03.01.2017 Views

PLC Logger's Voice Winter 2017

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Canadian Chains<br />

Continued from Page 7<br />

Production underway on the shop floor in Norridgewock.<br />

for it in Norridgewock, where it moved within a year and<br />

has remained ever since.<br />

Jason went into the family business straight out of<br />

school in 2005 and first worked in excavation for one of his<br />

many uncles in Connecticut, returning to Maine in the<br />

winters when logging-related business was busiest. He<br />

worked for his father as a mechanic one year, as a welder<br />

another, and in other roles. By 2007 he was working in<br />

Maine full-time including helping run the family’s Davco<br />

store in Farmington.<br />

Since taking over the management of Canadian<br />

Chains, Jason has invested heavily in upgrading and<br />

reorganizing the shop; installing overhead cranes, new<br />

welders, new saws, respirators and fatigue mats for<br />

employees, and other things designed to improve efficiency<br />

and working conditions.<br />

Production has doubled, and with a great product<br />

the company is getting business as far away as Oklahoma<br />

and California. It could expand even more, but Jason wants<br />

first to concentrate on doing the best job he can with what<br />

he’s got, and not grow too far too fast.<br />

“Quality is the number one thing obviously, but as<br />

much as I want to make money, I want to be a place where<br />

people want to come work, that’s big for me,” Jason said.<br />

He has four employees, and they are critical to the<br />

company’s success.<br />

It costs more to be able to put that “Made in<br />

America” label on Canadian Chains products, but in a<br />

market where cheaper imports often come with cost-cutting<br />

measures like using case-hardened steel instead of throughhardened<br />

steel, it pays to make something that lasts.<br />

Canadian Chains does business with loggers<br />

throughout Maine and is well aware of the challenges they<br />

face, so in 2015 the company joined the Professional<br />

Logging Contractors of Maine (<strong>PLC</strong>) as an Enhanced<br />

Supporting Member.<br />

Pulling together and supporting organizations like<br />

the <strong>PLC</strong> that fight for the industry is important, Jason said.<br />

“Anything that has to do with loggers, we want to<br />

support what they do, because they are more important than<br />

we are,” Jason said. “If they don’t make money, we don’t.”<br />

For now, Jason remains focused on growing the<br />

Canadian Chains brand through offering a superior product<br />

and service. Down the road, there’s plenty of opportunity to<br />

expand. Taking something and running with it is certainly a<br />

family tradition; his father started out with nothing and<br />

today is the owner of four successful companies.<br />

The company is a good one and he really enjoys<br />

the work and the customers Canadian Chains serves, Jason<br />

said.<br />

“I’m a fanatic about equipment and I really like the<br />

industry,” Jason said. “I love excavation, I love logging and<br />

I love everything that has to do with machinery.”<br />

Jason Carrier, at right, in the Canadian<br />

Chains manufacturing facility.<br />

* See Canadian Chains product at work in<br />

photo on page 4.<br />

8 Professional Logging Contractors of Maine Loggers Serving Loggers Since 1995

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!