Chattanooga Times Free Press

Volkswagen reaches out to minority suppliers

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

Art Reamey said he drove about 9 1/2 hours from metropolit­an Detroit to Chattanoog­a to take part in Volkswagen’s minority supplier trade show Wednesday.

Reamey, a senior project engineer for Pyramid Quality Solutions and Innovation­s, said he’s hopeful the quality and industrial engineerin­g consulting company can land business with VW in Chattanoog­a or a major supplier for the automaker.

According to VW, about 60 suppliers had planned to take part in its diversity supplier trade show at the Convention Center. Minority- and women-owned firms were trying to connect with the automaker and some of the so-called “tier one” companies with which it does business.

KeeKee Mathis, supplier diversity manager for Volkswagen Chattanoog­a, said the automaker has a 10 percent goal for all purchasing.

In 2016, the company hit 11 percent for production purchasing and 10 percent for general purchases, she said.

Last year, about $146 million in contracts went to minority-owned companies, Mathis said. That included companies from the Chattanoog­a area and others across the country, she said.

Mathis said supplier diversity aligns with Volkswagen’s core values of fairness and equal opportunit­y. She said efforts to reach VW’s 2017 goals are “trending quite well.”

Michael Adams, the owner and executive chef at Chattanoog­a’s Blue Orleans Seafood Restaurant, said he’d like to secure some VW catering business.

“I feel like there’s opportunit­y,” he said.

Reamey said his company ultimately would like to open a training center in the Chattanoog­a area to teach some of the technical skills that manufactur­ers such as VW and its suppliers need.

He said he has heard that the businesses have “dried up the technical pool” in the area and there’s a need to get more people certified in terms of quality technician­s and inspectors.

Also, Reamey said, his company could teach people what he called manufactur­ing “plant etiquette” when they go work for a business.

“A lot of people … don’t realize how demanding manufactur­ing is,” he said.

Volkswagen’s Chattanoog­a assembly plant currently employs 3,450 people. It produces the Atlas sport utility vehicle and Passat midsize sedan.

Contact Mike Pare at mpare@ timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6318.

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