Two men fought for jobs in a river-town mill. 50 years later, the nation is still divided.

In the 1970s, factory workers Brian F. Weber and James Tyrone Nailor Sr. found themselves on opposite ends of the issue of affirmative action. Weber, a white man, believed the law led to him being denied entry into a training program that would have led to higher pay. For Nailor, it was an opportunity to enter a white-dominated field and give his children the promise of a brighter future.

Money was tight the day Brian Weber was born in his family’s living room, nine months after his dad returned from World War II.

He would be the fourth brother of five. His father worked at the sugar mill, one of the many plants lining the Mississippi River above New Orleans, before he finally scraped together enough to start a small grocery store.

Weber turned down a scholarship to Louisiana State University to marry his high school sweetheart. The Monday after he turned 18, he went to work at the paper mill and then followed his father into the sugar mill.

Then, in late 1968, a union job opened up at the Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical plant in Gramercy and Weber jumped at it. But he soon had his eye on craft jobs.

At the hulking plant on the east bank of the river, it was the craftsmen  – electricians, mechanics, plumbers – who did skilled work, earned more money and had better working conditions.

But there was a hitch. Kaiser Aluminum only hired craft workers with prior experience from union halls in New Orleans and Baton Rouge.

During contract negotiations between Kaiser Aluminum and the United Steelworkers of America in 1974, Weber – a union official – circulated a petition for an on-the-job training program at the plant so new workers could get a shot at those better jobs too.

Those jobs and the controversy over who deserved them would soon change the direction of the country. And the lives of the men who competed for them – men who got hired in 1968 – would shape the working world in ways America has yet to resolve, even today.

Brian Weber wears a hard hat with an American flag outside the Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Co. plant in Gramercy, Louisiana, on July 19, 1978.

At the time, Kaiser Aluminum was under pressure from the Labor Department’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance to develop an affirmative action plan to address the scarcity of Black workers in the almost all-white craft ranks at the plant.

As a provision of the nationwide agreement, the company and the union created training programs at 15 facilities, including Gramercy, and set aside half the spots for Black workers.

Thirteen trainees were selected that year: seven Black and six white. The most senior Black worker had less seniority than several white production workers who were turned down. One of those white workers was Weber, who had more seniority than nearly all of the Black workers chosen.

Weber hadn’t expected to get a spot in the training program – he was pretty far down the seniority list – but he still didn’t think it was right to let Black workers jump the line. After spending hours reading up on Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which bars any racial discrimination in the workplace, he didn’t think it was legal either.