Work/Family Balance Program Earns Cascade Engineering Ron
Brown Award
CEO Fred Keller Receives Honor From Vice President Gore At
White House
GRAND
RAPIDS, Michigan - Vice President Al Gore today presented
Cascade Engineering CEO Fred Keller with the 1998 Ron Brown
Award for Corporate Citizenship. The Grand Rapids-based
manufacturer is one of four companies nationally to win the
award this year, along with Anheuser-Busch Companies Inc.,
BankBoston Corp. and Seafirst Bank.
Cascade was honored for its ability to help employees
balance the often conflicting demands of work and family at
various stages of their lives. Cascade Engineering has
formalized this approach in a program called P.H.A.S.E.S
(Providing Health, Activities, Safety, Enrichment Services).
The program offers employees a variety of personal
development programs, and helps them become more responsible
for their communities.
"The P.H.A.S.E.S program is really a result of our corporate
culture," Keller said. "The people who work here are, first
and foremost, people who have needs and ambitions. I believe
fundamentally in the concept of building trust throughout
the organization as a foundation. It is essential that
people are as free as possible of the hassles of daily life.
Toward that end, we have developed over the years many
initiatives to help employees balance work and family.
P.H.A.S.E.S. formalizes the initiatives into a program with
that very objective."
The Ron Brown Award for Corporate Leadership is the first
Presidential award to honor companies for the exemplary
quality of their relationships with employees and
communities. The annual award is presented to companies that
have demonstrated a deep commitment to innovative
initiatives that not only empower employees and communities
but also advance strategic business interests.
"As a privately held company we have the privilege of
thinking longer-term than most public companies, and we
often talk among ourselves about why we are in business. We
talk about achieving worthy goals, about as much as we
discuss return on investment. It is a very worthy goal to
make Cascade a company where people want to contribute,
where they feel their contributions are appreciated, where
they can spread their wings and really do that which they
have a yearning in their heart to do," Keller said. "The
P.H.A.S.E.S. program is designed to provide that kind of
opportunity."
Cascade Engineering is a leading injection molder of systems
and components for the automotive, furniture and container
industries. The company has an unswerving determination to
achieve worthy goals. The Cascade Engineering Family of
Companies, which employs more than 1,100 people, reported
1999 revenues of $185 million.
The Ron Brown Award is the latest for Cascade in a series of
honors. In 1997, Cascade was presented with Chrysler
Corporation's Role Model for Technology Award, which had
previously gone to multibillion-dollar international
companies Robert Bosch and Nippondenso. In 1998, Cascade was
named Manufacturer of the Year for the state of Michigan.
"During our 25 year history we have been working at
developing principles that make a difference in the lives of
our employees and in the community,” Keller said. “This
honor not only validates those efforts, but also
demonstrates that mid-size companies can provide effective
leadership in the pursuit of worthy goals for not only their
own business and the business community, but also for their
local communities.
“Manufacturers have been under tremendous pressure to
improve quality while reducing costs. This has been a
significant contributor to the improved economy of late. We
have had to learn how to solve complex problems while
continuing to grow. We have learned a great deal in
manufacturing about how to solve business problems. Now is
the time for leading companies to help the people of our
communities benefit from those lessons in order to truly
impact people's lives for the better.”
One local application of this philosophy has been The Delta
Strategy, in which community leaders are using
problem-solving principles learned in manufacturing to
address community needs in Kent County. Keller serves as a
member of the Delta Strategy advisory council. The Delta
Strategy emerged from a multi-year leadership dialogue led
by Keller.
Keller and Cascade Engineering are no strangers to Executive
Office accolades. In 1997, Cascade Engineering was honored
by Vice President Gore for its leadership programs promoting
awareness and treatment of domestic violence. In 1989,
President George Bush named daughter Lorissa Keller the
168th Point of Light for her work in starting a volunteer
program at her high school.
<
BACK
|