Community Impact: Tragedy Leads Iron City Wood Products to Focus on Distracted Driving

Community Impact: Tragedy Leads Iron City Wood Products to Focus on Distracted Driving

When David (Dave) Muslovski woke up on June 17, 2010, he never thought that it would be his last day to be alive. As the founder and owner of Iron City Wood Products in Youngstown, Ohio, he was familiar with hard work and was in the process of training to one day hike the entire Appalachian Trail, all five million steps.

Tina Yanssens, Dave’s daughter and vice president of the company, remembered, “My dad walked seven miles to work every day and seven miles home every evening to get into shape and live out his dream of hiking the Appalachian Trail for his retirement. He had a map of the trail framed and hung next to his door to motivate himself every day before walking out the door.”

Unfortunately, tragedy struck when Dave Muslovski was killed while on a morning walk by a nineteen-year-old woman who was texting while driving. Yanssens said, “I didn’t even have a cell phone that could send text messages at the time. I had never heard of distracted driving. I started paying attention when I was driving on Route 680, which is the interstate to get from my house to work. I started realizing, ‘Oh my God, everyone’s on their cell phone.’ I actually can admit that I got so upset when my dad was killed that I had a hard time even having a phone in the car with me.”

After the incident, Yanssens and her family immediately started campaigns to raise awareness and pass laws to crack down on distracted driving. They started the David S. Muslovski Charitable Foundation, which is dedicated to preventing distracted driving as well as providing scholarships for people going to trade schools.

Yanssens explained, “Texting while driving is the worst form of distracted driving. It requires you to take your eyes off the road, take your hands off the wheel, and your mind is not focused on what you are doing.”

Why trade schools? Yanssens said, “My dad was not college educated. I mean, he went to community college,but he was a diesel mechanic by trade. For his entire life, he had an affinity for hard work and blue-collar workers. He really connected. We do a lot of business with the steel mills, and my dad loved just being able to get into the mill and talk to the guys.”

After the accident, she turned her family tragedy into fuel to tackle the distracted driving issue. She became an immediate advocate on the local, state and national levels for passing distracted driving laws. She lobbied then Governor John Kasich to pass the first distracted driving law in Ohio. She also traveled to Washington, DC, to meet with the director of the Department of Transportation and the National Transportation Safety Board for a distracted driving panel they were hosting. Yanssens has talked to various groups, including local rotary clubs, customers and vendors, as well as numerous high schools.

Yanssens noted, “We have rented distracted driving simulators for various high schools in our area during prom and graduation season. To round out our message, we had our tractor trailers lettered to warn about the dangers of distracted driving and were on the forefront of distracted driving policies with our own employees while in company-owned vehicles.”

Since Yanssens first started lobbying on the issue, Ohio has passed revised laws making distracted driving a primary offense. This allows police to pull over violators for distracted driving without having to find another reason. Yanssens recalled, “Ohio’s distracted driving laws initially were so weak that they were very difficult for the police to enforce.” Also, making it a primary offense allows for advocates on the issue to tap into federal funds to support greater education and enforcement.

Currently, the foundation is focused on education. Yanssens noted, “My mom retired, and the hope is that she is going to pick up and run with the foundation now full time.” Working on this issue and speaking out about it has provided healing for Tina Yanssens. She admitted, “The more you talk about it, the more it allows for healing.”

For information on the foundation, email [email protected]

 

Full article can be found here.

Image of Iron City Wood Products production line.

Iron City Wood’s New Equipment Automates Pallet Recycling Process

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio – Iron City Wood Products Inc. has a new addition that will allow the pallet recycling company to sort and cut 20,000 boards per shift, all to specified sizes.

Tina Yanssens, who co-owns the third-generation family business with her husband, DJ, said their new Badger saw, a $600,000 investment, is the first of several in a series that can be put together to help optimize operations and increase efficiency and safety for workers. Read more

Image of two men building pallets

Pallet saw doubles production for local company

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (WKBN) – A Youngstown-based company is making a big investment to grow its business.

Members of the Yanssens family, who owns Iron City Woods, and some of their staff cut the ribbon on a new piece of equipment that cuts and then sorts wood boards from shipping pallets.

The company recycles those pallets for new users, building them to the customers’ specifications. Read more

Iron City Wood Products staff and family.

Iron City Wood Products: a tale of generational perseverance

Founder of Iron City Woods, Dave Muslovski died in 2010 after being struck by a distracted driver who was texting while driving. But this devastating loss did not mark the end of his dream.

Instead, it inspired his daughter, Tina Yanssens,  to not only became one of the first in the state to advocate for a texting while driving ban, but also take over his full-service pallet recycling company. Read more

Family-Owned Businesses Honored for Successes in the Valley

How Family Businesses Navigate Change

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio – Rob Cochran, chairman and CEO of #1 Cochran, says his father was a consummate salesman with a passion for his business and who would not accept less than whatever his goal happened to be.

Cochran remembers his father working a lot. He only got to spend a couple of years learning from his father before he took ill. If anything, Cochran says his father taught him perseverance. Read more

Family-Owned Businesses Honored for Successes in the Valley

Family-Owned Businesses Honored for Successes in the Valley

NORTH LIMA, Ohio – The decision to expand and move Schwebel’s Bakery to a site on Midlothian Boulevard – away from the soot of the industrial steel mills nearby – once came down to a family vote.

Alyson Winick said her grandmother, who raised six children on her own after her husband’s death at a young age, wanted to move the business. The vote failed, six against and one for it. Read more

Iron City Wood Products building sign.

Iron City Wood Products Adopts New Logo, Website

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio — As it relocates from its address in Campbell to the Ross Industrial Park on Albert Street, Iron City Wood Products has created a new brand identity and website, Tina Yanssens announced Thursday.
Read more

Image of Combination Pallets

New Business Coming to Former Ross Industrial Site

Something new is popping up on an old piece of industrial property on Youngstown’s East Side and it could eventually mean some new jobs for the area.

Read more

City of Youngstown skyline at night.

Youngstown to Assist Two Businesses in City

The city is giving $100,000 grants to two companies — one that is opening a business on the East Side and the other that’s increasing its presence at a city-owned downtown building.

Read more

Image of Pallets

Company Prepares to Expand

Inside a small office building on Wilson Avenue on Wednesday, Tina Yanssens hardly looked up from her desk as she blitzed through some work.

Read more