GUEST COLUMN — The importance of happy workers: Jamestown S’Klallam tribe shows how employee satisfaction serves employers, too

  • By W. Ron Allen
  • Sunday, September 21, 2014 12:01am
  • News
W. Ron Allen

W. Ron Allen

By W. Ron Allen

EDITOR’S NOTE: W. Ron Allen, the author of this guest column, is tribal chairman and CEO of the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe.

THE JAMESTOWN S’KLALLAM tribe is one of the largest employers in Clallam County.

That’s a big statement, but what does it really mean to our community?

It means that in a county of over 72,000 residents, we provide jobs to 670 people, second only to Olympic Medical Center.

Today, our tribal government (including our medical and dental clinics) and JKT Development (including Jamestown Excavating, Jamestown NetWorks and Carlsborg Self-Storage) businesses employ 235 people.

Our resort/casino businesses (7 Cedars Casino, Cedars at Dungeness Golf Course and The Longhouse Market and Deli) employ 435 people.

This message isn’t really about how many people we employ, or how that number compares to other employers’ numbers.

For us it is about job satisfaction, recruitment and engagement.

That is why our Human Resources Department recently conducted an Employee Satisfaction and Engagement Survey of our tribal government staff, to see how we are doing.

The survey found that our overall employee job satisfaction is 83 percent, 13 percent above satisfaction levels of other U.S. employees surveyed by the Society for Human Resource Management.

In fact, in every area surveyed, the tribal government’s staff satisfaction met or exceeded the levels of satisfaction for other U.S. employees surveyed by society.

In addition, our engagement score beat the average, telling us that our employees are more “engaged” than their industry peers.

Engagement is the “energized” feeling an employee has about work.

This was our first employee satisfaction and engagement survey, and we are pleased with the participation rate of 79 percent.

Since being re-recognized by the federal government in 1981, we have used our status as a sovereign nation to generate new unrestricted revenue to address our community needs.

We do this primarily to serve our nearly 600 tribal citizens, providing programs in education, health care, housing, culture and other areas that contribute to their quality of life and their ability to gain self-sufficiency as individuals and as families.

In order to provide these services effectively, we embarked on a dedicated program of economic development, balancing the investment of our profits back into our businesses, and into tribal programs and services.

One of our key goals has been tribal self-sufficiency, and today, 56 percent of our governmental funding is generated by our own enterprises.

Our tribal goal is to become self-reliant from federal resources.

Beyond serving our own community, we feel we have a role in serving the larger community.

Citizens of our tribe, having never moved to a reservation, have always been a part of the Clallam and Jefferson County communities — as workers, taxpayers, veterans, members of civic organizations, students in the public school system, church members, voters, home

owners and more.

There has never been a question that the tribe partners with our local community for the betterment of all.

It is due to that historical factor why we have been motivated to build the Blyn Fire Station, Jamestown Family Medical and Dental Clinics, and why we contribute to myriad educational, environmental and civic causes.

We hold dual citizenship, and we take that responsibility seriously.

All of these ventures require staffing, and our staff members are also members of our community.

We want them to have good jobs with benefits so that they can raise families and be prosperous and responsible members of our community.

We seek employees with skills and expertise, but also a willingness to become a part of our tribal family, whether our staff members are American Indian or not.

In return we strive to offer a great workplace with competitive compensation and benefits.

This two-way relationship works.

We expect excellence; we welcome our employees into our midst, and we provide stable employment with benefits.

Our survey showed that the main reason employees continue to work for the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe is meaningful work.

That matters to us as a major employer, and we believe it should matter to all employers.

________

This guest column appeared in the print edition of the Sept. 19-20, 2014, Peninsula Daily News.

More in News

Crescent School District Superintendent David Bingham is retiring after 41 years with the district, where he began as a paraeducator and boys junior varsity basketball coach. Bingham, a 1980 Port Angeles High School graduate, spent his entire career at Crescent. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Crescent superintendent to retire after 41 years, multiple jobs

Dave Bingham coached basketball, drove a bus and taught many classes

Grant to fund vessel removal

Makah Tribe to use dollars for Port of Neah Bay

x
Home Fund provides transportation reimbursement

Funding supports women getting cancer treatment

Matthew McVay of Bayside Landscaping and Pruning uses a gas-powered pole saw to trim branches off an overgrown gum tree in Port Angeles. Now is a good time for pruning and trimming before the tree saps start moving. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Tree pruning

Matthew McVay of Bayside Landscaping and Pruning uses a gas-powered pole saw… Continue reading

$99M bond to go before Port Townsend voters

District looking for renovations to campus

Presentation highlights tsunami risk, likely generated from an earthquake

Emergency management officials provide scenario, encourage preparedness

Jackson Smart, center with scissors, cuts the ribbon on Wednesday to officially open the newly remodeled section of the Port Angeles Underground Tour. With Smart are, from left, Julie Hatch, Kara Anderson, Elisa Simonsen, Sam Grello and Johnetta Bindas. (Laurel Hargis)
Section of underground tour dedicated to Port Angeles man

Jackson Smart discovered mural in 1989 and has been a tour advocate

Seven nominated for open OMC board spot

Three candidates were defeated in November general election

Navy to conduct anti-terrorism exercises

Navy Region Northwest will participate in Citadel Shield-Solid Curtain 2025… Continue reading

Construction is in the early stages at the new Hurricane Ridge Middle School in Port Angeles. A special cement delivery vehicle brings another batch for the school’s foundation. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Cement delivery

Construction is in the early stages at the new Hurricane Ridge Middle… Continue reading

Port Angeles approves donated building plans

Senior center reviews policies, procedures