Thursday is the last day of work for 215 employees at a Carrier plant in Indianapolis made famous when then President-elect Trump struck a deal to stop the factory from moving to Mexico.
But despite that deal to keep the plant open, these workers' jobs are still being moved to Mexico.
"There's still anger from the folks losing their jobs, even though they knew it was coming," said Kelly Ray Hugunin, vice president of the United Steelworkers local in Indianapolis that represents the workers. "But for others, they're ready for it to be over."
The layoff will leave about 730 hourly workers at the plant making furnaces. The workers laid off Thursday make a lower cost component of those furnaces. Even at the time that Carrier agreed to keep the plant open, it said it would go ahead with plans to ship that part of the factory's work to Mexico.
Jones says he's worried there are more layoffs coming in the future. Soon after the deal to save the plant was announced, United Technologies CEO Greg Hayes said in an interview on CNBC that the $16 million the company planned to invest in the plant would be spent on automation to make it more efficient. He also said that would mean fewer jobs.
Jones worries that beyond the automation job losses, Carrier may still move ahead with plans to close the plant and move all the jobs to Mexico three or four years from now when attention has died down. "I hope I'm wrong about that, but that's my fear," he said.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment on Thursday's layoffs.
http://money.cnn.com/2018/01/11/new...nt-layoffs/index.html?iid=surge-story-summary
But despite that deal to keep the plant open, these workers' jobs are still being moved to Mexico.
"There's still anger from the folks losing their jobs, even though they knew it was coming," said Kelly Ray Hugunin, vice president of the United Steelworkers local in Indianapolis that represents the workers. "But for others, they're ready for it to be over."
The layoff will leave about 730 hourly workers at the plant making furnaces. The workers laid off Thursday make a lower cost component of those furnaces. Even at the time that Carrier agreed to keep the plant open, it said it would go ahead with plans to ship that part of the factory's work to Mexico.
Jones says he's worried there are more layoffs coming in the future. Soon after the deal to save the plant was announced, United Technologies CEO Greg Hayes said in an interview on CNBC that the $16 million the company planned to invest in the plant would be spent on automation to make it more efficient. He also said that would mean fewer jobs.
Jones worries that beyond the automation job losses, Carrier may still move ahead with plans to close the plant and move all the jobs to Mexico three or four years from now when attention has died down. "I hope I'm wrong about that, but that's my fear," he said.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment on Thursday's layoffs.
http://money.cnn.com/2018/01/11/new...nt-layoffs/index.html?iid=surge-story-summary
