a slow recovery.

Will this platform appeal to young voters, women and minorities and social moderates in Colorado who increasingly decide elections? It’s principled. It’s also similar to what’s been defeated here before. And Gardner’s ‘Battle for the Future of America’ theme runs headlong against a few economic realities.

Contrary to the gloomy tone of the GOP’s economic assertions, growth and vitality are on display here. Energy is feeding an industrial comeback. Entrepreneurship is thriving. . . . On balance the Colorado economy is a formidable engine and compelling story, a national model in some respects. As Brian Burney, CEO of Oliver Manufacturing . . . told me, ‘It’s a good time to be a manufacturer.'”

So much has changed. And yet is hasn’t.

For one, it’s still a good time to be a manufacturer, and still a good idea to run on manufacturing.

David Hansen, senior economist at Development Research Partners, notes that “manufacturing seems to be one of the best performing industry supersectors so far [in 2020] in Colorado. Based on seasonally adjusted CES data, employment in Colorado’s manufacturing sector is down 1.3 percent YTD compared with 4 percent across all industries. Encouragingly, manufacturing employment was actually up slightly over the year in July. Our forecast for 2020 was 1 percent growth. The [CU Boulder Business Research Division’s] current forecast for manufacturing in 2020 is a -0.5 percent employment contraction.”

Yet still, both Gardner and his adversary, John Hickenlooper, don’t run on Colorado manufacturing, though they both could, each from a different point of view. Hickenlooper was a manufacturer, and Gardner’s been a quiet if effective advocate of Colorado’s sector.

Frankly, I’m not sure what either candidate is running on today. Perhaps each should revisit findings I referenced in the same 2014 column:

“Last week, Manufacturing & Technology News summarized research that, according to the publication, concludes, ‘There is a wide disconnect between the American public and policymakers in Washington, D.C., on the importance of manufacturing to the U.S. economy and the need for action to restore American industrial competitiveness.’ Or more succinctly, ‘Americans want Washington to deal with manufacturing, but Washington is not responding.’

M&T News reported on some of the findings:

When asked, ‘which of the following industries is the most important to the strength of the American economy?’ 32 percent of Americans said ‘manufacturing,” followed by 19 percent saying “high tech and knowledge industries,’ 12 percent saying health care, 11 percent saying agriculture, 8 percent saying housing and construction, 6 percent saying finance, and 4 percent saying services and retail.

Voters reject the idea that other sectors like high tech or services can replace manufacturing. Only 34 percent of Americans agreed with the statement that ‘the strength of the American economy is innovation and competition — and if manufacturing leaves, we will move into new areas like high tech or services which will take its place in the future.’

With 88 percent of Americans agreeing with the statement that ‘American manufacturing means American jobs,’ the survey found that ‘support for American manufacturing and manufacturers is nearly universal.’

Most Americans (84 percent) support the adoption of a national manufacturing strategy that is focused on tax, education, and trade policies (with 7 percent opposed to such a policy).”

As I noted in 2014, “Manufacturing may provide an opening for any candidate willing to make it a campaign issue.”

It’s never too late.

Bart Taylor is publisher of CompanyWeek. Reach him at btaylor@companyweek.com.

Colorado’s Top Manufacturing Communities, v. 2020

CompanyWeek turns seven this September. Twice in the past seven years, we’ve ranked Colorado’s top manufacturing communities, most recently in early 2017. Our criteria then: a growing, compelling industry or cluster of maker industries, supported by purposeful public/private efforts to build a robust manufacturing economy.

Here’s the 2017 list, followed by the 2015 ranking:

  1. Fort Collins/Loveland (2015 ranking: 3)
  2. Denver (2015 ranking: 2)
  3. Boulder County (2015 ranking: 1)
  4. Grand Junction/Palisade (2015 ranking: 5)
  5. Colorado Springs/Pueblo (2015 ranking: 4)

A couple things immediately stand out: However you cut and slice the geography, Northern Colorado, especially if you include Boulder County, is a production mecca. Fort Collins/Loveland/Windsor, Boulder/Longmont/Frederick, and parts in between or adjacent all flash nation-leading sector attributes.

Combining Colorado Springs and Pueblo into a single community was a mistake. Each is intent on carving its own path. We’d also marry Aurora with Denver. The synergy is self-evident, even as Denver’s northwest neighbors are carving more autonomous tracks.

Along with those geo-adjustments, we added two important criteria: high-profile manufacturing OEMs, brands, or contract manufacturers that call a community home; and sector diversity, i.e., the prevalence of multiple manufacturing industries. Manufacturing’s modern personality is shaped by multiple growth industries.

Here, then, is the 2020 list:

1. Fort Collins/Loveland/Windsor

The economic engine in northern Colorado is powered by a manufacturing sector that crushes all of our criteria: a powerful mix of growth industries, anchored by national and global OEMs, upstart brands, innovative contract manufacturers all supported by enthusiastic economic development professionals and civic leaders who see value in a vibrant manufacturing economy. The Northern Colorado Manufacturing Partnership touches more companies than any sector trade association in the state. There’s the NoCo powerhouse, and everyone else.

Top Industries: Food & Beverage; Brewing & Distilling; Industrial & Equipment; Consumer & Lifestyle; Aerospace & Transportation

Top Companies:


2 (tie). Denver/Aurora

Denver wants it all, and why not? The city continues to attract brands and companies from across the economic spectrum. But its high-tech production ecosystem lags, and interest in food and beverage, outdoor industry, consumer and high-tech brands often begins and ends with corporate relocations.

Adding Aurora changes the calculation. Its cadre of companies, more expansive real estate opps, and emerging bioscience cluster combine to provide the east metro a ton of potential to locate more manufacturing. If Denver would shake off it’s ambivalence to prioritize advanced manufacturing, it might keep its brands from outsourcing production to distant places and rewrite the history of manufacturing in the Rocky Mountain region.

Top Industries: Building & Construction; Food & Beverage; Brewing & Distilling; Aerospace & Transportation; Consumer & Lifestyle; Cannabis & Hemp

Top Companies:


2 (tie). Boulder County

Readers were only mildly surprised when we anointed Boulder County the top spot in our 2015 ranking. There wasn’t much to argue: Boulder’s natural and organic food sector, powered by production innovators like Fresca Foods, was leading a national revolution to tip over America’s vast industrial food play. Wall Street investors now dot the funding landscape here.

Today, an innovation ethos continues to inform growth in powerhouse industries like aerospace, outdoor industry, and cannabis, where Boulder companies are among first movers that have established Colorado cannabis manufacturing as the most healthy and stable ecosystem in the nation. A thriving ecosystem of capable contract manufacturers feed off the area’s rich R&D legacy. Longmont is a perfect complement and home to a growing number of fabricators and producers across the industry spectrum.

Mix in Broomfield, Boulder County’s autonomous-minded neighbor with its bevy of high-profile manufacturing brands, and Colorado’s industrial character continues to tilt down U.S. 36.

Boulder County and manufacturing? Uh, yeah.

Top industries: Aerospace & Transportation; Food & Beverage; Bioscience & Medical; Consumer & Lifestyle; Cannabis & Hemp

Top Companies:


4. Arvada

It seems we’re always writing about great manufacturers from Arvada. Barber-Nichols’ high-flying fabricators are winning awards at the same time the company adds space and people to accommodate growth, to name one.

Arvada EDA and Jefferson County officials are always quick to mention manufacturing and despite the cut-and-run by Molson Coors, the area largely retains an impressive beer manufacturing footprint. Leaders in this eclectic manufacturing enclave continue to piece together a cogent, enthusiastic message that both supports current bellwether brands as it appeals to new industry players.

Top Industries: Aerospace & Electronics; Food & Beverage; Industrial & Equipment

Top Companies:


5. Colorado Springs

Leaders in Colorado’s second-largest city seem intent on building an economic brand around two industries: cybersecurity and tourism. Manufacturing is an important corollary to the defense industry here including cybersecurity, but the town has not fully rallied to tourism-related opportunities like outdoor industry manufacturing, or cannabis, which Mayor John Suthers openly undermines, despite the presence of national heavyweights like Hemp Depot and Folium Biosciences.

Yet the city’s mix of capable contract manufacturers, global OEMs in industrial/equipment and bioscience manufacturing, and an intrepid craft sector anchored by successful brewing and distilling brands, land Colorado Springs in the top five.

Top Industries: Bioscience & Medical; Industrial & Equipment; Aerospace & Electronics; Brewing & Distilling; Cannabis & Hemp

Top Companies:


Honorable Mention: Grand Junction/Palisade/Montrose

We can only hope for a united Western Slope manufacturing corridor, but too much water has flowed under the bridges that cross the Gunnison and Uncompahgre rivers. The combined assets would fuel a regional economic renaissance: industry diversity, a legacy but innovative industrial base, global brands, the latent talent and promise of a rural workforce, agriculture’s auspicious influence, and more. All framed by the allure of lifestyle and the promise of the trillion-dollar outdoor industry.

Like Denver, Grand Junction is more covetous perhaps of a tech economy than an industrial awakening after years of boom-and-bust cycles with oil and gas. Who can blame them? Montrose is more purposeful around manufacturing, with energetic economic development that’s lined up behind the outdoor industry in the form of the forward-looking Colorado Outdoors development.

We’ve ranked Grand Junction in the top five before. It’s left to business and civic leaders to thread the needle and find a way to rally around manufacturing as it matures as a high-tech outpost. And, possibly, lead a deliberate effort to align with Montrose, Steamboat Springs, and Durango to onshore the vast Asian production ecosystem that manufacturers the toys of America’s outdoor industry brands. Many are located in Colorado.

Top Industries: Energy & Environment; Industrial & Equipment; Consumer & Lifestyle; Brewing & Distilling; Food & Beverage

Top Companies:

Grand Junction/Palisade:

Montrose:

Workplace wellness is manufacturing’s imperative — and opportunity

The haphazard way we’ve managed the pandemic continues to add new wrinkles to manufacturing’s workforce challenge. The latest is the trend of parents leaving work for good to stay home with kids as schools remain shuttered. A month ago, it was only a possibility. Today, it’s a reality. Companies are losing key employees.

Whether schools would reopen wasn’t supposed to be a variable in the fall of 2020. But there’s good news ahead: Kids will go back to school. And communities will turn to science to keep the public safe. They’ll have to. “If we don’t test, we won’t have more cases,” is a ruinous path.

In fact the science seems straightforward: Test more and faster, and innovate to make places safer. Until there’s a vaccine, and even after, how we interact with each other will change.

Manufacturing’s role will be threefold: 1) Make and assemble the solutions that will help us manage social interactions in our places — tools that measure and monitor biometrics, distance, density, etc.; 2) Deploy those tools in our factories, as stores, bars, restaurants, and schools do the same; 3) Lead a workforce wellness movement that highlights the healthiest and safest locations in our community. Our maker spaces and places should lead the way. It’s a natural corollary to manufacturers’ role as essential businesses.

The outcomes for business will mean everything. Companies able to create safe spaces will do more than just keep employees healthy and happy, they’ll be at the center of a new focus on wellness that distinguishes communities and its best companies. The ubiquitous “best companies to work for” contests will take on new meaning as the stakes become higher.

The flip side is that companies that don’t take steps to ensure employee health will lose out in the long run. Innovation in workforce wellness will become as important as investments in the latest production equipment and technology. To put it another way, IoT and Industry 4.0 is today changed forever, to include the monitoring and management of human capital.

Successful companies will win the competition for employees as they change our public places. Manufacturers can lead, or lag. There’s no doubt the sector will lead. American manufacturing has a long and distinguished record of transforming a crisis to a new more productive society.

A guns-to-butter moment has again arrived.

Bart Taylor is publisher of CompanyWeek. Reach him at btaylor@companyweek.com.

2020 CMA Preview: Cannabis Manufacturer of the Year

The three finalists for 2020 Cannabis Manufacturer of the Year represent the diversity of operations in the cannabis sector, but more, the high bar being established by companies for quality and safety.

Nominations were judged on the achievement of national quality and safety certifications and best practices.

Stillwater Brands

www.stillwaterbrands.life

Commerce City

Founded: 2014

Privately owned

Employees: 19

Industry: Cannabis & Hemp

Products: Beverages and edibles infused with THC and CBD

Photos by Jonathan Castner

Stillwater Brands’ innovations extend beyond their extensive product and process testing protocols to product development, where the patented water-soluble Ripple brands of CBD and THC products have captured the imagination of cannabis consumers.

Trusted suppliers in the company’s raw material supply chain provide continuity that translates into consistent product quality for both CBD and THC lines. THC distillate is quality-control tested “before receipt” for potency, color, and aromas pursuant to highly transparent protocols.

CBD products are third-party tested for pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, potency, and microbiology. Raw materials sourcing is from U.S. providers only, with a focus on Colorado.

Finished goods manufacturing focuses on maintaining low formulation tolerances in the manufacturing process, targeting thresholds common in the food industry that ensure product consistency, quality, and safety. Shelf stability testing has been a staple of Stillwater protocols to verify dosage control.

CompanyWeek profile: https://companyweek.com/article/stillwater-brands

Medically Correct / incredibles

www.medicallycorrect.com

Denver

Founded: 2010

Employees: 101

Privately owned

Industry: Cannabis & Hemp

Products: Cannabis edibles, extractions, and equipment

Sustained success — staying power — is at the center of MedicallyCorrect’s stellar reputation in the cannabis market.

The company follows an operational path that reflects a deep food background, with emphasis on quality ingredients, refined processing, transparent packaging, and for cannabis, dosage management. The company’s consistently safe and quality-focused product line earned trust for Colorado’s industry early on, critical in the industry’s run-up.

Community involvement and industry and product education effort also distinguish the company. Medically Correct’s influence — and sales — will only increase as the company attains cGMP and other certifications. Yet there’s little doubt the company is already an elite operator.

CompanyWeek profile: https://companyweek.com/article/incredibles

Hemp Depot

www.hempdepotco.com

Colorado Springs

Founded: 2015

Privately owned

Employees: 85

Industry: Cannabis & Hemp

Products: CBD-infused products

Hemp Depot topped off impressive growth with an NSF Dietary Supplements GMP certification in 2020, increasingly the de facto standard for cannabis manufacturing operations. (View the Gold List of GMP certified manufacturers.)

Yet the company’s innovative and persuasive model also set the business apart. It’s in a catbird’s seat — touching much of the hemp CBD market, vertical integration in developing, growing, formulating, and wholesaling CBD seeds, clones, and an array of CBD oil. Many of cannabis leading brands deal in Hemp Depot products.

It adds up to a powerful position in a fast-changing hemp CBD world — a singular mission to certify and professionalize operations to feed a blue-ribbon list of brands. It’s a market position that also comes with responsibilities. The company has been up for the challenge thus far.

CompanyWeek profile: https://companyweek.com/article/hemp-depot

Colorado’s cannabis economy leads the nation. The mayor of its second-largest city pretends it doesn’t exist

If you wish hard enough, maybe it will go away.

That seems to be the approach of Colorado Springs mayor John Suthers, who argued recently to prevent voters from deciding whether recreational cannabis could be sold in the city. His “sharp criticism” of the option dissuaded the city council from approving a ballot measure this fall.

Suthers position was summed up by the Colorado Springs daily newspaper, The Gazette:

“Suthers also argued the promises made by recreational marijuana proponents when it was legalized statewide in 2012, such as reigning in the black market, have not been kept. ‘We are spending infinitely more time and effort regulating marijuana than when it was illegal,’ he said.”

It’s an obtuse statement for the ages. We’re spending more time regulating marijuana, because we’re regulating marijuana. Plus, not only have proponents kept their promises, the dark, dystopian future forecast by opponents of legalization hasn’t materialized.

Suthers shouldn’t be held to account for opposing legal marijuana. He’s been consistent in his opposition to it. That the mayor would instead relegate a billion-dollar industry to the black market is unconscionable for the leader of Colorado’s second largest city. Meanwhile, Colorado’s cannabis locomotive rolls down the track. Every month, the state’s residents demonstrate new and unwavering support for the industry’s products.

It’s a sparkling industry at that. Tomorrow we’ll announce the winner of the second Colorado Manufacturing Awards Cannabis Manufacturer of the Year. One of the finalists, Hemp Depot, is a Colorado Springs company that’s brought dozens of jobs to the city. They’re a national leader, one of a select few cannabis companies to receive an FDA-endorsed GMP certification for professional operations. They bring much needed science, transparency, and operational acumen to a legal hemp CBD market that further legitimizes the cannabis space.

Not that the mayor would know the difference between THC and CBD. For cannabis deniers, it’s all the same.

For the city, it’s more of the same. The professed need of denying citizens their vote is to protect the defense economy. Or as The Gazette surmised, “Opponents argued legalizing recreational marijuana could hurt the town’s chances of becoming the next permanent home for U.S. Space Command because the military would likely weigh the drug laws in competing communities in its decision.”

Left to generals, the U.S. military would do no such thing. Time and again, military brass sloughs off a conservative stereotype with progressive, modern leadership that reflects the makeup of their standard bearers — soldiers, sailors, airmen and women, and scientists. If the U.S. Space Command seeks a cannabis-free zone to host operations, they’ll need to look outside the U.S.

In the real world, if those in Suthers’ camp would embrace regulation and not work to undermine the industry with misleading nonsense, the black market would fade away.

Wish for it. Maybe it will come true.

Bart Taylor is publisher of CompanyWeek. Email him at btaylor@companyweek.com.

2020 CMA Preview: Innovative Product of the Year

Innovation comes in many forms, and in this inaugural Colorado Manufacturing Award for Innovative Product of the Year, companies were asked to submit products distinguished by design-centered manufacturing, with the following criteria:

  • Integration: degree to which manufacturing considerations are incorporated into the product design.
  • Advanced processes: the use of advanced manufacturing processes
  • Leading-edge visual aesthetic
  • Innovative functionality

Guerrilla Gravity

Consumer product, cycling frames

www.ridegg.com

Denver’s Guerrilla Gravity has earned a reputation both as an innovative cycling manufacturer and outstanding business, flashing important operational achievements including a $250,000 Advanced Industries grant from the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade.

Yet a tightly integrated design-to-manufacturing process is the company’s calling card. Highly configurable designs, inspired by local talent, take into account the unique challenges of frame manufacturing. The use of proprietary carbon-fiber technology, in-house molds and printed parts are among the innovations that enable manufacturing of cycle frames in Denver, tipping over an industry paradigm that for decades have sent cycling OEMs offshore.

The improved manufacturability of the final product is further reflected in leading aesthetic functional attributes of the product, like impact resistance in demanding terrain.

CompanyWeek profile: https://companyweek.com/article/guerrilla-gravity

TEI Rock Drills

Commercial product, HCC10X Control Unit

www.teirockdrills.com

The innovative HCC10X control unit was inspired by a customer request to improve safety on the job site.

The company’s successful response started with a design process driven first by meetings with relevant manufacturing departments to address design concerns and simplify the manufacturing process. Design engineers were then available to shop managers once production started, to address issues that were missed in the concept phase.

The product’s rapid development required the use of additive manufacturing to meet the tight deadlines of the project. A working prototype was operational within two weeks, bypassing a longer lead time required with traditional tool and die processes.

The control unit is also functional with multiple excavators, enabling customers to utilize the product with rented equipment, potentially saving thousands of dollars in transportation costs alone.

CompanyWeek profile: https://companyweek.com/article/tei-rock-drills

Eldon James

Commercial product, SeriesLock disconnect coupler

www.eldonjames.com

The notable medical device manufacturer has been awarded multiple patents for spring-free couplers that improve user functionality while maintaining high levels of flow with lower line pressure.

A highly integrated design-to-manufacture process is distinguished by the use of additive manufacturing to rapidly prototype products, facilitate customer feedback, and move products to final production.

The shortened product manufacturing cycle enables a robust design process that results in enhanced usability, including improvements in latch mechanisms and mating features, that have set the product line apart.

SeriesLock innovations have also enabled the company to diversify from the biomedical industry to life science, automotive, and industrial food and beverage applications.

CompanyWeek profile: https://companyweek.com/article/eldon-james

The winners of this year’s Colorado Manufacturing Awards will be announced online from 2:30 to 5 p.m. on Aug. 6, 2020. REGISTER HERE>