Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Foxconn reconsider­s plan for Wisconsin manufactur­ing hub

- By Scott Bauer

MADISON, WIS. >> Electronic­s giant Foxconn reversed course and announced Wednesday that the massive Wisconsin operation that was supposed to bring a bounty of blue-collar manufactur­ing jobs back to the Midwest — and was offered billions of dollars in incentives from the state — will instead be devoted mostly to research and developmen­t.

The much-ballyhooed facility was heralded by President Donald Trump and former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker as a once-in-a-generation opportunit­y . Foxconn, a major supplier to Apple, is the world’s largest contract maker of electronic­s and China’s largest private employer.

In a statement Wednesday, Foxconn said it remains committed to the project, the creation of 13,000 jobs and “to our long-term investment in Wisconsin.” But because the global market environmen­t that existed when the project was first announced in 2017 has shifted, “this has necessitat­ed the adjustment of plans for all projects, including Wisconsin.”

Foxconn previously said it could invest as much as $10 billion in the project. It did not recommit to that number in its statement Wednesday, but Wisconsin leaders said Foxconn leaders had pledged to spend that much.

Louis Woo, special assistant to Foxconn CEO Terry Gou, told Reuters that it’s scaling back and possibly shelving plans to build liquid crystal display panel screens in Wisconsin.

“In terms of TV, we have no place in the U.S.,” Woo told Reuters. “We can’t compete.”

Woo said a factory would not be built in Wisconsin: “You can’t use a factory to view our Wisconsin investment.”

Instead, Woo said Foxconn wants to create a “technology hub” that would largely consist of research facilities along with packaging and assembly operations. Woo said about threequart­ers of the jobs created will be in research and developmen­t and design, rather than blue-collar manufactur­ing jobs.

Marc Levine, senior fellow and founding director of the University of WisconsinM­ilwaukee’s Center of Economic Developmen­t, called it “one enormous bait and switch.”

And he scoffed at the idea that Foxconn, known for manufactur­ing, could transform into a research-and-developmen­t giant.

“That’s simply not what Foxconn is,” Levine said in an email. “So the notion that there will be 13,000 research jobs at Foxconn is highly, highly unlikely.”

Assembly Minority Leader Gordon Hintz, a Democrat, said it was another example of Foxconn overpromis­ing and under-delivering.

“This news is devastatin­g for the taxpayers of Wisconsin. We were promised manufactur­ing jobs. We were promised state of the art LCD production. We were promised a game-changing economic opportunit­y for our state. And now, it appears Foxconn is living up to their failed track record in the U.S. — leaving another state and community high and dry,” Hintz said.

Walker, who brokered the deal, emphasized in a tweet Wednesday that Foxconn only earns tax credits for actual investment and job creation.

“No jobs/investment? No credits. Period,” Walker tweeted.

Foxconn’s statement said it was broadening its investment to focus on research and developmen­t in advanced industrial internet technologi­es and producing high-tech applicatio­ns and solutions for industries such as education, medical and health care, entertainm­ent and sports, security, and smart cities.

The Taiwan-based company initially billed the massive 20 million-square-foot (1.86 million-square-meter) Wisconsin campus as its first North American manufactur­ing site for the next generation of liquid crystal display panels to be used in a wide variety of products, including large-screen TVs, self-driving cars, notebooks and other monitors.

Wisconsin state and local government­s promised roughly $4 billion to Foxconn, the largest incentive in state history and the biggest pledged by a state to a foreign corporatio­n in U.S. history. Foxconn was required to invest $10 billion and create 13,000 jobs to get the full incentives.

It had already fallen short last year, hiring 178 full-time employees rather than the 260 targeted, and failed to earn a state tax credit worth up to $9.5 million.

Wisconsin Republican legislativ­e leaders who pushed the Foxconn project blamed new Democratic Gov. Tony Evers for Foxconn’s changing plans. They said he had created an air of economic uncertaint­y by supporting eliminatio­n of a manufactur­ing tax credit program.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this June 28, 2018, file photo, President Donald Trump, center, along with Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, left, and Foxconn Chairman Terry Gou participat­e in a groundbrea­king event for the new Foxconn facility in Mt. Pleasant, Wis. Foxconn Technology Group said Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2019 it is shifting the focus of its planned $10 billion Wisconsin campus away from bluecollar manufactur­ing to a research hub, while insisting it remains committed to creating 13,000 jobs as promised.
EVAN VUCCI—ASSOCIATED PRESS In this June 28, 2018, file photo, President Donald Trump, center, along with Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, left, and Foxconn Chairman Terry Gou participat­e in a groundbrea­king event for the new Foxconn facility in Mt. Pleasant, Wis. Foxconn Technology Group said Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2019 it is shifting the focus of its planned $10 billion Wisconsin campus away from bluecollar manufactur­ing to a research hub, while insisting it remains committed to creating 13,000 jobs as promised.

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