Algoma Steel is a Northern Ontario company in the spotlight for
2008. It just won't be with Denis Turcotte at the helm.
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The 46-year-old Thunder Bay native, who shepherded a restructured
Sault Ste. Marie steel mill fresh out of bankruptcy in 2002 into one of
North America's most profitable integrated steel producers,
resigned his position April 30.
Six years ago, he replaced Sandy Adam as president and CEO when the
debt-ridden Sault Ste. Marie rolled sheet and plate producer was
emerging from its second bankruptcy in nearly a decade.
Turcotte is the last president and CEO of Algoma. Under the new
corporate structure under Essar Global of Mumbai, India. Armando
Plastino, Algoma's vice-president of operations, will move up to
become chief operating officer.
The company was bought last year by Essar for $1.85 billion.
Turcotte says it's quite common when ownership changes, that senior
management changes with it.
"In this case, it was an opportunity to pass the baton on at
the right time."
Turcotte says he's leaving on positive terms with the Ruia
family whom he calls "fantastic operators" and "great
entrepreneurs" who are committed to the steel business for the long
run.
With the transition into the Essar fold complete, he plans to take
six months off.
"I thought was just a good time for me to take a bit of a
break."
He plans to relax and spend time at the camp with his family with
no immediate plans to move from the Sault.
"I've been working hard since coming out of university I
loved work and always put a lot into it, but here's a great
opportunity to take a sabbatical, spend time with my wife (Julie) and
kids (Danielle, Patrick, Phillip), travel a bit, just relaxing for a
while.
"Post-Labour Day, then I'll start thinking about what I
want to do professionally moving forward."
But he'll stay active on Domtar's board of directors and
serve on the Ontario Ministry of Energy's Advisory Committee.
Personally, it was a tough winter for the Turcotte family with the
sudden passing of 17-year-old daughter Adele at Ryerson University in
December.
To steel industry analyst Peter Warrian, Turcotte was the right man
at the right time.
"This has gotta go down as one of the great turn-arounds in
Canadian business history"
Under Turcotte's leadership, Algoma capitalized on spiking
global steel prices and posted record-high profits (including $344
million in 2004) which made the company a highly attractive takeover
target during a wave of industry consolidation.
He's credited for introducing a results-oriented culture at
the cyclical 106-year-old steelmaker, helped iron the bugs out of its
flagship mill, the Direct Strip Production Complex, and explored new
markets.
Turcotte came into the job with a new perspective from outside the
steel industry
A former Tembec senior executive, was already a rising Canadian
industry star, being named a 1998 recipient of Canada's Top 40
Under 40. He was named Canadian Business magazine's CEO of the Year
in 2006.
Trained as a professional engineer, he came out of the pulp and
paper industry where he spearheaded an employee-led drive to prevent the
closure of a Spruce Falls paper mill by Kimberley-Clark and its
subsequent acquisition by Tembec.
Warrian ranks Turcotte's performance at Algoma in the same
strata as that of Roger Phillips at Regina-based Ipsco, North
America's most profitable mini-mill. Phillips came out of the
aluminum industry.
"It can't be an accident that both came from outside the
steel industry," says Warrian, a professor at the University of
Toronto's Centre for Industrial Relations and Human Resources.
Warrian says Turcotte's final chapter is far from being
written.
"I don't think we've seen the last of Denis"
says Warrian. "He's a Northerner."
A CEO with a certain personality, skills and the talent as a
turn-around artist moves on the next gig at some stage, says Warrian.
There's opportunities with a "couple of upstart
companies" in the energy and real estate field, but he would like
"to try to help some entrepreneurs with some great ideas in the
North."
Turcotte calls his successor, Armando Plastino "a great man
that I've come to call a friend. "I trust him with my
children. He's a guy with good values, excellent work ethic, and he
knows that mill inside and out."
Essar plans to a sink $500 million in new capital investment in
Algoma over the next three to five years.
"That's critical going forward to make hundreds of
millions of capital gets deployed the right way.
"I can't think of anybody better to accomplish that than
Armando."
www.algoma.com
By IAN ROSS
Northern Ontario Business
COPYRIGHT 2008 Laurentian Business Publishing,
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