High Job Satisfaction Keeps
Turnover Rate Low
White Rock Is Among Industry Leaders In Employee Retention
(May 2001)
"Everything!"
That’s what employees of White Rock Quarries say they like best about
working for the company.
When pressed for more details, a number of factors come up to explain how the
company maintains a turnover rate less than half the industry average. The
bottom line is, people who come to White Rock tend to stay at White Rock.

In the aggregate plant control room,
Day Shift Plant Operator Arturo Pelaez enters the latest production
figures, as Pit Foreman Nate Malone looks over the log sheet. Pelaez has
been with White Rock since the plant opened in 1988.
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Elijah
Holmes, left, a White Rock employee since 1990, helps Mechanic Charles
Payne, Sr. prepare a new pivot shaft for installation in a Cat-8 dozer.
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"It’s much different here, much better than other places," says
Fidel Almeda, through one of his bi-lingual coworkers at the heavily Hispanic,
northwest Miami work site. An off-road haul truck driver, Almeda has worked at
White Rock since 1988 when the product line was expanded to include processed
aggregates. "I’m happy with the people I work with and the
supervisors."
The benefits package is another reason workers are satisfied, especially
the 401(k). And they like the steady work, with overtime. Workers at White
Rock average from five to 15 hours of overtime per week, at time-and-a-half
pay.
"They also make sure the equipment is taken care of," says Ruben
Washington, a Loader Operator hired in 1989. "That’s important."
Mechanic Charles Payne, Sr., a 12-year veteran of the company, agrees.
"That means a lot, having good equipment to work on. And the operators
take good care of their equipment."
Pit Foreman Nate Malone, who transferred from Ranger in 1986 to help start
the quarry, explains that well-maintained equipment not only keeps employees
happy, it increases White Rock’s production.
"Maintenance makes production. If you don’t do maintenance, you can’t
make good production. You’re going to have problems that catch you by
surprise."
Maintenance also makes the work place safer, something White Rock takes
very seriously. For example, the aggregate plant schedules eight hours of
maintenance for every 16 hours of production. The result is an efficient work
place that hasn’t had a lost-time injury in more than three years.
Even off the premises the company looks for ways to keep up morale, such as
with an annual picnic for workers and their families, where thousands of
dollars of door prizes are given away.
When you put it all together, what you get is a high level of employee
satisfaction — and as a result, a very low turnover rate.
"We treat everyone as we want to be treated," explains Raymond
Maddy, Vice President of Operations. "Most of our supervisors came up
through the labor ranks, including myself, so we try to lead by example."
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WRQ’s Raymond Maddy Promoted To V.P. of Operations
(May 2001)
When it all first started, way back in 1986, Raymond Maddy was there, putting
in the long days, building from the ground up a full-production limestone
quarry in the competitive mining industry in northwest Dade County.
His title was Supervisor then, but over the years his career continued to
progress. He eventually became the company’s Operations Manager — but even
that was still just a stepping stone.
In April, Raymond was promoted to Vice President of Operations, a fitting
reward for his many years of excellent service as the quarry has grown to one
of the top 10 producers in the country.
But don’t expect the new title to change him. Raymond still wears the
same uniform as everyone else and still spends most of his days out in the pit
overseeing the operations — as he has done for years.
"Raymond is one of the true cornerstones of White Rock’s
success," notes WRQ Executive Vice Pres. Jim Hurley.
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