Since the start of the pandemic, the company installed a medical-grade air filtration system, cleaning stations for the start of every shift, staggered shifts, automated scanners for temperature checks, 3-D prints masks and what it calls its âCOVID clawâ for touchless contact to open doors. It has also added outdoor employee break areas and spread out plant work stations.
Pre-pandemic, the company would have 10 to 20 open positions at any given time, but now it has 58 openings, most of which are in the companyâs plant. Some are office positions.
âOne of the really cool things is we do a lot of innovation. You can see a lot of automation here,â Schmahl said. âEveryone here can really upskill themselves and learn something.â
Bilsteinâs opening minimum wage is $15 an hour for first-shift jobs and $15.75 for second- and third-shift jobs.
The stateâs seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in October was 5.2 percent, the lowest since the onset of the pandemic in March, when the unemployment rate was at 5.6 percent.
The company has manufactured masks and the âCOVID clawâ for employees, said Stephanie Flannery, Bilstein Hamiltonâs Occupational Safety and Health manager
âOur employees are obviously our priority so itâs important that we keep them healthy and safe,â she said.
She company also credits plant nurse Teri Baker with having âsingle-handedly kept our plant openâ by communicating the latest health guidelines and protocols with employees and being available 24 hours a day, Flannery said.
âWeâre just focused on making sure we can still run the business and keep everybody safe, healthy and employed,â Flannery said.
Baker said guidelines and protocols can change frequently because of new information or a better understanding about the virus, so educating employees regularly is important.
âThe education has to continue because itâs changing rapidly all the time on so many levels, whether itâs symptoms, if youâre in contact (with someone COVID-19-positive) or how much time youâre in contact,â Baker said.
Schmahl said in Bilsteinâs success, whether itâs keeping employees healthy or continual work on innovative technology, âit starts with employee engagement.â
Bilstein Hamilton spokeswoman Sarah King said the companyâs culture âis hard to find in most manufacturer environments,â but theyâve âseemed to have mastered it.â
âItâs really neat to see our product getting out there. You get to see it on the vehicles at the end and we try to feel that excitement that what we do is meaningful work and itâs also enjoyable,â she said.
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