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Former Eastern Fine
workers asked about Cianbro plan
Friday, June 08, 2007 - Bangor Daily News
For Roy Mayhew,
who worked at the Eastern Fine Paper Co. mill in Brewer for 35 years,
talking about his former job is still difficult. And he’s not alone.
"It’s awful to get
emotional about an old place of work," Mayhew said earlier this week
from his home. At times, there would be silence on the telephone line as
he composed himself.
"Obviously, I
thought a lot about working for Eastern Fine," he said. "I worked there
a long time. I’m sad it didn’t stay a papermaking facility."
Even so, he said
he was pleased when he heard that Cianbro Corp., a Pittsfield
construction company, plans to create 500-plus well-paying jobs at the
defunct mill site. When Eastern Fine closed in January 2004, he was one
of the 240 employees displaced.
"I’m glad that
something is going in there rather than a shopping mall," Mayhew said.
"It’s sad to see the place demolished, but I’m glad to see that there
will be some job opportunities. That really means something. It’s
expensive to live up here."
Peter Vigue, CEO
and president of Cianbro Corp., announced plans last week to renovate
the former mill site into a manufacturing facility to produce steel
modules — prefabricated and pre-wired, self-standing building structures
— that will be shipped out by barge to industrial clients elsewhere, who
will then join the modules together on site.
The Cianbro
project will draw welders, electricians, pipe fitters, millwrights and
other skilled workers from all over the region to build the multisize
steel modules.
Vigue said a big
part of his plan is to tap into the underemployed people in the Bangor
and Brewer area, saying the project not only will provide those folks
with well-paying jobs, but also will be a place to educate young people
and keep them in Maine.
"We believe we
have about 10 years to be able to transfer the knowledge and skills from
the baby boomers to Generation X and Generation Y," he said. "It’s not
just about today, it’s about the next generation."
Mayhew, who is
working at a Waterville mill, has no plans to apply for a job with
Cianbro, but he expects other former Eastern Fine workers will.
Peter Coppa, who
served as president of Eastern Fine’s labor union before it disbanded in
mid-2004, said Monday he may apply to work at the Brewer facility, "even
though I don’t have the skills required." He said he’s now "working as a
summer temp" and even after three years is bitter about the closure, but
added, "It’s all water over the dam.
"I have nothing
but praise for Peter Vigue and the effort he put in trying to keep our
mill open," Coppa said. "He’s a great man. It’s a great thing for the
city of Brewer and for the state."
After the mill
closed, many of the displaced Eastern Fine workers still hoped the mill
would be reopened, Coppa has said. In addition to the 240 employees who
lost their jobs in 2004, another 125 people were laid off there in May
2003.
A mill had been
operating on the 41-acre South Brewer site since 1889, and both Mayhew
and Coppa are extremely proud of the paper they made while working for
Eastern Fine. The two former Eastern Fine workers toured the empty
industrial site Thursday. Mayhew wore a blue and gray fleece jacket
with "Eastern Paper" and the company logo embroidered on the front,
and Coppa sported an Eastern Fine company cap.
Neither had seen
the inside of the building since they were laid off three years ago.
They reacted
solemnly with words such as "sad," "wow" and "amazing" and took deep
breaths that left their lungs slowly when seeing the ransacked interior.
When reaching the vacant spot that once held the No. 1 paper machine,
both stopped in their tracks.
"It’s not easy to
come in and look at this facility," Mayhew said, standing inside the
barren finishing area of the mill. "When you look down through here you
see the machines and the people working on the machines. It was full of
people — full of life.
"I can still see
’em," he said in a thick Maine accent.
The two former
millworkers had to use flashlights to see in many spots within the
mostly brick building, while holes in the roof and dingy windows
provided some light. They walked past peeling paint, over discarded
pieces of equipment, through puddles of dirty water and still were
amazed by the emptiness at every corner.
"They just went in
and took what they wanted and left the rest," Coppa said. Being in the
building "just brings back a lot of memories, and it’s kind of sad,
really."
During the tour,
Mayhew found his old electrician’s locker that still bears a green
sticker with his name and nickname, "No. 1 Brain," still affixed, and
Coppa surveyed where he once worked finishing the mill’s fine paper.
About halfway through the tour of the 336,000-square-foot site, the two
began telling stories of the old days with smiles on their faces. It
appears the camaraderie remains, even though the company is gone and the
facility is empty.
It’s this
brotherhood and fellowship they miss the most.
They also
commented on how upset they are about how the mill closed. They and
other millworkers, including Newburgh resident Scott Reglin, a 20-year
Eastern Fine veteran who is disabled from a fall at the mill, are still
resentful about the mill’s demise. Reglin described the closure as a
"roller-coaster ride" during a Monday phone interview.
However, he added
that he worked for Cianbro for two years, and "if something is going to
happen in the manufacturing line, I’m glad to see it’s a Maine-based
company."
Because of his
disability, Reglin said he would not be able to apply for a Brewer job.
Candy Guerette,
Bangor Region Chamber of Commerce president, called Cianbro’s plans "an
innovative sort of state-of-the-art use of that facility, working with
the assets that that facility offers — the river, the railroad, the work
force."
"Cianbro has been
a company that has always cared deeply about the Maine economy, and you
see that in how they treat their employees and with the quality of the
work that they do," Guerette said. "It’s wonderful to have a company
like that take over."
For people who
"want a career," there are positions available at Cianbro and access to
educational opportunities, Vigue said.
"We’re actually,
on an ongoing basis, hiring people and have been all year," he said.
The old mill
buildings will begin coming down in November 2007, and the company is
planning to start producing the modules on April 1, 2008, Vigue said.
For Mayhew and
other longtime millworkers, there still is a sense of loss from the
closure of Eastern Fine three years ago.
"I’ve been in
there more than I was at home," Mayhew said. "It’s kind of like your
second family after all that time."
Mayhew, a
60-year-old electrician, started at Eastern Fine as a young man in 1969.
After the mill closed in 2004, he was employed as a summertime
part-timer at the International Paper mill in Bucksport before taking a
job at Huhtamaki Food Service Inc. in Waterville in September of that
year, a job he still holds.
"I’m one of the
lucky ones," he said. "Most of them [his former co-workers], but not
all, have had to settle for something with quite a bit less pay.
"I would say
anyone who has a mediocre-paying job is going to apply" for a Cianbro
job in Brewer, Mayhew said.
A copyright story from the
Bangor Daily News, Friday, June 8, 2007, BDN
writer Aimee Dolloff contributed to this report. |