Folks: 

I am as pro-metric as anyone, but I cannot sign this petition. Since I have not 
posted much in a few years, before explaining why, here is some info about me: 
I founded a manufacturing company (QSI Corporation) in 1983, which I converted 
to metric around 1992 (also when we joined the USMA). I sold the company last 
November to a Swedish manufacturer (our website is now 
www.BeijerElectronicsInc.com ). 

In addition to converting a manufacturing company to metric, I helped a dozen 
or so employees receive USMA CMS and CAMS certifications; I taught perhaps 150 
employees the basics of the metric system; QSI distributed tens of thousands of 
metric rulers around the country (now available at the USMA home page); I have 
been on the USMA board of advisers for years; I also worked with numerous 
vendors helping them deal with our metric-only procurement documents (drawings, 
etc.). We had to do that a lot in 1992, but essentially all manufacturers of 
any size can handle metric today. 

(BTW, I would like to say that QSI being metric played a major role in a 
Swedish company buying us, but that would not be the case. Beijer was delighted 
that we were metric, as it eases the integration, but they bought us for 
business reasons (i.e., our size, profitability, market penetration, key 
business strengths, etc.). If we had NOT been metric, they would still have 
bought us.) 

So, there are three primary reasons I cannot sign the petition: 

1. I feel it is WAY too generic or un-actionable. "We petition the Obama 
administration to complete the US transition to the modern metric system." What 
specifically do you want them to do? Start issuing press releases with metric 
units? (Utterly useless.) Require federal agencies to procure in metric? 
(Extremely powerful, may need Congressional approval.) Require all businesses 
to use metric only? (Guarantees constitutional challenges.) 

In my thinking, being so unspecific has two negatives: it does not suggest to 
the Administration what direction they should consider, and leaves the door 
open to them doing stupid or ineffective things. 

2. I have real heartburn over the "allowing us to manufacture items we could 
sell to the World." There is NOTHING stopping any company that wishes to from 
manufacturing items to "sell to the World." My company did it, starting when we 
were non-metric and had all of three employees (in late 1984). The barriers to 
companies converting to metric have nothing to do with any government barriers, 
and everything to do with individuals who run the companies seeing any benefit 
in converting. If there are so many market opportunities out there for 
companies that convert to metric, why haven't they already done so? 

3. I also have heartburn over "We could increase our exports if we manufactured 
and sold using the metric system." Both the objection immediately above, plus 
the use of "we." "We" do not manufacture anything -- individual companies, run 
by individual persons, do. And it is those individuals who are in the position 
to know whether or not converting to metric would increase their export sales. 
The world is FAR too complex for even the brightest Administration to know even 
a tiny fraction of the issues that the millions of individual companies in the 
country have to deal with. 

My (prior) company exports to many countries (Canada, France, Japan, China, 
Brazil, etc.). When we receive an RFQ (request for quote) from a foreign 
country, it will frequently have certain metric requirements (e.g., cord has to 
be 2 meters long), but I cannot think of it ever happening that being a metric 
company gave us a significant advantage over other US non-metric companies (the 
exception would be a company that refused to comply with metric requirements 
(e.g., sells ONLY six-foot cords). 

In my opinion, the single most effective thing the Federal government could do 
to promote metrication in the US is simply to require that all federal 
procurement be done using the metric system. The Federal government is the 
single largest purchaser of goods and services in the entire world, and the 
millions of US businesses that scramble for government contracts would rapidly 
metricate if they had to in order to sell to the Federal government. 

A petition along those lines is one I could support. 

Jim Elwell 



----- Original Message -----

From: "Michael Payne" <[email protected]> 
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, September 24, 2011 12:06:22 PM 
Subject: [USMA:51140] Re: White House Petition 

As of Saturday 14:00 ET there were 80 signatures, there has to be 150 for the 
general public to even see this apparently, so I'd like to ask everyone to open 
an account and vote. We need to get this out to the American public. 

Thanks 

Mike Paye 
On 24/09/2011, at 24:03 , Harry Wyeth wrote: 

> I signed it, but 41 signatures is pretty pathetic. Let's get on it! 
> 
> HARRY WYETH 
> 
> 
> On 9/23/11 1515:15, Michael Payne wrote: 
>> Please go to http://wh.gov/gw1 I need 150 signatures to keep it on the list, 
>> 5000 to get the White House to pay attention. 
>> 
>> Mike Payne 
> 




-- 

        
Beijer Electronics, Inc. 
Jim Elwell | Technical Product Manager 
[email protected] 
2212 South West Temple #50 | Salt Lake City | Utah | 84115 | USA | 801-466-8770 
| Fax 801-466-8792 
        

Reply via email to