Skip navigation
Advertisement

The Journal Gazette, 600 W. Main St., Fort Wayne IN

Partly Cloudy

68°

Local weather

Alcoa lays off 30 in Auburn

Weakness in the automotive sector continues to cost the area economy jobs. Alcoa laid off another 30 from its Auburn plant Tuesday, bringing the number of jobs at the plant to less than 90.

Almost 400 worked at the plant before the company announced plans in March 2005 to lay off 178, and the workforce has dwindled since.

The plant makes aluminum auto parts, including bumpers and engine cradles, primarily for General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., Chrysler LLC and Toyota – all of whom have reported dismal sales for the last two months.

"It’s due to decreased customer demand," Alcoa spokeswoman Sally Rideout Lambert said of Tuesday’s cuts.

Twenty-five of the workers laid off Tuesday were hourly and five were salaried.

Alcoa will try to find more business for the plant and rehire the furloughed workers, Lambert said, but she didn’t know when that might happen.

William Maxfield wasn’t optimistic Tuesday the staffing at the plant will start growing again soon. He was among the hourly workers to lose their jobs.

At 36, the Fort Wayne resident said his job operating a forklift at the plant was the best one he’d ever had. He praised his managers and co-workers, none of whom were surprised by Tuesday’s layoffs. Even so, he said it was an emotional morning when the announcement was made.

"People were so upset," Maxfield said. "People were in tears, management as well as hourly."

Hourly workers at the plant are members of United Steelworkers Local 9463. Local President Larry Griffin couldn’t be reached Tuesday, but Maxfield said jobs in the plant paid between $12 and $14 an hour.

Maxfield said he plans to use a federal job retraining program to get his welding certification.

Tuesday’s news means further job losses in DeKalb County, where the October unemployment rate of 8 percent was well above the 6.4 percent state average.

Despite the bad news, Galen Eberhart, director of the DeKalb County Economic Partnership, said his office is working with several companies to bring jobs to the county.

"The world’s not died away," Eberhart said.

mschladen@jg.net

Advertisement

Business

  • Senior housing keeps ‘booming’
    Non-profit Lutheran Life Villages wants to build a $6 million nursing home in what is becoming a trend in Fort Wayne.
  • Oil falls below $75 ahead of U.S. jobs report
    Oil prices fell below $75 a barrel Friday ahead of closely watched U.S. employment report that will inform traders about the strength of future energy demand from the No. 1 economy.
  • Stock futures edge higher ahead of jobs report
    Stock futures inched higher Friday, continuing a rally ahead of the government's monthly employment report.
  • Euro steady ahead of U.S. jobs report
    The euro is barely changed against the dollar as markets focus on the upcoming release of a closely watched U.S. jobs report.
  • McCourt wife concerned about nest egg
    LOS ANGELES – Former Dodger CEO Jamie McCourt was more concerned with protecting the couple’s luxurious homes than dealing with baseball matters and didn’t want to take the risk associated with buying one of
  • Premium costs shift to workers
    Workers are paying a larger portion of their health insurance costs as businesses shift more of the burden to their employees to help ride out the economic downturn, an annual study shows.
Advertisement

  Stock Sponsor
Click here for full stock listings