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Hardcover Details
  • 03/2021
  • 978-1-953943-00-2 1953943004
  • 302 pages
  • $29.95
Karl Weber
Editor (anthology), Service Provider
One Day Stronger: How One Union Local Saved a Mill and Changed an Industry--and What It Means for American Manufacturing

Adult; Memoir; (Market)

In August, 2017, the death knell sounded for yet another troubled American manufacturer: Appleton Coated, a historic paper mill in Wisconsin’s Fox River Valley. The mill and its parts were set to be sold for scrap, devastating a community. But then the unlikely happened. Dedicated union workers teamed with a lone local official to leverage an obscure legal strategy proposed by a community-minded attorney to stop the sale, enable a profitable new business plan, and save hundreds of jobs. In a world where corporate greed and financial engineering have crushed the dreams of countless Americans, the inspiring story of Appleton Coated offers a road map for fighting back—and winning.
Reviews
Former Wisconsin State Assemblyman and Outagamie County Executive Nelson delivers a captivating and comprehensive account detailing the plight of American manufacturing company Appleton Coated, a historic paper mill in Wisconsin’s Fox Valley region. Nelson critically examines the circumstances surrounding the sale of Appleton Coated to Industrial Assets Corporation, an industrial scrap dealer, in 2017 and the resulting battle that pitted mill workers and labor unions against large corporations and state politicians.

In the first third of the book, Nelson delves into the political events and corporate policies that caused the 127-year-old paper mill to be put on the auction block. A native of the Fox Valley region, Nelson has unique insight into the town of Combined Locks and the importance of the paper industry to the local economy. In the second part, Nelson skillfully takes readers through the rich 150-year history of paper manufacturing in the region, starting with land conflicts between First Peoples (Outagamie, Iroquois, and Mohican) and European settlers, moving through the roots of the labor movement, and on to the current state of the paper industry.

In the third and final part of the book, Nelson swings into high gear as he details his efforts and those of Appleton Coated CEO Doug Osterberg, CFO Marianne Sterr, and USW Local 2-144, the international labor union that represented Appleton Coated workers. At times, the book reads like a memoir; Nelson narrates courtroom testimony and private conversations related to the legal battle to save the mill. Nelson doesn’t shy away from opining that Governor Scott Walker took a “cynical approach to economic development” and that Republican legislators under Walker’s administration “afforded scant attention let alone resources to the paper workers.” Political biography fans and readers interested in labor movements will both enjoy Nelson’s account in which the underdog prevails.

Takeaway: This combined history and memoir will resonate with centrists, readers interested in labor movements, and political biography fans.

Great for fans of: Michelle Obama’s Becoming, Mona Hana-Attisha’s What the Eyes Don’t See.

Production grades
Cover: A+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A+

Formats
Hardcover Details
  • 03/2021
  • 978-1-953943-00-2 1953943004
  • 302 pages
  • $29.95
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