|  Scott M. Paton’s First 
                      Word in the March 2004 issue is right on the money. If organizations 
                      can be honest and use ethics, perhaps the employees could 
                      turn around too. Many employees feel the only way to get 
                      their voice heard is through a union. I believe that employees 
                      seeking a union should realize what it means to their business 
                      and country. Employers also need to become more resourceful 
                      and open about the policies they want to enforce. If the 
                      organization wants trust from the employees, it must give 
                      the employees reason to trust them. --Anonymous  I mostly agree with Paton’s 
                      First Word comments. As Americans, we should be able to 
                      adapt to the new global economy. However, you did not address 
                      the issue of second- and third-tier suppliers to large conglomerates 
                      that are doing business with China, Mexico, Taiwan and so 
                      on. As you know, we provide a great amount of money to the 
                      economy of the United States.  How are we going to compete against the Chinese or anyone 
                      else who works for a fraction of what we do? --Tony Gasso  Thank you, Dan Nelson, for 
                      your Last Word editorial in the March 2004 issue. I got 
                      into a heated debate with a customer about this same issue 
                      two years ago. The customer was asking for a preventive 
                      action after the corrective action was complete. I asked, 
                      “How can you prevent something from happening if it 
                      has already happened?”   --Jason Monsul  I like to look at preventive 
                      action a little differently. The point of Nelson’s 
                      article is the difference between corrective action and 
                      what I call “impact in other areas.” I use “prevention” 
                      as the tool used to prevent or keep it from happening again 
                      within the system. I have found that leading corrective 
                      action needs to be broken down into basic steps, like a 
                      checksheet in order to maintain a systematic approach to 
                      problem solving. Taking one or two steps of problem solving 
                      out of context can cause more confusion of the entire process, 
                      so I will list all eight from my approach. * Document the problem, list dates, location, who reported, 
                      quantities and the nonconformance tracking number related 
                      to the concern. First express the problem in the customer’s 
                      terms. Add some explanation or translation of the concern 
                      to the supplier’s vernacular if required. * Containment needs to be established quickly. Sorting 
                      at the customer is only the first step (if requested). What 
                      will you be doing to isolate the customer from this concern 
                      before the corrective action is proved and documented as 
                      verified? How much stock was reviewed for this concern at 
                      your facility and how much was found with the concern? You 
                      need to concentrate on your internal reject rate.  If you find some, so will the customer. * A root cause will almost always have two types of causes. 
                      The first is the obvious: missed operation, machine broke, 
                      etc., causing concern on the physical part. The second is 
                      the system failure that allowed that part to be processed 
                      and shipped to the customer. Both of these need to be addressed. * Corrective action needs to be done immediately. Document 
                      what areas, the date finished and the corrective action 
                      completed. If process documentation is updated, include 
                      those in the corrective action report. If the corrective 
                      action is more inspection, that increased inspection must 
                      not be eliminated at a later date. All corrective action 
                      must be written in past tense and dated before it can be 
                      closed. * Verify that the corrective action is effectively eliminating 
                      the concern as defined in the problem description. Do not 
                      use the customer’s complaint system for verification. 
                      Verification must be accomplished within your facility. 
                      Effective verification will always involve the review of 
                      production run parts after corrective action has been in 
                      place. * Prevention of reoccurrence needs to be addressed by updating 
                      documentation that controls the process or operation where 
                      corrective action took place. Procedures, operator instruction 
                      sheets, work instructions, flowcharts, FMEA, control plans, 
                      etc. must be updated.  * List the part numbers involved, the production lines 
                      and the processes that were changed. Is there an opposite-hand 
                      part or similar production line in which this defect could 
                      occur? If there are no other areas affected, state so and 
                      give a brief explanation of why. * Evidence of analysis of mistake proofing needs to include 
                      a true poka-yoke, or the reasons for the actions taken if 
                      no mistake proofing is implemented. A person manually doing 
                      an operation is not mistake proofing. If a true poka-yoke 
                      cannot be implemented, the method used for evaluation of 
                      mistake proofing needs to be documented. --Chris Nelsen  I enjoyed your article on 
                      the distinction between corrective and preventive action. 
                      Reading from ISO 9001:2000, sections 8.5.2 and 8.5.3, corrective 
                      action works to eliminate the cause of nonconformities, 
                      and preventive action works to eliminate the cause of potential 
                      nonconformities. In your example, the future parts to be 
                      made for the jig are potential nonconformities, not actual 
                      ones, because they have not yet been manufactured. This 
                      seems to argue for your solution being preventive action, 
                      not corrective action.  --Lee Beaumont |