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Peter G. Vigue Thinks Globally But Builds Locally
Major modular work helps Maine retain good-paying, skilled jobs
Visionary
Peter G. Vigue, chairman of employee-owned Cianbro Corp. is creating a
new economic paradigm for areas that are losing their traditional
industries. The 60-year-old Maine Maritime Academy graduate is
transforming the long-time heavy-civil Pittsfield, Maine-based
contractor into a regional manufacturing and economic development
powerhouse by investing in shipbuilding, oilrig and modular industrial
process-plant construction. For him, the key is to keep ownership and
employment local.
Vigue’s vision brings needed industrial projects to Maine. One is a
54-module deal with Motiva Enterprises, which is expanding its Port
Arthur, Texas, oil refinery. The $7-billion project will make the
refinery the largest in the U.S. That job alone will provide work for
over 500 Maine tradesmen. This modular approach will help stem Maine’s
loss of skilled labor due to pulp and paper mill closings. “We want to
export our knowledge and skills and bring the work back to Maine,” says
Vigue.
Vigue has long been concerned with preserving and creating
good-paying jobs that bring workers dignity and benefits. He started as
a Cianbro laborer in 1970 and became company president in 1991. Several
years ago, rather than shift rising health-care costs to employees,
Vigue started a proactive wellness program to cut costs by reducing
risky behavior such as smoking and overeating that lead to chronic
diseases such as diabetes and heart and lung problems. He also started a
nationally recognized safety program.
Central
to the modular manufacturing is the firm’s redevelopment of the 41-acre
former Eastern Fine Paper mill site in Brewer, which includes a new
barge pier and dredged channel to the Penobscot River. Project owners
increasingly favor modules because they help ensure schedule and
quality.
The site was slated for development as a retail/condo complex but a
partnership between Cianbro and the city capitalizes on surging global
industrial needs. “Much of Brewer’s identity has been associated with
the paper industry,” says Stephen Bost, Brewer city manager. “Once the
mill closed three years ago, hundreds of skilled workers were displaced.
The Cianbro deal injects new economic vitality into our community and
region by providing meaningful job opportunities for skilled workers and
for a new generation of trainees.”
Vigue also is planning a privately funded $1-billion 220-mile
east-west toll road in Maine to link three Canadian container ports and
major provincial highways to Interstates and the U.S. market. The road
also includes two intermodal facilities in north central Maine,
providing needed rail and river links. Vigue’s road “has huge
implications,” says a Maine DOT deputy commissioner.
A copyright story
from the ENR.com Engineering News-Record by William J. Angelo
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