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AK Steel

Coordinates: 39°19′38″N 84°26′18″W / 39.32722°N 84.43833°W / 39.32722; -84.43833
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AK Steel Holding
Company typePublic
NYSEAKS
IndustrySteel
Founded1899 (1899) (as The American Rolling Mill Company - Armco)
HeadquartersWest Chester Township, Butler County, Ohio
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
James L. Wainscott
(Chairman), (President) & (CEO)
ProductsSteel products
RevenueIncreaseUS$6.468 Billion (FY 2011)[1]
Decrease US$-201.3Million (FY 2011)[1]
Decrease US$-155.6 Million (FY 2011)[1]
Total assetsIncreaseUS$4.450 Billion (FY 2011)[1]
Total equityIncreaseUS$377.2 Million (FY 2011)[1]
Number of employees
6,600 (Dec 2011)[1]
SubsidiariesAK Tube LLC
Websitewww.aksteel.com

AK Steel Holding Corporation is an American steel company whose predecessor, Armco, was founded in 1899 in Middletown, Ohio, United States. In 2007, the company moved its corporate headquarters from Middletown to West Chester, Ohio.[2][3]

The company derives its name from the first letters of "Armco" and "Kawasaki Steel Corporation," which entered into a limited partnership with Armco in 1989. The company was formally renamed AK Steel in 1993 when it became a publicly traded company.[4]

History

The company was founded in 1899 as The American Rolling Mill Company (which is the basis for the eventual ARMCO name) in Middletown, Ohio, and operated the Middletown Works there. In 1901 it opened the Ashland Works in Ashland, Kentucky. In 1948 it adopted the ARMCO name which in turn became Armco Steel Corporation.[4]

The Middletown, Ashland, and at least Zanesville, Ohio, and Butler, Penna.,were the company's only plants until the 1950s when it began buying more mills and diversifying.[4] Armco had more patients than any other steel company during the 60's.In the later 60's Armco upgraded and added production facilities which included a new Middletown Works hot strip rolling facility that required a building, the worlds first, so massive the curvature of the Earth had to be factored in its design.

During the late 1970s and 1980s corporate finances and business declined, as with much of the US steel industry, and Armco faced a number of pollution and obselescence/international competition issues, which resulted in a general decline of workforce size and profitability and closure of a number of older facilities.

In 1978 it was renamed Armco, Inc. and it moved its headquarters for a now diversified company to New Jersey in 1985. In 1989 it entered into a limited partnership with Kawasaki Steel Corporation as well as with Itochu Corporation owning 50 percent of its Nova Steel Processing unit.[4]

In 1993 the company moved its headquarters to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and renamed itself AK Steel Holdings reflecting its Armco roots and sizable investment by Kawasaki. The company became publically traded in 1993. In 1995 it moved its headquarters back to Middletown.[4]

In 2007 it moved its headquarters to West Chester Township, Butler County, Ohio. In 2008 it became a component of S&P500.

AK Steel was listed #1 on the Mother Jones Top 20 polluters of 2010; dumping over 12,000 tons of toxic chemicals into Ohio waterways.[5]

Operations

Products

AK Steel production facility in Mansfield, Ohio.
An Armco culvert in an irrigation canal.

AK Steel's main products are carbon, stainless and electrical steels, cold rolled and aluminium coated stainless steel for automakers.

One of Armco's best-known products may be the crash barriers installed at roadsides, in central reservations, and around many auto-racing tracks. Many race car drivers said "I/he ran into the Armco" These barriers are commonly called "Armco" or Armco barriers in the UK.

Another product is bent corrugated steel panels that can be bolted together to make culverts. These are known as "Armco culverts".

For many years Armco was well known for its line of pre-fabricated and pre-primed/pre-painted steel panel buildings, often found in railyards and as outbuildings and storage structures (sheds, Quonset hut, hangars, etc.).

Facilities

The company has production facilities in a number of American cities including:

Management

The current CEO at AK Steel Holding is James L. Wainscott.

Environmental record

The Political Economy Research Institute ranks AK Steel 14th among corporations emitting airborne pollutants in the United States. The ranking is based on the quantity (300 thousand pounds in 2009) and toxicity of the emissions. At the same time, it scored well in terms of environmental justice, affecting smaller percentages of the poor and minorities than their respective percentages of the total population.[6] The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued an Emergency Order pursuant to the Safe Drinking Water Act to AK Steel's Butler Works located in Butler, Pennsylvania concerning the nitrate/nitrite compounds being released into the Connoquenessing Creek, an occasional water source for the Borough of Zelienople on June 27, 2000.[7] They had violated the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act and that it had failed to properly dispose of hexavalent chromium waste in Butler.[8] In 2004 the EPA and the Justice Department announced that AK Steel Holding settled their alleged environmental violations at their steel mill in Butler, Pennsylvania.[9] AK Steel Holding agreed to a $1.2 million settlement, which consists of a $300,000 penalty and $900,000 in projects intended to reduce smog-producing ozone in Pennsylvania.[9] In 2006, AK Steel reached an estimated $12,000,000 settlement to compensate for PCB contamination in Middletown, Ohio.[10]

Middletown Works lockout

Armco and the Armco Employees Independent Federation (AEIF; an employee labor union) had a collective bargaining agreement in place in 2004 that required AK Steel to employ 3,114 workers, a "minimum base force guarantee". The agreement also authorized AK Steel to suspend the minimum number. On January 13, 2004, AK Steel informed the AEIF that it was suspending the minimum. The union then filed a grievance contesting the suspension. An arbitrator upheld the decision by AK Steel on July 1, 2004, subject to certain limitations, through at least May 10, 2005. The union sought and was granted a new hearing, and on July 1, 2005 the arbitrator issued a comprise total workforce. As part of the agreement the arbitrator allowed AK Steel to set aside financial payments to a fund, in lieu of hiring to the minimum, the amount of which was set by the arbitrator on October 7, 2005. On September 29, 2005, the AEIF filed a lawsuit against AK Steel in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio (AEIF v. AK Steel Corp.; Case No. 1:05-CV-639), in which the AEIF sought to vacate that portion of the July 1, 2005 Award. AK Steel answered the complaint and filed counterclaims (AK Steel Corp. v. AEIF, Case No. 1:05-CV-531) on November 2, 2005.[11][12]

On March 1, 2006, AK Steel began a lockout of around 2700, workers, at their Middletown Works plant, in Middletown, Ohio.[13][14] By the next day, the mill was operated by 1,800 salaried and temporary replacement workers. In late October, AK offered a "final" contract, which was rejected by the union at a vote of 2 to 1.[15] One year after the lockout started, on February 28, 2007, AK Steel reached a labor deal with the labor union,[16][17] The lockout was over when the union members ratified the proposed contract on March 14, 2007.[18][19] This lockout was the longest labor stalemate in the 105-year history of the Middletown Works.[20] The previous longest stalemate was a six-day company lockout in 1986.[21][22] As part of the agreement the AEIF and AK Steel reached a joint settlement of their five total counter lawsuits, with AK Steel paying $7,702,301. A third of the amount was for profit sharing, a third for an assistance fund for employee benefits of employees not recalled to work, and a third an escrow account to settle employee disputes and claims as a result of the lockout. The Employment Security Plan and the Trade and Craft Quota and Service/Support Group Quota (the "minimum base force guarantees") were completely terminated.[12] Prior to the 1984 lockout Armco's Middletown works never lost one minute of production due to a labor issue. <The Rise And Fall of Americas Middle Class by Jim Davis, a former Armco employee>

AK Steel replaces Countrywide in S&P 500 Index

Following the close of trading on June 30, 2008, AK Steel was added to Standard & Poor's 500 Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) Steel Sub-Industry index. The S&P 500 is a widely known and utilized indicator of the U.S. equities market.[23][24] On December 11, 2011, it was removed from the S&P 500 and replaced with BorgWarner.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "AK Steel Holding, Form 10-K, Annual Report, Filing Date Feb 27, 2012" (PDF). secdatabase.com. Retrieved Jan 2, 2013.
  2. ^ "AK Steel Holding, Form 8-K, Current Report, Filing Date Feb 20, 2007" (PDF). secdatabase.com. Retrieved Jan 2, 2013.
  3. ^ "AK Steel Holding, Form 10-K, Annual Report, Filing Date Feb 26, 2008". secdatabase.com. Retrieved Jan 2, 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d e "AK Steel Holding Corporation - Company History". Fundinguniverse.com. 1997-02-10. Retrieved 2012-02-03.
  5. ^ http://motherjones.com/blue-marble/2012/03/top-10-polluted-rivers-waterways
  6. ^ Political Economy Research Institute - Toxic 100
  7. ^ AKS Annual Report (Regulation S-K, item 405) (10-K405) Item 1. Business - AK Steel Holding Corporation
  8. ^ Environmental Protection Agency
  9. ^ a b "AK Steel Settles Lawsuit Over Environmental Violations at Butler Mill - Steelmaker to Pay $300,0000 Penalty and $900,000 in Pollution Reduction Projects to Settle Hazardous Waste, Air and Water Pollution Violations" - Newsroom - U.S. EPA
  10. ^ Environmental Protection Agency
  11. ^ 1Q 2007. - AK Steel Holding Corporation. - May 7, 2007. - (Adobe Acrobat *.PDF document). - | Environmental and Legal Contingencies p.13 | Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  12. ^ a b "Settlement Agreement". - International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. - (Adobe Acrobat *.PDF document). - Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  13. ^ Gnau, Thomas. - "AK Steel locks out Union". - Cox News Service. - The Middletown Journal. - March 01, 2006. - Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  14. ^ 1Q 2006. - AK Steel Holding Corporation. - May 4, 2006. - (Adobe Acrobat *.PDF document). - | Environmental and Legal Contingencies p.11 | Results of Operations p.17 | Outlook p.18 | Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  15. ^ Union: "Workers At AK Steel Reject Contract Offer". - WHIO-TV. - October 19, 2006.
  16. ^ "AK Steel Reaches Tentative Labor Deal". - Associated Press. - (c.o Topix.net)
  17. ^ Press Release: "AK Steel and IAM Reach Tentative Contract Agreement For Middletown Works". - AK Steel Holding Corporation. - February 28, 2007. - Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  18. ^ AK Steel boss projects long-term profitability. - The Middletown Journal. - May 25, 2007
  19. ^ Press Release: "IAM Members Overwhelmingly Ratify New-Era Labor Accord For AK Steel’s Middletown Works". - AK Steel Holding Corporation. - March 14, 2007. - Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  20. ^ Gnau, Thomas. - "Day 7 brings no resolution". - Cox News Service. - The Middletown Journal. - March 08, 2006. - Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  21. ^ Rick McCrabb, Rick. - "Veteran AK workers fear someone's going to get hurt inside plant". - Cox News Service. - The Middletown Journal. - March 02, 2006. - Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  22. ^ Rick McCrabb, Rick. - "Timeline of the AK Steel lockout". - Cox News Service. - The Middletown Journal. - October 19, 2006. - Retrieved: 2008-06-10
  23. ^ [1]. - Pittsburgh Business Times. - June 30, 2008
  24. ^ [2]. - PR Newswire - First Call. - June 30, 2008

39°19′38″N 84°26′18″W / 39.32722°N 84.43833°W / 39.32722; -84.43833