Schooler Cuts Down The Net
EDITOR’S NOTE: Timber Processing magazine presented its 34th Annual Person of the Year award to Eric Schooler, CEO of Collins, as he prepared to embark on his new career of “retirement.” The presentation ceremony and reception, which was hosted by Hatton-Brown Publishers, Inc. and sponsored by Real Performance Machinery, occurred during the Timber Processing & Energy Expo at the Portland Expo Center in Portland, Ore., and at the Hatton-Brown Media Presentation Center in the middle of the show floor. Timber Processing magazine Editor-in-Chief Rich Donnell delivered opening remarks on the history and evolvement of the award, and Senior Editor Dan Shell spoke about Schooler’s career before presenting the award to Schooler, who received a standing ovation from a packed crowd. Here is Schooler’s acceptance speech:
Thank you to Timber Processing magazine for this special honor as my career winds down. I feel like an ex-ball boy or bat boy that has just joined the big leagues.
I have been coming to the Portland sawmill machinery show my whole career. I haven’t missed many. And I have a full collection of Timber Processing magazines at home.
Longevity goes a long way: In my case 50 GREAT years in this industry—although, there were a few recession years that challenged the heart.
It is truly an enormous honor to represent our industry. Our public reputation has gone up and down. We have been attacked over the years by many, but with the need for housing, climate change, carbon, those same people now recognize this industry as part of the solution!
A lot has changed in my 50 years in the timber industry. Yes, I look older, sometimes I feel older, hair gray, and less of it, etc. Forests are replanted, trees grow faster and straighter and our mills get a lot more lumber or plywood, or EWP out of every tree. Actually, EWP didn’t exist 50 years ago.
1972, my start, at a big high production sawmill, there was not a single computer, no PLCs, no VFDs. Sales orders were typed in triplicate and sent to the mill. That mill had J-Bar sorter #2! It didn’t work well. The rest of the world still had green chains.
My timing was lucky. Crude electronics were showing up. Nobody understood or believed in them. Computers were slow, bulky, expensive, unreliable. The guys on the floor didn’t understand or believe in them.
It was the start of the automation. As a supervisor you worked and maneuvered only as well and as fast as your crew. Technology was moving fast, faster than our industry for sure. There certainly were lots of false steps in the automation evolution. Shadow scanning (edger), feely finger scanners (trimmer), mechanical relays, cart sorters, arc sawing, and on and on: Most worked but were impractical or they were soon outdated by newer technology and ideas.
Now, five decades later we feed values and parameters into computers and they scan, process and operate almost every machine, every decision in the mill. Operators now basically oversee and watch for flow interruptions. The result is more output, fewer line workers, better grade, better working conditions, and maybe most important, more recovery from every log. We learned to rely on those who develop and maintain the computers, scanners, PLCs and automation.
I have had the great fortune to work for incredible people and companies. In my early years I was exposed to supervision in literally all areas of sawmilling, log yard to shipping and on all of the shifts. There is a big picture.
My last 35 years have been a dream. Starting at Hampton Lumber when it was a one mill company, led by John Hampton. And my last 20 years leading the Collins Companies for the amazing Collins Family. Privately held, family businesses are special. I have worked with really great people throughout these two companies. Their respective mottos— “Find a Better Way Every Day” and “Do the Right Thing”—say a lot. I was part of something special.
It has been a fascinating time to work in this business. Every day is the same, and by that I mean always changing. It has been an era of applied technology and always, continual improvement.
As I wind down my career, I will miss the brainstorming, the creative solutions, the teamwork. And I will miss all the many fascinating characters…absolutely wonderful people…and the incredible comradery within this industry.
To you young folks starting out: Work hard, volunteer for everything, ask questions, and at the same time question the answers.
Make responsible choices. Manage time and energy. Nurture relationships and be good stewards to our forests and operations.
I can only imagine what technology and opportunity will bring this industry in your 50 years.
I appreciate this award, a kind acknowledgement for a long career. I wish I could do it all over again.
Again, thank you.
Latest News
Flush With Lumber, N.A. Hardwood Buyers Slow Purchases
North American hardwood sawmills reported slow sales during the first half of March. “Normally we see business improve from the second week of January through May,” said one contact. “This year, we are quoting and not selling.” One buyer for a large flooring...
Georgia-Pacific Concludes Deal For Alabama Lumber Facility
Georgia-Pacific today announced it has concluded an agreement with RoyOMartin for the transfer of RoyOMartin's Mexia, Alabama, Rocky Creek lumber operations to Georgia-Pacific. The Rocky Creek lumber facility employs approximately 110 employees. Terms of the agreement...
West Coast Log And Lumber Exports Decreased In 2014
Log and lumber exports from Washington, Oregon, northern California, and Alaska both decreased in volume in 2014 compared to 2013, the U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest Research Station reported today. Exports of west coast logs decreased 13 percent to a total...
Lumber Producers Brace For End Of Long Truce In U.S.-Canada Lumber Wars
Canada’s lumber producers should be a happy lot. The U.S. housing market is coming back, exports are rising and the Canadian dollar is cheap. But the industry has a wary eye on its own version of the doomsday clock – the countdown to the Oct. 12 expiry of a long truce...
New Montana Sawmill Bucks Logging Industry Trends
New Montana Sawmill Bucks Logging Industry TrendsBill Fenner has cut timber along the Rocky Mountain Front for decades, but the logging industry in the 21st century isn't what it was 30 years ago. Tightening regulations, slimmer profit margins and diminished access to...
Odd Winter Means Wood, Lumber Is Piling Up In Oregon
With the deep freeze that has inundated the eastern half of the United States contributing to the drop, prices for logs and lumber processed on the West Coast have dipped over the last couple of months. Sales are down and wood inventories are up. The market today is...
Minnesota Office Building Made Of Wood Would Be A U.S. First
Last November, the Hines development company unveiled plans for a new office building in the North Loop section of Minneapolis. Seems like ordinary news, except that the building would be the first of its kind in the U.S to be made primarily of wood. The builders...
Getting A Handle On Hardwood Checkoff
Getting A Handle On Hardwood CheckoffArticle by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing March 2015 We didn’t intend to include an article on the hardwood checkoff situation in this issue. But beginning on page 10, there it is. As much as our articles are...
Find Us On Social
Newsletter
The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.
Subscribe/Renew
Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.
Advertise
Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.