I had heard from friends that they were tearing down the old AC Spark Plug facility, affectionately known as “The Highway.”  It had been over eight years since I’d even driven past the place.  Then one day while in Michigan my oldest son and I were on an errand and happened to drive right down Dort Highway past the demolition.  I stopped the car, got out my phone, and began taking pictures and videos.

042
There is something sad about a plant closing anyway, like the end of an era.  But this particular plant held massive significance for me.  My grandfather worked in that building for thirty-three years.  During World War II, he tested machine gun munitions in the basement.  When I hired in there in 1985 some of the windows were still painted black as protection against bombers from the war.  Papa Floyd lived two more years, long enough to see me begin a career at “The A.C.,” and he was proud.  It’s also where I met future business partner, friend, and co-author Orrin Woodward, when we were both young, snot-nosed engineering co-op students.  There were lots of other great people there too, and my mind is literally filled with memories.  My professional education as an engineer took place in that building, as well.  I love cars, my first word was “car,” and I have a soft-spot in my heart for the auto industry to this day.  Looking  back, I guess I came of age in that facility; learning how to supervise production crews, run maintenance groups, and yes, eventually, do some engineering.

I understand job shifting, I think.  I have read all about the “flattening of the world” theory and how lower level manufacturing has moved off-shore and those jobs have been replaced by high-tech industry and services.  I understand emerging third-world labor and the imbalances in exchange rates (don’t get me started on the Federal Reserve and why this is so!).  I lived and studied in Japan for a brief period to understand how East Asia had emerged as a world manufacturing leader.  I also know change is inevitable.  And I understand the laws of competition and market forces (at least better than the Keynsian economists in our government.  For more on this, read Orrin Woodward’s posting today about the Austrian school of economics).  I was also directly involved with the struggle between the powerful union and the bureaucractic leadership.

Still, it was painful to watch the dismantling of so many memories.  Flint, Michigan, the home of the founding of General Motors Corporation and one of the Industrial Age’s largely unsung heroes, “Billy” Durant, is possibly a picture of bigger things.  And these things are more serious, comlex, and less born of conspiracy than was suggested by Flint’s most embarrassing offspring, Michael Moore.  Flint can represent what’s left over when one fails to compete.  It can represent what happens when a population doesn’t change with the times.  It can represent what occurs when entitlement sets into a culture.  It can represent the last dying embers of an older way of life.  It can represent those left behind in the dynamics of world politics and competition.  It can represent a changing of the guard.  It can represent the end of an era.

Somewhere, somebody is manufacturing spark plugs, fuel filters, fuel level senders, instrument clusters, circuit boards, and fuel pumps.  But they aren’t doing it in Flint, Michigan, anymore. Hopefully, the replacement industries and jobs will be finding their way into people’s lives soon.  I know some good people in Genesee county who would be willing to give it another try.  Perhaps that’s why General Motors decided to award the new engine plant for the new Chevy “Volt” to Flint.

As I filmed the last portions of the main office being dragged down into rubble, I realized that the very section of the building I was watching come down was the exact spot where I had sat for my original interview so many years before.  From youthful hope to dissimilation.  The windows we had painted black to hide America’s industrial might from the enemy, we eventually tore down ourselves.  

As I drove away that day I noticed two things peculiar, two final salutes to the waste and attitude that had played their part in the demise: the lawn’s sprinkler system was still running, and the barbed wire fences (leaning inward!) were still standing.  044
           
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4 responses to “Change”

  1. TLA Avatar
    TLA

    It is sad to drive by the site you reference or “The Hole” over on Chevrolet. So much history … The sprinkler system & fence? Probably waiting on a pipefitter and a tinsmith to take care of them.
    My brother-in-law told me about a news video on a Ford plant in Brazil — where they have room to be innovative, away from the unions and hyper-environmentalists. Very interesting…not surprising.
    http://info.detnews.com/video/index.cfm?id=1189

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  2. Cathy Avatar
    Cathy

    Chris,
    I am sorry you had to see such a significant part of your and your family’s history be destroyed. That is so very sad.
    How right you are about the effects of the slow and subtle changes that have taken place over the past 50 or so years on our culture. It’s sad, scary and exciting, all at the same time.
    I am currently reading (as my enjoyment book, apart from my daily 15 or more minutes) a book by journalist David Brinkley called “Brinkley Beat — People, Places and Events That Shaped My Time.” In the book, he profiles different people he interacted with or got to interview who were significant in some way during his long career.
    Your post reminded me of one of Brinkley’s character studies I read yesterday, about fellow journalist May Craig. A change agent herself, she was a woman journalist beginning before the Great Depression, in the days before that term existed. Yet, before she retired, she mourned the excesses of the feminist movement and the effects she saw it was having and likely would have (and in fact now does have) on American family life.
    Change can be good. There have been changes to our society that have been great, and much needed. Yet, when I read your words, I see you share my own concern that our society, in its headlong rush for change, is so busy throwing out the bathwater, they are far too often tossing the babies with it.

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  3. Phyllis Hoff Avatar
    Phyllis Hoff

    Chris:
    I am sure that was difficult for you to watch, but just remember, God had a greater plan for you, and as you say on your CD’s, that part of your life brought you to today. That was the beginning of your journey.
    God Bless.

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  4. Brent Campau Avatar
    Brent Campau

    The hardest thing is to help people understand they need to let go and move on. The fact that people hold on to something that is gone is unsettling. We’ve all done this at one point in our lives. We’ve been grasping at a memory, which surely leads to a hopeless paralysis. To know that many out there feel that way is not pleasant.
    It’s easy for me to say let go and move on since I’m not directly impacted by this change. I just hope that when I meet someone who is directly affected by this, that I have enough guts to convey a message of hope.

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