Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

What will Foxconn mean for locals?

Residents aim to get jobs at new facility

- BILL GLAUBER

Jobs and transporta­tion were front and center Saturday during a community brainstorm­ing session on how Foxconn’s facility in southeaste­rn Wisconsin will affect Milwaukee residents.

“The train has left the station and we need to make sure we’re ready to get on board,” Eve Hall, president and chief executive of the Milwaukee Urban League, told about 75 people assembled in the basement of St. Matthew C.M.E. Church.

Wisconsin has approved a $3 billion incentive package to lure Taiwan-based Foxconn Technology Group to Racine County. Groundbrea­king on the massive facility is scheduled for the spring.

State Sen. Lena Taylor (DMilwaukee), who opposed the Foxconn incentive package in the Legislatur­e, said she has concerns about the company’s hiring practices and history of backing out of deals.

Despite those reservatio­ns, Taylor said she wants to see Milwaukee workers get jobs at the facility.

“It’s happening,” she said. “The question is: How do we make sure to get access to what is happening?”

Several of the speakers said significan­t issues need to be addressed, including job training and transporta­tion. There is a lack of mass transit in the region to get inner-city Milwaukee workers to Foxconn’s yetto-be-announced Racine County site.

“How are we going to make sure we get people to those jobs who are most in need,” said Jamaal Smith, racial justice community engagement manager at YWCA Southeast Wisconsin.

Timothy R. Sheehy, president of the Metropolit­an Milwaukee Associatio­n of Commerce, said Foxconn is “very focused on transporta­tion.”

Gerard Randall, executive director of the Milwaukee Education Partnershi­p, said Foxconn will “transform the demographi­cs of this region,” as the firm hires talent ranging from engineers to technician­s to maintenanc­e workers.

Internatio­nal workers also are expected to be part of the mix, Randall said, and they will have an impact on schools and housing in Racine and Kenosha counties.

Sheehy was asked by one participan­t about the educationa­l requiremen­ts that would be needed to work at the facility.

He spoke of a range from high school graduates with skills and job experience all the way up to graduate degree holders. Engineers are expected to be vital in research and developmen­t.

Sheehy also emphasized the need for thousands of constructi­on workers to build the facility. He expressed hope that local trades workers who are now on the job constructi­ng Milwaukee’s new Bucks arena can help in building Foxconn.

 ?? BILL GLAUBER/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Eve Hall, president and chief executive of Milwaukee Urban League, addresses a Community Brainstorm­ing Conference breakfast on Foxconn at Saint Matthew C.M.E. Church on Saturday.
BILL GLAUBER/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Eve Hall, president and chief executive of Milwaukee Urban League, addresses a Community Brainstorm­ing Conference breakfast on Foxconn at Saint Matthew C.M.E. Church on Saturday.

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