IMI – Members and Masonry First
February - March 2005
As a BAC member, have you ever asked, “What
does IMI do for me?” The short answer is “a
lot!” But it’s an important question, and
one that deserves a thoughtful and thorough response
because your contributions have helped make IMI a driving
force in today’s unionized masonry industry.
The following article is the first in a series that
will help connect the dots between IMI’s programs
and services and you – the BAC member. In these
articles, you will learn how IMI develops and delivers
its programs at each level: national, regional and
local. We’ll begin with the national.
BAC Locals vary both in size and in types of services
they provide to members. But what they all have in
common is IMI, which offers services that would be
out of reach for any one Local. IMI offers apprenticeship
and training, market development, and technical services
throughout the Union. These services not only show
the union masonry advantage to builders, owners and
designers, but more important, they translate into
more work for BAC members.
One national effort that pays local dividends in the
form of jobs is IMI’s national Project Tracking
system. Using Dodge reports, IMI identifies major construction
projects in their earliest stages and makes contact
with the key players – the owners, architects
and construction managers – to convince them
to use masonry materials installed by BAC members.
Local IMI representatives then follow up by offering
valuable IMI services, like technical support and custom
training, which make masonry materials a more attractive
choice for the project.
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| IMI tested SEALTECH block
at the National Training Center to ensure quality
construction by IMI-certified BAC installers. |
For example, in Massachusetts, when Dodge Reports
turned up an office building project slated to be 100
percent metal panel, IMI immediately contacted the
architects, and showed them they could get a union
masonry building at a competitive price. As a result,
the job, now going out to bid, has been turned around
to roughly 40 percent masonry, and the work is expected
to be done by members of BAC Local 3 Massachusetts.
Local 3 President Charles Raso says that while IMI
can’t always guarantee a “knockout punch” like
this, there are definitely long term benefits of such
IMI efforts. “With marketing, like organizing,
progress comes slow at times, but you’ve got
to play. I think the culmin-ation of programs that
IMI puts together has a positive effect on the stability
and growth of the masonry industry. In the face of
the vast array of substitute materials we compete with
on a daily basis, it is amazing that masonry products
have remained so viable and cost effective. IMI has
been the catalyst in this regard. Without a strong,
well-funded IMI, the union masonry industry is not
going to grow and prosper.”
Two Indiana hospital projects originally planned for
drywall and stud construction switched to CMU when
IMI met with the architects in the pre-planning phase
and presented compelling information on mold prevention
and life cycle costs. As a result, the year-long tandem
projects, Clarion North and Clarion West, brought 139,940
work hours for Local 4 Indiana/Kentucky members. “IMI
has done so much for us,” says Steve Crafton,
the Local 4 Field Representative for Indianapolis,
who also appreciates IMI training resources. “They
are the biggest help we have.” The Dodge project
tracking information also helps BAC Locals identify
jobs for organizing.
Similarly, IMI’s Major Accounts program works
with large corporations such as Target to provide useful
services and information that make masonry an attractive
choice for their projects, wherever they are built.
The program recognizes that the top five percent of
construction owners and developers account for the
lion’s share of the construction market, and
targets resources strategically at that level. Marsh
Supermarkets and Wegmans are just two examples where
this approach has translated into increased work opportunities.
For Marsh Supermarkets, Inc., a leading regional food
retailer in Indiana and Ohio, BAC signed up the contractor
on two mega stores when IMI impressed the owners with
IMI certification programs, particularly in Autoclaved
Aerated Concrete (AAC). “That was definitely
a big plus,” says Local 4 IN/KY President Ted
Champ. “The effort resulted in more than 1,000
work hours for BAC members in the Pendleton and Indianapolis
chapters. And, because Marsh is using the new stores
as trial runs for incorporating AAC construction into
their building program, it should give a big boost
to AAC, installed by BAC members. We were able to pool
our resources, and it worked out great.”
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| IMI and BAC joined forces
with Mapei to develop and field test a new terrazzo
product, Terratop™. BAC Local 7 NY/NJ members,
pictured above, installing a 5,000-square-foot
floor. |
In New York state, an IMI design seminar presented
for Wegmans, a major regional supermarket chain, left
their national design staff impressed with BAC training
and IMI technical support, and whetted their appetite
for AAC and Terratop™, both of which are certified
only when installed by BAC members. IMI and Local 3
New York, whose three training facilities (Buffalo,
Niagara Falls, and Rochester) are certified in Terratop™,
are demonstrating the product for area contractors
and architects. According to Local 3 President Dan
Rose, “Our three percent IMI contribution has
paid off for our members in terms of improved training
and expanded work opportunities over the years, and
with innovative materials like Terratop™, even
more jobs are being created.”
“IMI has been a great investment on the training
and marketing end and helped to get us into Wegmans,” says
Local 3 Apprentice Coordinator Dan Palazzo, who participated
in the Wegmans presentation. Palazzo adds that it would
be a particularly sweet victory, since Wegmans used
to build union in the area years ago, until relations
broke down. Now, he says, “I am really optimistic
that we can get new work, especially as Wegmans broadens
their geographic base” into the mid-Atlantic
region.
An arsenal of tools helps IMI sell BAC masonry. Products
like life-cycle cost studies, project case studies,
targeted advertising, and technical materials help
to persuade owners and designers that masonry materials
installed by BAC members offer the clear advantage
for quality, schedule and budget control.
With new products and installation methods always
on the horizon, how do BAC Locals keep up with everything?
The answer is IMI, where training experts keep up on
market trends and get ahead of the curve with specialized
training programs.
A key variable with any new product is proper installation.
In recent years, IMI has joined forces with manufacturers
of new products to provide craftworker training and
certification programs, plus marketing and technical
assistance, with promising new products like water-resistant
SEALTECH block and Terratop™, a new terrazzo
product. In return, the requirement for IMI certified
installers ensures new work opportunities for BAC members
and contractors.
For products already on the market, like AAC block
and coatings, and JAHN stone and terra cotta restoration
materials, IMI works with specifiers and builders to “think
BAC.” A key selling point is the certified training
available only to BAC members.The demand for craftworkers
certified in specific products and techniques is a
clear trend in today’s specifications. The IMI
catalog of certification programs ranges from grouting
and reinforced masonry to foremen/supervisors and even
contractors.
Resources at the BAC/IMI National Training Center
also allow IMI to meet custom BAC needs, like refractory
or OSHA training, quickly and cost-efficiently.
BAC and IMI training has always had a sterling reputation
for quality. What keeps that reputation polished is
IMI’s Instructor Certification Program (ICP).
See map below. This annual event brings together BAC
and IMI instructors from all regions to learn the latest
industry practices and products, and to brush up their
teaching skills. In 2004, 165 instructors representing
51 Locals attended.
When New York State evaluated Local 2 DE/NJ instructor
Bart McClellan, he received an “A+.” That,
he says, “would have been impossible without
the knowledge I received from ICP.” Local 67
IL instructor Gary Pawlowski couldn’t agree more. “This
entire experience has made me a better instructor,” he
says.
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