Products Finishing

JAN 2013

Products Finishing magazine is the No. 1 industrial finishing publication in the world. We keep our readers informed about the latest news and trends in plating, painting, powder coating, anodizing, electrocoating, parts cleaning, and pretreatment.

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th ef in ishi n gto u c h pfonline.com The Reluctant Hero Plating shop owner steps up to help, but steps out of limelight. M ost shop visits start in the owner���s office, wind through the tanks and painting booths, over to the lab, and back to the office, where we usually immerse ourselves in food and beverage plans for that evening. That was pretty much the scenario when I visited John and Hunter Cutchin in Easley, S.C., recently and toured the Palmetto Plating plant. But between stories of John���s upbringing���his father was friends with Gen. George Marshall and children���s author Theodor Seuss Geisel���I spied a couple of plaques in the corner of his office that I had missed when I walked past. ���Presented to the Outstanding Science Student��� at Easley High School and Gettys Middle School, the pair of plaques proclaims, followed by a listing of 19 students from the high school and six from the middle school. For 20 years, the Cutchins and their staff at Palmetto annually have awarded a college scholarship to the best of the best in the community in the area of science. When I ask John about the plaques, he gazes at the names of the past winners of the $1,500 awards and starts rattling off occupations. ���That one���s a doctor now; that one���s a lawyer,��� he says, a gleam appearing in the corner of his 70-ish-year-old eyes. ���They���ve all gone off to bigger and better things.��� Cutchin doesn���t give the award so he can stand on stage each spring, hand out a check and make a speech. In fact, he doesn���t awards a scholarship to the football player with the best academic scores each year, because this is, after all, Gamecock and Tiger country.) ���Because college is so expensive now, the scholarships help with the cost,��� says Dr. Tim Mullis, Easley High School���s principal. ���It is also nice that local businesses recognize our students and their achievements.��� But it doesn���t stop there for Cutchin. Several years ago he realized he could help students even more if he opened up his shop and hired a few science students to come work in his in-house laboratory. Those students work alongside chemists and metallurgists to gain experience they could never get in a traditional classroom. When he offered to hire a student to work after school running tests and doing other lab work and the science teachers couldn���t pick between the top two students, he hired them both. ���I just like to give back to our own part of the world,��� Cutchin says. ���I like to give people a chance.��� That philosophy runs deep if your name is Cutchin. Son Hunter was president of the local Rotary Club. John���s wife, Debbie, volunteers at a food pantry called SHINE���Stopping Hunger In Nearby Easley. Helping out comes easy to John Cutchin. When he wanted to start the science scholarship program, he just walked into the offices of the school���s superintendent��� a longtime friend���and told him he wanted to help. When two teams of fifth graders from a school���s STEM program (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) qualified to compete in a science competition in Detroit, Mich., Palmetto and a few other businesses John Cutchin likes to help. He just doesn���t want anyone to know about it, thank him or make a big deal out of it. even get that involved in picking the winner, letting the science teachers do that. Nor does he stand for a photo, unless the school asks him to. (Cutchin also stepped up to help defray travel costs. The students took the Grand Champion Award. When Billy Smith, Palmetto���s longtime director of technical services and a NASF Palmetto Branch officer, passed away suddenly in 2010 at age 43, Cutchin, his staff and the NASF branch put together a charity golf tournament in his memory. John Cutchin likes to help. He just doesn���t want anyone to know about it, thank him or make a big deal out of it. Call him a ���reluctant hero.��� ���I do what I can,��� he says. ���And why not?��� Great question. n TIM PENNINGTON, Editor, tim.pennington@pfonline.com 4 JANuARY 2013

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