By Associated Press - Friday, August 31, 2018

CEDARBURG, Wis. (AP) - In a July 21 story about a Wisconsin company that sometimes hires former inmates, The Associated Press reported erroneously that all the employees of the company, Harrigan Solutions, have served prison time. Only some of Harrigan’s employees are former prisoners.

A corrected version of the story is below:

Wisconsin company hires former inmates, helps them succeed

A Wisconsin business is hiring former inmates and helping them succeed

CEDARBURG, Wis. (AP) - A Wisconsin business is hiring former inmates and helping them succeed.

Some of the employees at Harrigan Solutions have served prison time, WUWM-FM reported. The Cedarburg company contracts with Harley-Davidson to service the machines that create motorcycle parts.

Company owner Bill Harrigan said he hopes to give former inmates a chance to show that they’ve changed.

“This isn’t just a job,” he said. “It’s a chance to belong, to join the rest of the world. It’s to be counted, to be counted on.”

Harrigan Solutions uses novel methods to motivate workers, such as holding on-the-job competitions while they’re making repairs. The winning teams earn prizes.

“If you watch any racing, it’s all about times, down to the seconds,” Supervisor Brandon Sayre said. “We focus on the reduction of pit-times, meaning the down-time of the machine when we’re servicing it. We make a competition out of it.”

Worker Ryan Young said the structure motivates him.

“It is friendly competition, but we’re all pretty close here,” he said. “We get pretty competitive, and it kind of makes it fun. Gives us a reason to work harder, work faster, work better.”

The company also has a compliment board for good work, holds a weekly meeting to talk about employees’ strengths and even has a banquet at the end of the year.

Harrigan said employees have told him that the work has changed how they view themselves and their future.

“That’s incredibly motivating to someone who’s never … had anyone that has asked them what success looks like to them,” he said. “Many people, this population, they’re not even aware that they have strengths. So they all know what it’s like to feel like nobody wants you, nobody cares, nobody thinks you have any potential.”

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