Southern Indiana Business July-August 2020 | Page 11

amounted to price-gouging in order to get the equipment, it wasn’t an option. “I spent more money on masks in one day than we would typically spend in three years,” he said “But we did that because we knew we would have to have them, and we knew our employees would be squeamish about coming back.” Team member safety was top on the minds of the leaders at Cimtech Manufacturing in New Albany, too. President and CEO Jesika Young said that while they were fortunate to have a floor plan that’s already spaced out thanks to the large machinery, the company still put additional measures into place that included eliminating the second shift, reducing the work week to four days so that they could implement sanitization procedures, and eliminating on-site visits. They also got creative in caring for their delivery drivers. Shipping and receiving, she said, used to be a fully inclusive experience where delivery drivers were treated like extended members of the manufacturing team, even being included in celebrations and afternoon treats. Now they’re still beloved, she said, but they have to phone when they arrive and aren’t allowed past a certain point. And if the team members are sharing sweets in honor of someone’s birthday? “We bring it out to them instead of them coming in,” she said. A shift in what’s important Wendy Dant Chesser, president and CEO of One Southern Indiana, a local economic development organization, said this is the first time that the government’s actions to protect public health created economic contraction that forced people to choose between their health and the economy. “As a nation we were illprepared to have that conversation,” she said. “This was so different than anything we’ve ever had to face.” As businesses continue to push toward normal capacity, she said issues like how to maintain social distancing, especially where people work as a team or in close quarters, are quickly becoming the new normal. Businesses are also struggling to understand their liability if, for example, they hold an event that leads to a COVID- 19 outbreak. For companies that have gone fully remote, Dant Chesser said, worries include how the office looks when people start coming back and run the gamut from setting break-room rules to finding enough plexiglass shields and understanding who’s responsible for sanitization. Team member Byron Jackson remains socially distant during an inspection by Stephan Schmidt at Cimtech Inc. in New Albany. Photo by Joe Ullrich July / August 2020 11