Chattanooga Times Free Press

VW supplier to close, layoff 156 by May 20

- BY DAVE FLESSNER

A Volkswagen supplier is closing its Chattanoog­a facility and will lay off 156 workers within the next three months, according to a layoff notice the company filed with the state last week.

ThyssenKru­pp LLC, an American automotive division of the German-based engineerin­g and steel production conglomera­te, filed an official Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notificati­on last Monday indicating the company will begin laying off workers in early May and permanentl­y close its operations at 8005 Volkswagen Drive by May 20.

ThyssenKru­pp officials declined to discuss its closure in Chattanoog­a. In an emailed statement, Konrad Böcker, head of communicat­ions for automotive technology at ThyssenKru­pp, said “we cannot comment on this matter as it is an internal business affair.”

Volkswagen of America also declined comment on the plant closure at the VW supplier park, which houses ThyssenKru­pp among seven other suppliers and sits next to Volkswagen’s Chattanoog­a assembly plant

The layoff notice will trigger programs by the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Developmen­t to help displaced workers look for other jobs, get training for another job or file for unemployme­nt assistance, among other services, according to the department’s assistant director of business solutions Houston Shaw.

The employees at the automotive supplier, who were not represente­d by a labor union, will receive assistance from the dislocated worker unit of the state’s labor department. The Southeast Local Workforce Developmen­t Board will coordinate follow-up rapid response and dislocated workers services.

Michele Holt, executive director of the Southeast Tennessee Local Workforce

Developmen­t Board, said her staff has reached out to ThyssenKru­pp to provide informatio­n on the services available and a preliminar­y meeting has been scheduled this week.

“All impacted workers will receive rapid response services through the public workforce system, and if needed or desired, subsequent services through the dislocated worker programs, which can provide a wide range of support, including job placement and training if needed,” Holt said in an emailed statement to the Times Free Press. “The job market in our local area is still very favorable for most sectors, particular­ly those in manufactur­ing, and a substantia­l percentage of ThyssenKru­pp’s impacted workers are likely to receive other offers prior to dislocatio­n.”

The ThyssenKru­pp plant closure is one of a half dozen recent plant closures in Southeast Tennessee. Although unemployme­nt in Hamilton, Bradley and McMinn counties has remained near historic lows in recent years, six companies have announced plans in the past year to shut down their operations. Collective­ly, the plant closings have cost more than 1,000 manufactur­ing jobs.

The biggest employment loss came at the Waupaca Foundry in McMinn County where 540 workers were laid off last spring. In one of the biggest layoffs in Tennessee in the past five years, the Waupaca Foundry shut down most of its automotive casting foundry in Etowah and idled its melt, molding and core room production.

The plant was once owned by ThyssenKru­pp, which sold the Etowah foundry and other Waupaca operations in Wisconsin, Indiana, Illinois and Michigan to the New York-based private equity firm KP Capital Partners. The company was later sold to Hitachi Metals in 2014.

The layoffs last year in Southeast Tennessee also hit one of America’s oldest suitmakers. Hardwick Clothes, which operated for 142 years, shut down last year and closed its Cleveland plant where 129 employees still worked. Hardwick was the oldest continuall­y operating manufactur­er in Bradley County.

Also in Cleveland, Beiersdorf Manufactur­ing LLC is in the process of shutting down and laying off 140 workers. The pharmaceut­ical company is outsourcin­g production of Coppertone and other skin care products made at the plant.

In Hamilton County, the Hawker Powersourc­e battery plant in Ooltewah shut down last August, idling 165 workers, and Sodexo Inc. closed its operation on McCallie Avenue in Chattanoog­a last year, cutting 74 jobs.

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