Keeping the workplace peace
Paul Clinton
With a surgeon’s calm, John Hermann explains his philosophy about
repairing the broken bonds between employee and employer.
Hermann, president and chief executive of Labor Relations Services
Inc. in Newport Beach, usually intervenes when a shop is on the verge
of unionizing.
“[Unionizing] pits hourly employees against management,” Hermann
said. “It creates an internal fight on a regular basis. That is no
way to run a railroad.”
Hermann came out of retirement in 1998 to form the company. It was
a retirement that Hermann says lasted exactly two days, after almost
three decades as a labor mediator.
Companies with labor headaches turn to Hermann to guide them out
of their misery.
Kevin Kelly, who founded Emerald Packaging Inc. in Union City,
turned to Hermann’s company after he came to work one day and saw his
parking lot strewn with leaflets urging his employees to unionize.
Two of Hermann’s consultants surveyed the employees, collecting
more than 60 complaints about the lack of fairness in the way
supervisors were treating workers. Hermann prepared recommendations
for solving some of the problems, which Kelly said he implemented.
“Those moves turned around the immediate situation,” Kelly said.
“I have no doubt that letting managerial mistakes pile up again will
prompt another visit from the union.”
While union membership in the workforce has dwindled -- now, only
13.3% of workers in the country belong to unions -- the threat to
employers is still taken seriously, Hermann said.
Hermann’s services include an employee attitude survey, focus
groups and small group sessions to expose employees’ gripes.
Hermann earned his master’s in social psychology from Arizona
State University in 1973 and went to work for Kraft Foods as a labor
mediator. In 1978, he joined American Consulting Services, based in
Newport Beach.
Four years later, Hermann founded Total Employee Relations, which
he sold in 1998 before starting his current firm.
Hermann, 53, says the majority of employee issues can be ironed
out by management as long as there is a mutual loyalty, trust and
respect. Oddly enough, Hermann, when he was at Kraft, developed a
reputation as a manager who could skillfully fire employees.
“I ended up being so good at firing employees that they would end
up thanking me,” Hermann said. “I’ve always viewed myself as an
employee advocate and an agent of change. It can be done
judiciously.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.