Toyota exit: Altona factory ends on a high

BY TIM NICHOLSON | 4th Oct 2017


IN ITS final few years of operation, Toyota Australia’s Altona factory in Melbourne’s west has achieved the best quality and productivity ratings in its long history, the company’s outgoing president Dave Buttner has revealed.

Toyota finally closed the plant yesterday after 54 years of producing cars, ranging from the Tiara which was built between 1963 and 1965 to the final Toyota to be built Down Under – the seventh-generation Camry sedan.

Mr Buttner said the factory has met global and Australian standards for production for several years, while Toyota Australia chairman Max Yasuda added that annual audits highlighted the efficiency and dedication of the factory staff.

“Every day at the plant you’re judged on safety, productivity, quality and cost, they are the main factors you’re judged on,” Mr Buttner said in an embargoed interview with Australian journalists last week.

“There are individual country KPIs (key performance indicators) and global KPIs for every one of those factors and over the last four years the plant has achieved every global KPI that has been established.”Added Mr Yasuda: “We have a quality auditor team in TMC (Toyota Motor Corporation) and they come to Australia once a year to check on our quality. I think our last audit was done beginning of this year, and we achieved the best ever quality levels by this audit.

“We have had a better performance than ever before, which itself is a fantastic achievement of our people. Myself, I don’t know how they keep up the motivation, to keep this performance, going through to the end,” he said.

At the time of the announcement, in February 2014, Toyota had 3900 employees in Melbourne and Sydney across manufacturing and corporate roles, but that number has subsequently dropped to 1300.

The number of staff still working on the final day is difficult to determine.

As the final car passes through various stages or processes such as body press, paint, powertrain, final assembly and inspection, those areas are progressively moved offline, therefore the number of people at the very final stage would have been small.

Mr Buttner admitted that Toyota had been “fairly insular” in not discussing what the company was doing to prepare for the closure since the 2014 announcement in a bid to protect its staff, and in the interview ahead of the closure he said that Tuesday would be “a pretty heavy day in the history of the company”.

Mr Buttner revealed that the in-house event on Tuesday to commemorate 54 years of manufacturing and celebrate the achievements of the workers included a dinner with every staff member and celebrations with “25-year club members, our suppliers, dealer council and our 2500-odd employees ... and of course visiting dignitaries from Toyota in Japan”.

Toyota says that approximately 130 Altona employees have been redeployed in other roles, while about 260 have indicated that they now plan to retire.

A company spokesperson said it was difficult to gauge the success of Toyota’s reskilling programs until the workforce enters the job market, but that it would become clearer over the next six to 18 months.

Toyota launched the first phase of its DRIVE program – which stands for dedicated, ready, individual, vocational and energised – in August 2014 to help employees prepare for their future.

A number of DRIVE centres are located around Australia for employees to discuss their future plans with managers and the company says it has recorded engagement of 79 per cent among impacted employees as of July this year.

DRIVE centres will remain open for six months after yesterday’s factory closure and more than 2200 people have put their hand up to take part in the program since its inception.

The program has provided employees with job skills training, career plans, the opportunity for some company-sponsored training, information on other industries, referrals to financial services and, more recently, has focused on helping people with job-seeking skills such as resume writing and interview techniques.

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