1950

The First Employees

ucc-75th-anniversary-logo.

Phil LoGiudice tells the story of his first experience with George.

He was almost the first employee in the 1950’s. It was common for workers to show up at the Union Halls looking for employment. This was a daily activity with a dispatcher taking requests and picking the most qualified to fill the order. Phil was dispatched along with Tommy Paul to Union Concrete at an apartment complex in the Kinsington and Eggert
area. Phil tried to reject the order, wanting an inside job out of the weather, but the dispatcher stood his ground and sent Phil out.

Upon gaining access to the site, Phil and Tommy searched for the UCC shanty to no avail. While searching, they found a guy in an excavation setting planks in what Phil described as “2 foot of water and ice”. When asked where the Union Concrete office was, the guy responded “Down here! Welcome to Union Concrete.”

Realizing what he was in store for, Phil promptly told the guy (George) to “kiss off”. He was not working for the likes of him. When he tried to get Tommy to bail with him, Tommy simply answered “I need the job”.
Phil went home for the day and showed up at the Union Hall the next morning. When the Dispatcher saw him, Phil was told if he didn’t go back to the job he was dispatched to, he may as well find another Trade.
Seems like the “stockholders” in Union Concrete had a little pull at the Hall. Tommy’s history with UCC was just a few years, but Phil managed to hang around for some 40 years. We might have a few more stories told by Phil…

Continued next week…
Company News
POSITIONS AVAILABLE: 
  • Heavy Equipment Mechanic
  • Truck Mechanic
 

If you know anyone interested, please have them apply at UCC’s website. https://unionconcretecorp.com/about/careers/

 
JOBS TO BID: 
  • Four Rod Road Bridge – ECDPW 
  • Toad Hollow Bridge 
  • Rt. 240 HWY Drainage, Signal, & Safety Improvement 
 
JOBS WON: 
  • West Valley Spillway and Slope Repairs 
  • Rt 219 Great Valley Bridge Replacement 
Safety Brief

Not all dangers are in plain sight—some are waiting above you. A poorly rigged load, a frayed strap, a crane operator with limited visibility—any one of these can turn a routine lift into a deadly drop. Never walk under a suspended load, always double-check rigging, and communicate clearly with signalers. The weight you don’t see coming is the one that will crush you.

Reminders
  • Remember to TAG anything that needs repair. Any Equipment problems or repairs that need to be made can be emailed to equipment@unionconcretecorp.com / Please return any equipment that is no longer in use. 
  • When a hazard is identified, please report it immediately to a supervisor or the Safety Director (Jeff Jackson jjackson@unionconcretecorp.com) 

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