Dell closing Triad plant: Facility will cut 905 jobs by January
by Paul Johnson
2 years ago | 886 views | 3 3 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend | print
In this Sept. 23, 2005, file photo, Dell employee Barrie Kutlik works in the computer assembly area at the then, new Dell plant in Winston-Salem. File | AP
In this Sept. 23, 2005, file photo, Dell employee Barrie Kutlik works in the computer assembly area at the then, new Dell plant in Winston-Salem. File | AP
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WINSTON-SALEM – Dell Inc. announced Wednesday it will close its computer manufacturing plant by the end of January, costing 905 workers their jobs and reigniting a debate about the worth of economic incentives.

Dell’s announcement comes four years to the month after Dell opened its plant with great fanfare in southeastern Winston-Salem. The desktop computer plant was supposed to spur spinoff development and help make the Triad a technology center.

When Dell picked North Carolina for its plant on Nov. 9, 2004, then-Gov. Mike Easley proclaimed that “Dell’s decision to locate in North Carolina means thousands of jobs are headed to the Piedmont Triad.”

Instead, Dell said Wednesday that it will lay off about 600 workers next month and close the plant by the first of next year. Workers losing jobs will receive severance packages and job placement help, the company said.

Dell received the largest incentives package in state history following a one-day special session of the N.C. General Assembly in November 2004. Dell was pledged $281 million in state and local incentives to open the plant.

But the company was supposed to invest $100 million, create 1,700 jobs by September of next year and maintain those jobs for 10 more years to receive the full incentives. Dell said Wednesday it would comply with the terms of its incentive agreements with the state, Winston-Salem and Forsyth County.

From the outset, critics of the Dell incentives said the Texas-based computer conglomerate was promised too much too easily. In the fall of 2004, state legislators were told by Easley administration officials that they couldn’t amend the Dell incentives legislation during the General Assembly special session.

Former state Supreme Court Justice Robert Orr, who challenged the incentives in court, said he regrets the loss of Dell jobs.

“The closing, however, provides a stark and painful example of the folly of the incentives game engaged in by our state and local governments. No matter how big the incentive package, operational decisions by businesses headquartered out-of-state will be driven by corporate financial considerations and not by any sense of loyalty to the community being left behind,” said Orr, currently executive director of the N.C. Institute for Constitutional Law in Raleigh.

The plant closure is part of a plan to save $4 billion a year at Dell by 2011. Dell has a plant in Austin, Texas, as well as in Miami, Nashville, Brazil, Ireland, Poland, China, Malaysia and India.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

pjohnson@hpe.com | 888-3528
Comments
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Thom Stone
|
October 12, 2009
And the reason I was picked early to be layed off was for the fact I sustained a back injury at work that I did NOT report to DELL so as to keep my job.

I was placed on limited duty until my back was able to heal and they did not keep the old or weak employees but I had to promise upon separation not to speak of these things. Ask the ones noe getting layed off...I bet since the plat is CLOSING they have ALOT more to tell!!!!!!!!

Ex DELL Production Employee
Thom Stone
|
October 12, 2009
The fact they have plants in Austin, Miami, Nashville is a lie!!! We are the LAST US based factory and because of greed and poor management, they are sending OUR work to Mexico..as I knew of 1 year ago BEFORE I got layed off.
wheelhorse
|
October 08, 2009
according to the [media] the recession is over?
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