Sun Journal article 2/1/2010
Nezinscot providing jobs without
state money
By Bonnie Washuk,
Staff Writer
Feb 01, 2010 12:01 am
Russ
Dillingham/Sun Journal Russell Souther of Livermore Falls, repackages test kits
for IDEXX Corporation at Nezinscot Guild in Turner. Souther has been working
there for 18 years and loves every day that he comes to work.
-
Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal
Sign in Nezinscot Guild break room says it has
paid over $1.75 million in wages to workers with developmental disabilities
over 30 years.
For
more, go to www.thenezinscotguild.com
TURNER
— On a recent weekday a dozen workers were busy inside the packaging room of
the Nezinscot Guild. Rock 'n' roll music played on the radio while employees
counted and packed test vials for IDEXX Laboratories.
"I
like working here, I enjoy working here," said Rene Tassinari of Lewiston,
who is developmentally disabled. Having a job is much better than not, he said.
"Some
days I don't feel like getting out of bed, but this gets me out of the
house," he said, adding it provides some needed space between him and his
mother. At other places he's worked, "I had to have a job coach,"
Tassinari said. "Here I don't need one. I like it."
In
the woodwork room, boxes were being assembled. One worker named George, also
developmentally disabled, assembled wooden boxes using glue and a staple gun
while Executive Director Dan O'Shea looked on.
Building
boxes calls for good coordination. O'Shea said he's been surprised at who can
achieve what. "You can never predict who's going to be good at something.
We give everybody a shot at every job."
Nezinscot
Guild is a small business that does three things:
•
It manufacturers wooden crate boxes used in food gift packages for companies in
Maine and across the country, including Bert's Bees, Ray's Mustard, Dean and
Deluca.
•
It provides packaging and assembly services. IDEXX is one of its biggest
clients, as is J.S. McCarthy printing company in Augusta.
•
It provides jobs for people with developmental disabilities, people who might
not otherwise be employed.
Nezinscot
employs 20 people with disabilities plus others without. The number depends on
the need. In the fall its payroll rose to 45.
Nezinscot
has its roots in the closing of Pineland in New Gloucester in the mid-1970s.
"The state was sued for not providing community integration and activity
for people out of Pineland," O'Shea said. The state was mandated to go
into communities and ask people to create activities.
"We
started in Turner Village and immediately took on a work focus, something that
was really lacking," O'Shea said. "We took on a small business model,
and have been developing that for the last 31 years."
When
Nezinscot first started, 100 percent of its funding came from state dollars.
"Originally we were hoping for 50 percent self-sufficiency, to have our
business cover 50 percent of the operation. We saw the need to generate our own
money to grow."
They've
achieved that, and more.
In
2006-07 they received $176,000 a year from the state, which was 30 percent of
their budget. Then their state funding was cut from $176,000 to $140,000.
As
the tough economy continued to slow tax money, Nezinscot lost more state money,
from $140,000 to $50,000. In July it lost the remaining $50,000 of state money.
"We're
now zero," O'Shea said. "It's difficult to rebound from that, but
since the early days, our goal has been self sufficiency, so we had a lot of
things in place geared toward increasing our business presence."
Their
mainstay is the wooden boxes used for gift box sets which enhances the
presentation of jams and jellies, mustard and other high-end food. "There
continues to be that demand," O'Shea said.
The
slumping economy did slow sales, but the company still produced 20,000 boxes
from July through December.
"We
have a niche. We're nationally known," O'Shea said.
And
the company is working on developing new wholesale products. Their best is the
Maine Lobster Kit, lobster eating tools, lobster crackers and picks, in a
decorative wooden box. It's small enough to fit into drawers, neatly storing
lobster tools until the next feed.
"It's
a very hot item," O'Shea said. "We've sold hundreds of these since we
put them out. We started marketing them last spring." They've had some
help from companies. "Downeast magazine gave us free advertising. Supreme
Lobster in Lewiston put our link on their Web page to help us out. They're
responsible for a lot of our sales."
The
business has an immediate goal of finding more customers and building more
contributions from individuals and organizations "because we're on our own,"
O'Shea said. "Developing the lobster kit was a deliberate effort to
replace lost state dollars," O'Shea said. "We had to come up with an
answer."