Tuesday, December 30, 2008

State jobless rate jumps


158,000 Maryland job-seekers unable to find work as unemployment rises to 5.3 percent

Maryland's jobless rate climbed to 5.3 percent last month, keeping it at a more than 12-year high, the Labor Department said yesterday.

It was the worst unemployment rate for the state since January 1996, when it hit 5.4 percent, and the number reflected the worsening turmoil in the financial, credit and housing markets.

"It's to be expected in light of worsening economic conditions," said Daraius Irani, director of applied economics for the RESI consulting arm of
Towson University. "Maryland is going to get hit, and going forward will see an increase in the unemployment rate."

Maryland's November unemployment rate increased, on a seasonally adjusted basis, from 4.9 percent in October. The Bureau of Labor Statistics adjusted that rate from the preliminary number of 5 percent reported last month.

Maryland was among 37 states and the District of Columbia reporting month-over-month jobless increases in November.

The nation's jobless rate last month rose to 6.7 percent, the government had reported earlier, as U.S. employers shed 533,000 jobs. That was the biggest job loss in a single month since December 1974. Maryland is expected to be buffered to some extent from the nation's rate of job losses because the region is not heavily dependent upon manufacturing and has a high share of federal government jobs.

Still, the number of out-of-work Maryland residents is growing. Preliminary numbers released yesterday showed that about 158,000 Maryland residents are looking but have been unable to find work, a 52 percent jump since the beginning of the year.

On a month-to-month basis, payroll employment fell in 41 states. Maryland lost 4,900 jobs in November, bringing payroll employment down to 2.63 million jobs, the government statistics showed. Many of those likely came in the hardest-hit sectors of construction, retail, financial services and manufacturing, or were tied to the auto industry, as manufacturers slow production.

Maria Solitario, a Lutherville resident with a background in psychology and early childhood education, has been looking for a job mostly at hospitals or preschools for more than a year. Solitario was laid off in October 2007 as a supervisor for a residential treatment facility in Baltimore as part of budget cuts, and now she finds herself overqualified for many jobs. But she says she can't afford to take an entry-level job.

"If I take a position for less than $10 an hour, I just can't survive off of that," says Solitario, who relies on unemployment insurance to rent an apartment for herself and her three young-adult children. "It's just so tough. Between rent, car insurance, food, it's difficult because you have to juggle everything. I can't even understand what's happening."

Local employers have announced hundreds of layoffs in recent weeks.

Volvo AB
of Sweden said about a week ago that it is cutting production and workers at its Mack Powertrain Division plant in Hagerstown, effective Jan. 25, as sales of trucks and buses have dropped. Two Baltimore-area manufacturers are laying off a total of 267 workers, including Harland Clarke, which is shutting down a check-printing operation inGlen Burnie by the end of March. Solo Cup Co. plans to lay off 147 workers at its Owings Mills plant and 29 people in its Owings Mills corporate offices.

Baltimore money manager
Legg Mason Inc. earlier this month cut 8 percent, or about 200 people, from its corporate work force, affecting about 99 employees in the Baltimore region. And Baltimore-based energy giant Constellation Energy Group blamed the near certainty of a prolonged, deep recession for plans to cut more than 800 people, mostly from its commodities trading division, with about half those jobs in the Baltimore area. And more layoffs are expected as part of Provident Bankshares announcement yesterday that is has agreed to sell itself to M&T Bank Corp.

The state's jobless rate has risen significantly on a nonseasonally adjusted, year-over-year basis. Maryland unemployment had been at 3.4 percent in November 2007, data show.

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Sunday, December 28, 2008

Schwarzenegger orders mass layoffs, unpaid furloughs


Union leaders for state employees vow to challenge the legality of the mandatory time off, which amounts to about a 9% pay cut according to the governor's finance department.
By Patrick McGreevy and Jordan Rau December 20, 2008
Reporting from Sacramento -- Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Friday ordered mass layoffs and unpaid furloughs for state workers starting in February to address California's growing fiscal crisis.Under his executive order, 238,000 employees will be forced to take off two unpaid days per month through June 30, 2010. Managers will receive either the furlough or an equivalent salary reduction during the same period.
H.D. Palmer, spokesman for Schwarzenegger's finance department, said the mandatory time off is the equivalent of about a 9% pay cut for affected workers. He said the furloughs would save the state more than $1.2 billion. It is unclear how many people will lose their jobs. Palmer said each department will have to cut its payroll by 10% and will make its own decisions on how many workers must go. Schwarzenegger attempted a few months ago to unilaterally reduce the pay of state employees, but his order never took effect. State Controller John Chiang said the state's payroll system was incapable of carrying it out.
Chiang did not comment on the viability of Schwarzenegger's new order, saying in a statement Friday that he had not seen the administration's implementation plan.The governor's order was condemned by officials of state employee unions, who vowed a legal challenge. Democratic legislative leaders voiced angry disappointment but said they were willing to return to negotiations with the Republican governor to solve the state's financial problems.A day after Schwarzenegger said he would veto an $18-billion package of cuts and new revenue adopted by the Legislature, he blamed lawmakers for the need to seek layoffs and other measures to reduce spending. "Our state's fiscal crisis has worsened dramatically in the past few weeks without legislative action to address our budget crisis," Schwarzenegger said in a letter to state employees Friday, after he declared another fiscal emergency and called a new special session of the Legislature.Lawmakers ended the previous special session Thursday with the passage of the $18-billion package forged by Democrats to shrink a $42-billion budget gap expected by mid-2010.Schwarzenegger asked the personnel department to work with state agencies to initiate "layoffs, reductions and other efficiencies" starting Feb. 1.Tens of thousands of employees, those in the bottom 20% of seniority, will receive "surplus" notices within the next month, said personnel officials, but not all who receive them will be laid off."I regret having to take these steps," Schwarzenegger wrote in his letter. "We simply have no choice. The emergency steps I am announcing will require sacrifice from everyone, including those in my own office." Aaron McLear, Schwarzenegger's spokesman, said it was unclear how many of the governor's staff will be laid off.Employee groups, including the Service Employees International Union Local 1000, said they would file a grievance with the state Public Employment Relations Board, charging that the governor's order is an unfair labor practice because workforce reductions are currently the subject of contract negotiations, according to Yvonne Walker, president of the local."The situation is out of control," said Walker, who represents 95,000 people, the largest number of unionized white-collar state workers. "With the state's economy heading towards a cliff, Gov. Schwarzenegger has pushed the state's fiscal crisis into catastrophe."Walker said the new layoffs will come on top of 10,000 job cuts made in the last year.The Assn. of California State Supervisors objected that managers were being singled out for potential pay cuts and layoffs on a day when the state unemployment rate rose to 8.4%, the worst in 14 years.Assembly Majority Leader Alberto Torrico (D-Newark) and other Democratic lawmakers issued a statement condemning the order by the governor, who negotiates state employee contracts."Arnold Schwarzenegger may be Hollywood royalty, but that doesn't make California a monarchy," the statement said. "Part of his core responsibility is to negotiate deals with employees."
Schwarzenegger's order prohibits state agencies from entering into new consulting contracts to cover the furloughs and layoffs.Additionally, he asked agencies not under his direct control, including the University of California, the California State University, California Community Colleges and the Legislature to implement layoffs and furloughs to cut their budgets.
Without these actions, the governor said, the state cash reserve is estimated to be a negative $5 billion in March. California is expected to run out of cash by February.Democratic legislative leaders said Friday that they were willing to go back to the bargaining table with Schwarzenegger to try to resolve the issues that led the governor to threaten a veto of their financial package.They believe differences over economic stimulus measures and relaxation of environmental laws for construction projects can be settled.
"We are far too close to let this $18-billion opportunity slip," said Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento). "We want to sit down with the governor as soon as possible."Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) noted that the legislative package approved Thursday calls for $500 million in savings through unspecified workforce cuts. It would be up to Schwarzenegger to negotiate the cuts with employee unions.But in vowing to veto the legislation, the governor, she said, is "trying to pass off his responsibility onto us because he doesn't want to take the heat for that. That's not acceptable."She also objected to Schwarzenegger's demand that lawmakers incorporate every one of his budget ideas."It's like a child telling Santa, 'If you don't bring every single item on my list, then stay out of my chimney,' " Bass said.Steinberg and Bass said they would stay in Sacramento through the holidays to keep negotiations going. The governor spent Friday in Los Angeles and Fresno. "He seems to think that we need to be here all the time," Bass said. "He needs to be here and join us."McLear said Schwarzenegger is ready to keep talking, even by video conference."He'll meet with them whenever they want to," McLear said.

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Romanian aluminum plant plans 1,200 layoffs


Read this copywritten article, follow the link

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Employment hits 5-year high as administration retreats from job estimates


Boston - A day after Gov. Deval Patrick projected federal aid would create “hundreds of thousands” of jobs in Massachusetts, the administration retreated Thursday from the estimate, as fresh employment data showed joblessness reaching a five-year peak.The state’s jobless rate jumped to 5.9 percent in November, its highest level since August 2003, as employers slashed 8,000 positions, the third straight month of cuts. The state also raised the official October job-loss count, from 7,000 to 8,000, bringing the total decline since August to 19,100, according to the Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development. Statewide, the November figures said 203,000 people were unemployed.On Wednesday, Patrick rolled out a $4.7 billion wish list of infrastructure projects he wants federal assistance to fund, expected to reap major gains for the construction industry, with benefits reverberating throughout the economy. In response to a reporter’s question during a press conference, Patrick said, “At its height, we’re talking about hundreds of thousands of jobs. These are direct jobs.”One top aide to Patrick called the “hundreds of thousands” figure unrealistic.Patrick’s labor and workforce development chief, Suzanne Bump, said Thursday that those estimates were more suitable for national job gains. “I think he was talking about the national bill,” said Bump when asked about Patrick’s projections. Asked for her expectations of the stimulus’s impact, she said, “I couldn’t begin to estimate, because we don’t know how much money could be coming and what categories it will be in.”Asked whether the administration believed Patrick’s projection was accurate, Patrick spokeswoman Kimberly Haberlin replied in an email, “While details of the plan are still being worked out, it is clear that an infusion of federal funds will lead to significant job creation here in Massachusetts and across the country.”Aides said Patrick was referring to highway construction job estimates provided by the New England Council, which pegged region-wide job creation at 45,000 in the first six months of the federal recovery plan. Over two years, according to those estimates, 180,000 new jobs would be generated. President-Elect Barack Obama has pledged to save or create 2.5 million jobs in his first two years.The state has 3.275 million jobs, down 10,700 from a year ago. The construction industry, expected to be the biggest beneficiary of the federal stimulus, shed 1,700 jobs last month, bringing the three-month net loss to 4,800 and the size of the industry to 130,000.Sen. Jack Hart, co-chair of the Committee on Economic Development and Emerging Technologies, said it was too early to judge local employment results from the federal package. “I don’t think anybody can predict it here,” said Hart (D-South Boston). “Would we like to see a hundred thousand jobs created here? Sure, but I think it’s tough to say.”“Let’s hope that it creates in the range of a hundred-thousand. But if it falls a little short, that’s OK,” Hart said.Bump predicted a protracted slump in state employment. "We expected the trend [in unemployment] to be an upward one, and economists have suggested we better get accustomed to seeing this,” she said. “It’s certainly going to be this way for a while." Patrick has stumbled over job creation projections before, while trying to build support for his casino proposal. The administration’s original estimate of 30,000 was undercut by subsequent outside calculations, and Patrick backed off the figure.Patrick on Wednesday laid out the state’s strategy for capitalizing on an expected federal aid package that federal officials say could reach $1 trillion. The apportionment method is still undecided, and competition is likely to be fierce both among the states and once the aid is delivered. The Bay State’s share is unclear.Massachusetts’s unemployment rate is still outperforming national numbers, where the unemployment rate has hit 6.7 percent. The three straight months of job losses, though, bode poorly, analysts said. “At some point, things are bound to change, we’re bound to be affected by the national economy,” said UMass-Amherst economics professor Robert Nakosteen. “And that started to happen in August. Since August, where we started falling off the table, the economy has deteriorated rapidly since then.”“Everything is sort of permeating the state from the national and local economies, and this is the continuation of a trend that really started at the end of the summer,” Nakosteen said. Bump said an internal survey of employers’ willingness to replace departing workers showed reluctance in the second quarter, what she called “a sharp decrease in vacancies.”“That’s evidence that employers already were starting to plan for a pinch, were already starting to cut back,” Bump said. “We didn’t really feel a contraction until August, but they were preparing for the second quarter.”The jobless rate announced Thursday was up 1.2 percent over a year ago, with the state recording 10,700 fewer jobs, and up from 5.5 percent in October. Both government and the information sector added positions last month, with professional, scientific and business services posting the biggest subtraction, 2,000 positions. Education and health services dropped 1,500 jobs, the sector's third straight monthly decline.Bump said the benefits from a stimulus would likely blanket different sectors. “If this economic stimulus is as broadly composed as we are hearing it might be, then that means opportunities across a wide number of job occupations,” she said. “That’s why we are so looking forward to it, and secondly why there needs to be so much planning for it.”

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Electronic Arts Layoffs


ADOTAS — EA will be laying off 10 percent of its workforce, a 1,000 people, which was an increase from an earlier estimate.
The company expects to save about $120 million, and includes the consolidation or closure of nine studio and publishing locations. EA is working on a plan “to narrow its product portfolio to focus on hit games with higher margin opportunities. The company remains committed to taking creative risks, investing in new games, leading the industry in the growing mobile and online businesses, and delivering high-quality games to consumers.”
EA also expects restructuring charges of approximately $55-65 million for 2009. mbia.

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Omnicom Lays Off 3,500; Are More Layoffs on the Way?


Omnicom is to lay off 5 percent of its workforce, or about 3,500 of its 70,000 employees worldwide. BBDO is expected to take a large hit as it is Chrysler’s agency of record. The question now is, will those cuts be enough or must Omnicom agencies bleed some more to stay afloat?
Omnicom’s position with Chrysler has turned from asset to liability as PHD, the Omnicom media buyer, already let go 30 people to cope with the carmaker’s cuts. Ad Age suggests the agency could be on the hook for $80 million in thus far unpaid bills. To make matters worse, Chrysler has shut for the month. BBDO actually takes a double hit after it lost Pepsi a few weeks back.
And there have been little cuts elsewhere in the Omnicom business. Proximity in the U.K. just lost a piece of the BBC account. Porter Novelli lost its Humana account when the merger with FischerHealth backfired.* (So many staffers left that agency that there may be no need for layoffs there.) And Omnicom has a mixed picture facing it when it comes to its debt repayments.
Whether these job losses will be the first or last swing of CEO John Wren’s ax is an open question. A little back-of-the-envelope math shows that compensation expenses at Omnicom are probably around 67% of Omnicom’s total operating expenses. A reduction of 5% should equate to roughly $99 million out of the network’s quarterly operating budget. That would reduce operating expenses to $2.8 billion, down from $2.9 billion. The revenue yield on those expenses would rise from a lousy $1.13 (where it is now) to a more decent $1.17. For comparison, that’s the same level of staff productivity that WPP was at back in the fourth quarter of 2007, before the recession started.
These numbers assume that revenues stay flat. But as Chrysler is obviously cutting its budget and, if bankruptcy happens, won’t even pay for some of the commitments it has made, then revenue will definitely not stay flat. Which means that the real level of staff productivity will be somewhere below $1.17 after the layoffs happen.
To put it more simply: Before the cuts, Omnicom’s net income margin was just 6 percent. The cuts Wren has just made total about half that number, which suggests that Wren believes net income is falling by 50% down to the 3 percent level — barely profitable.

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Closings, layoffs to cost Memphis 300 jobs


Follow link for atricle under copywright

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Aetna To Lay Off 1,000


By DIANE LEVICK The Hartford Courant
2:03 PM EST, December 17, 2008
Aetna Inc. is laying off 1,000 employees companywide, including 375 in Connecticut -- about 5 percent of its work force here -- to protect profits in a declining economy.Hartford-based Aetna notified affected employees Wednesday and said the job cuts will "align administrative expenses with the company's growth outlook for 2009 and redirect resources to areas with a greater potential for future growth."The group health and life insurer has about 7,850 employees in Connecticut, excluding part-timers.Details couldn't be obtained on how the 375 Connecticut layoffs will be split among Aetna's Hartford, Middletown and Windsor offfices.
The 1,000 layoffs represent a little less than 3 percent of the company's 36,208 employees."These actions will reduce our operating costs and allow us to manage through the economic downturn from a position of strength," Ronald A. Williams, Aetna's chairman and chief executive, said in a prepared statement. "The fundamentals of our business are solid, and we continue to win in the marketplace.Many insurers have begun layoffs, and most of Aetna's competitors have been projecting enrollment declines for 2009. Aetna expects to add 800,000 members in the first quarter of 2009 but hasn't said whether it expects enrollment to shrink after that.Employers are laying workers off around the nation, which means fewer members in their health plans.Employers have also been cutting back on benefits in the plans and shifting more medical costs to employees, which makes it harder for health insurers to grow revenue.Aetna wouldn't say how much money it will save by reducing staff, but expects to discuss that on its fourth-quarter earnings conference call in early February.Laid-off employees will continue to receive their salary for nine weeks, and then severance pay will kick in and will be based on years of service to the company, Aetna spokesman Fred Laberge said.He noted that Aetna, while losing some positions, has added 5,725 new jobs companywide since May 2007. Of those, 1,968 came through acquisitions and 3,758 were created internally."We're committed to adding jobs and investing in businesses or geographic locations that offer revenue growth opportunities," Laberge said.The company will take an after-tax charge of about $35 million to earnings in the fourth quarter to reflect expenses related to layoffs and office consolidations, which will be outside Connecticut.Aetna said the job cuts, across a wide range of corporate staff and business units, are being done in a way so they don't hurt the company's ability to meet commitments to customers and to grow.

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Western Digital Corp. to lay off 2,500 workers


Western Digital Corp. to lay off 2,500 workers
December 17, 2008 Filed under Computers


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Western Digital Corp. has announced that they are to layoff about 2,500 of their workers, as well as cutting the outlook of the fiscal second quarter. WD had said on Wednesday that the layoffs will amount to at least 5 percent of the total workforce.
Western Digital has also announced that predictions for the December quarter will be somewhere in the region of $1.7 billion to $1.8 billion. The tech storage company has also been announcing some other moves in the hope of saving money.
The first is to reduce capital spending for the 2009 fiscal year, from $750 million to $500 million. WD is to close two facilities, one in Malaysia and the other in Thailand. Western Digital expects demand weakness for their products well in to the middle of 2009.

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Orange County to lay off 210 social workers


Orange County to lay off 210 social workers
digg_url="http://bleedingjobs.blogspot.com/2008/12/orange-county-to-lay-off-210-social.html"
Source: LA Times
Orange County officials plan to hand out layoff notices to 210 social workers on Dec. 29, and are preparing to proceed with even more job cuts. The employees will be given two weeks notice before they lose their jobs.
The job cuts come in response to deep cuts expected to state funding of social services programs, officials said last week.
About one-third of the targeted workers process public assistance claims for the needy and unemployed, said Herman Martinez, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees local in Orange County.
"The sad reality is we may one day see our co-workers in the lobby applying for benefits," he said. "There's not exactly an abundance of jobs out there, the way the economy is going."
An additional 4,000 social services employees will begin two weeks of mandatory unpaid leave in February.

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Magna to lay off more workers at New Process Gear


By: Eric Reinhardt
12/16/08 11:34 AM
DeWITT - Magna Powertrain will lay off 216 hourly employees at its New Process Gear (NPG) plant in DeWitt next week, a spokeswoman for Magna International of America, Inc. said today.
The layoff period is described as "indefinite."
The job cuts reflect a combination of a considerable downturn in consumer demand for full-sized trucks, a corresponding reduction in customer production volumes, and the overall economic conditions facing the North American auto industry, according to a statement from Magna.
This round of layoffs follows 100 indefinite layoffs on Sept. 22 and 250 layoffs on July 2. Today's reduction drops the number of employees at the plant to approximately 1,450.
Magna International (NYSE: MGA) is a global auto-parts manufacturer. It owns Michigan-based Magna Powertrain, which operates the New Process Gear plant.
Magna lost $215 million, or $1.93 per diluted share, in the third quarter, compared to a profit of $155 million, or $1.38 per share, a year ago, the company announced Nov. 4.
Shares of Magna were up 27 cents at $29.35 per share in trading this morning.

Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com

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Charles Schwab to Cut 100 Jobs


Brokerage firm and investment manager Charles Schwab Corp. said Monday it is cutting at least 100 jobs in an effort to improve operating efficiency.
Schwab said it is cutting about 100 positions, and over the next two months will review further actions to improve efficiencies that could include further job cuts. The initial cuts will come as Schwab integrates and centralizes similar leadership roles across the firm, the company said in a statement.
The San Francisco-based firm had about 13,500 full-time equivalent employees as of Sept. 30.
Schwab said it expects to record severance charges of $20 million in the fourth quarter related to the 100 jobs cuts.
Aside from the cuts, the upcoming review will also focus on possible reductions in professional services, development projects and some marketing activities.

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Thousands of layoffs by DHL, ABX Air hit Wilmington, Ohio


By David J. Lynch, USA TODAY
WILMINGTON, Ohio — As hard times go, this is about as hard as it gets. The single-biggest employer in these parts is laying off about 7,500 men and women.
In a town of fewer than 13,000 people. In the midst of the worst financial crisis in generations.
"It's going to test us," says Mayor David Raizk. "The numbers are frightening."
Those numbers came in a Nov. 10 announcement by Deutsche Post World Net, the German owner of package-delivery company DHL. After investing five years and nearly $9 billion, DHL is abandoning its ill-starred effort to compete in the United States with FedEx and UPS. Winding down its U.S. business will eliminate 9,500 DHL positions around the country plus thousands more here at the company's local partner, ABX Air.
DHL, which has long struggled in the U.S., said in May that ABX would likely lose business that supported thousands of workers. But the global financial crisis magnified shareholder pressure on DHL's German owner and accelerated the erosion at the No. 3 company in a three-company market, triggering DHL's exodus. Exposure to bankrupt investment bank Lehman Bros. blew a $450 million hole in third-quarter earnings at the German giant's banking subsidiary, while DHL's customers grew tightfisted amid the spreading economic malaise.

Now, the rise in unemployment happening across the USA is appearing here in concentrated form. One of every three Wilmington households will be hurt by DHL's exit. From pilots to avionics technicians to package handlers, waves of people in several counties are losing their paychecks in a place and at a time when well-paying jobs are as precious as diamonds. And, in rural Ohio, about as easy to find.
The sad truth is there's no way the local economy can sprout paychecks for all who will need them. Some people who've called this solid, unremarkable town home their entire lives will be forced to leave. Others will stay but will find getting by a whole lot harder. "I really don't want to (leave) unless I have to," says pilot Bill Kocher, 47. "I was born and raised here. I like the town. I like the school my daughter's in. I like the church we go to."
It hasn't gone unnoticed here that as times got hard in other industries, people with more money and better connections lined up in Washington, D.C., with their well-manicured hands out. Wilmington received an emergency $3.8 million Labor Department grant to help retrain the newly jobless. But no one here expects Uncle Sam to ride to the rescue.
This community's self-image is one of straightforward, hardworking Midwesterners, the sort of people who continue to produce for the boss even after the boss says he's putting them on the street. Since learning that its contract with DHL would be ending, ABX has delivered 99% of its packages on time, says ABX spokeswoman Beth Huber.
Hardest hit among the affected workers will likely be those in the package-sorting operation, most of whom don't have a college degree. The "sort" jobs pay well, about $16 an hour, and offer good health insurance benefits.
Wilmington native Chris Haidet, 45, went to work at ABX straight out of high school 27 years ago. He remembers the excitement in town when the first McDonald's opened and the thrill of the company's first giant DC-8 cargo jet. "You could walk under the airplane," he says. "People were in awe."
Haidet raised three kids here. A daughter works in Cincinnati. A second cuts hair at the local Wal-Mart. His son has traded dreams of attending graphic-design school for what his dad says is now "the only guaranteed job around": a slot in the U.S. Marine Corps.
Three dozen of Haidet's co-workers got their pink slips on Nov. 20. Maybe two have new jobs lined up. Haidet's wife has children from an earlier marriage and won't leave Wilmington. He hopes to find something in Dayton, Columbus or Cincinnati. But all three cities are about an hour's drive away, quite a change from his four-minute commute.
"Right now, we're not really sure (what we'll do)," Haidet says. "I was going to retire from here."
Success was elusive
Walk along the streets of Wilmington's historic downtown and the storefront names seem lifted from a Frank Capra film. Smith's Barber Shop, First National Bank, A&A Insurance, Granny's Country Cupboard. This is small-town America from an era when most of America was small-town.
"You know that nostalgic picture you have in your mind of what a hometown should be? Well, the way it should be is the way it is in Wilmington," says Molly Dullea, 51, who moved here five years ago to buy the 80-year-old General Denver Hotel.
Dullea says about 30% of her business is from ABX pilots who live outside the area and spend occasional nights at the General Denver. She worries that the venerable hotel, a landmark boasting perhaps the best restaurant in town, may be among the one-in-five local businesses the mayor expects will fail.
First settled in 1810 as a plot of "16 squares of eight lots each," Wilmington isn't much more populous today than it was two centuries ago. The aging neighborhoods at its core contain modest, clapboard homes arrayed on streets named for states, such as Kentucky or New York.
In recent years, new strip malls full of familiar, modern names such as CVS, Staples, McDonald's and Wal-Mart arose on the city's eastern rim. Some folks wonder how long the national chains will linger as the pink slips mount.
The economic heart of the region has long been the Airborne Airpark, the airport business park named for the delivery company that was ABX Air's corporate ancestor. In 2003, DHL acquired Airborne Express as part of its bid to become a global carrier able to challenge FedEx and UPS on their home turf.
U.S. trade rules limiting foreign companies to minority stakes in domestic airlines forced a spinoff of Airborne's airplanes into a new company called ABX. The regulations thus saddled DHL with a less-efficient, higher-cost operation than its rivals.
DHL planned to marry its international prowess with Airborne/ABX's domestic footprint. Success was elusive and made more so by missteps, such as a botched 2005 consolidation of package-handling operations in Cincinnati and Wilmington, which left packages stacked in idle rows and cost DHL 10% of its domestic business.
As the financial losses multiplied, DHL announced in May a major restructuring of its U.S. operations that would shift its domestic air business from ABX to rival UPS. The announcement meant that several thousand ABX workers eventually would be jobless, though it left about 1,000 ABX ground employees hopeful of continued work.
But as negotiations with UPS continued, and the economic picture darkened, DHL opted for a more draconian strategy. On Nov. 10, the company announced it would exit the domestic package-delivery business entirely. From the end of January, DHL will handle only international shipments into and out of the U.S. "The financial crisis was the final nail in the coffin," says Dave Ross, who heads Teamsters Local 1224, representing ABX's pilots.
Of 550 active pilots, perhaps 50 can expect to find new flying jobs, Ross says. The rest will likely drift into teaching or the military reserves.
Bill Kocher, who rose to Boeing 767 captain after starting 28 years ago as a part-time package sorter, knows there are few jobs for pilots in a small town midway between Columbus and Cincinnati. A handful of his co-workers have caught on with foreign carriers such as Korean Air or Emirates. But neither moving to Dubai nor being away from home for weeks at a stretch appeals to him. So he's getting ready to ratchet down his standard of living, one notch at a time.
Kocher wouldn't disclose his salary. But annual base pay for ABX captains is $186,000, and some make upwards of $200,000 or even $300,000. If he's lucky enough to secure a job with one of the rare airlines that are hiring, such as Virgin America or Southwest, he'd make just $30,000 during a one-year probationary period.
His 9-year-old daughter goes to a costly private school. Kocher realizes other layoff victims confront more wrenching financial sacrifices, but he can't bear the thought of upending her young life to save money. His wife, Tammy, who hasn't worked outside the home for a decade, is scrambling to find a job in the worst job market in a quarter-century.
"I can't sleep," he says, over coffee. "I will sell my house and downsize so I can keep my daughter in that school. She's grown up with all these kids."
The road ahead
Such individual dramas are becoming common in communities like Wilmington. This corner of southwestern Ohio has been slipping behind for years, reflecting the erosion of American manufacturing and its relatively high-wage blue-collar jobs.
In 1970, per-capita personal income in Clinton County was about 10% below the national average. It fell further back in the late 1980s, then crept closer to the national average during the late-1990s boom. Since then, local prospects have declined. County residents now earn about 20% less than people elsewhere.
As people here brace for the layoffs, there's plenty of finger-pointing. Some say DHL just never understood the domestic market. Some say Joe Hete, CEO of ABX Air's corporate parent, blew it when he rebuffed a DHL-supported takeover bid from another air carrier called Astar. A merger would have given DHL the single air partner and lower costs it coveted. Hete says Astar never made a formal offer. But its "indication of interest" valued ABX at $7.75 a share; shares of the parent company, Air Transport Services Group (ATSG), closed Monday at 24 cents apiece.
Still, identifying corporate culprits won't bring the jobs back or create ones to replace them. ABX hopes to remain in business, perhaps as a smaller outfit offering maintenance and repair services to other airlines. That could save a few hundred jobs.
The Chamber of Commerce is planning a benefit concert for mid-January. Karen Haley, the chamber president, talks hopefully of converting the airpark to alternative energy production.
Volunteers at a local Methodist church counsel workers on retraining options or scarce job leads. And Mayor Raizk says he's confident that in five years Wilmington will be back to where it was, just as good as ever. Left unsaid is how people will get from today to five years from today.
"I don't think it's going to be a ghost town like some people say. … It's going to be all right," says Kocher. "It's just not going to be the same."

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InFocus will lay off 30 percent of its staff


by Mike Rogoway, The Oregonian
Monday December 15, 2008, 4:31 PM
InFocus Corp. said this afternoon that it will lay off 30 percent of its employees over the next year, beginning in January.
"We've made quite difficult, but necessary, decisions resulting from a number of factors affecting our business," chief executive Bob O'Malley said in a written statement. He said the Wilsonville company saw demand for its digital projectors begin to fall in September, adding that the recession is prompting InFocus to re-evaluate its strategy for 2009.
InFocus didn't say precisely how many people will lose their jobs, but the company had about 350 employees last spring, including roughly 150 at its Wilsonville headquarters. If cuts are applied evenly across the company, about 100 people would be laid off altogether -- including about 45 in Wilsonville.
The company said it expects restructuring charges up to $6.1 million in the fourth quarter of this year to cover the cost of restructuring and job cuts.
InFocus helped pioneer the market for digital projectors, now ubiquitous in meeting rooms from schools to corporations. But InFocus has steadily lost market share to big brand names from Asia, which brought bigger marketing muscle and lower prices.
"Our 2009 business model will be based on a targeted and simplified product line combined with prudent management of cash outlays and expense levels," O'Malley said. "In 2009, we will focus on streamlined sales and marketing programs in our core markets in the education, business and high-end home entertainment markets."
Additionally, InFocus said it will take charges of up to $4.5 million to vacate leased space at its Wilsonville headquarters.
Last week, InFocus announced it has hired an investment bank to help it evaluate unnamed bidders' interest in buying the company.
InFocus' share price rose 9 cents today, closing at 76 cents before the company announced its layoffs.
-- Mike Rogoway; mikerogoway@news.oregonian.com

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Unisys announced to lay off 1300 employees; 2009, staff will not be given a raise


The U.S. information technology provider Unisys on December 22 announced to lay off 1300 employees to achieve an annual saving with 225 million U.S. dollars of expenditure. The company said that the cost-saving plan included third-party spending cuts, expense reduction on facilities improvement and layoffs on 1300 employees. The layoff plan has begun, which will continue until 2009.

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All 632 Invista workers receive layoff notices


By Jimmy LaRouePublished: December 15, 2008
All 632 Invista workers at the company’s Waynesboro plant have received notice that they could be laid off Feb. 8, according to federally required documents filed by the fibers manufacturer with the state.
That figure is three times higher than the 210 layoffs announced by the company last week. Invista spokeswoman Jodie Stutzman said today that because the company has not identified specifically which workers will be laid off, it included all employees in the notice. The company has said an undisclosed number of contract workers also will be laid off as part of a plan to idle nylon production.
“While we can’t estimate the exact number of contractors, we can tell you that the combination of employees and contractors to remain at the site will still exceed 500,” Stutzman said. “We’re still not sure just what those proportions will be.”
Invista began the year with 1,100 company and contract workers at its plant on the South River, making it the city’s largest employer.
The Mundy Companies, a Houston-based industry services firm contracted by Invista, notified 137 workers Dec. 5 of layoffs, according to state records. Invista filed its notice Tuesday.
Under federal law, an employer must file a written warning notice with employees or their union representative 60 days in advance of a plant closing or mass layoff. A mass layoff is defined as the reduction of at least 33 percent of a company’s workforce.
A layoff of 210 workers calculates to 33.7 percent of Invista’s 623 company employees. The law also requires notices to be provided to state and local government.
“Everybody had to receive a warn notice, because, as I said before, staffing plans haven’t been finalized,” Stutzman said.
Invista has idled and restarted operations in the past, Stutzman said. The idling of nylon production in Waynesboro is “intended to be temporary,” she said.
Warning letters filed with the state sometimes do not list specific layoff data, said Willie Blanton, the manager of the State Dislocated Worker unit, the Virginia agency that receives layoff notices.
“We get some instances where there’s uncertainty on the absolute number and they tell us that in the letter,” Blanton said.
Some layoffs, he said, do not materialize.
“We don’t know up front,” Blanton said. “There are no definitives to us except for what they tell you in the letter.“Companies that break federal layoff notification laws are liable for back pay and benefits for workers for the duration of the violation, up to 60 days. Employers also may face $500 fines for each day of the violation.
Notification laws took effect under the federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act in 1989.
The law says company notices must provide the location where a closing or mass layoff will occur, a statement as to whether it is a plant closing or a mass layoff and the expected date of first separation and the number of affected employees in each job classification.
Companies must file a warning notice with the highest-ranking locally elected official in addition to workers and the state.

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Bristol-Myers will layoff yet another 10%


Bristol-Myers Squibb will be handing layoff notices to another 10 percent of its 37,000 remaining workers, likely due to weak pipelines, increasing regulatory burdens, looming generic competition and (do we even need to say it?) the economy. This, along with a 10 percent cut the company announced in July of this year, will bring the total to 8,000 layoffs.
The cuts will occur through 2010, but 800 people will lose their jobs before this year is through. The layoffs are part of a streamlining effort and an attempt to lower costs by $2.5 billion before 2013 to address upcoming challenges, although the company has had a good sales run with Abilify, Erbitux and Plavix recently. According to the Wall Street Journal, the cuts will be company-wide and global, and will include researchers as well as sales staff.
The pharma giant joins other huge industry players that are sending employees to the unemployment line, including Abbott, AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck and Pfizer. It might be that big pharma companies finally are finding their ways to becoming right-sized, but employees and shareholders are not happy to be holding the bag for some less-than-stellar planning.
Bristol-Myers Squibb also sold Convatec, its wound care unit (which had another 3,400 employees), in May. At around the same time it attempted to purchase ImClone, but lost to Eli Lilly.

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Global Layoffs at Electrolux


STOCKHOLM (AP) — The Swedish appliance maker Electrolux said on Monday that it would lay off more than 3,000 staff globally because of a slump in the market.
An Electrolux spokesman, Anders Edholm, said the layoffs represent about 5 percent of the company’s total work force of 57,000.
Mr. Edholm said demand in Europe and North America has been declining for some time and fell sharply in the second half of November and in December.
As a result, Electrolux will not reach its previous forecast of an operating profit for the year of 3.3 billion kronor to 3.9 billion kronor ($411 million to $486 million).
The layoffs will come in the fourth quarter of this year and in 2009.

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SEAT announces temporary layoffs affecting 5,300


Follow link to article with copywright

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Saturday, December 27, 2008

Alcatel Lucent’s turn to layoff 1000 employees


Alcatel Lucent is cutting out a 1000 worker out its 75,000 plus workforce and culling some 5,000 contractors, a move that it hopes will stop them from losing too much cash- a problem which had affected them since Alcatel's purchase of Lucent in 2006. The embattled CEO already stepped down earlier this year in a quest for profitability.
Source: Engadget Mobile

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Sharp layoffs, Fairchild layoffs


Sharp will shut down part of the LCD panel production line and lay off 380 peoplefrom:
use Translate (most links are in Chinese) http://projector.it365.com/60/8635560.shtmlSharp announced today that the company would close part of the LCD panel production line in its two plants. Sharp, executive vice president Yoshiaki Ibuchi said the company would lay off 380 temporary workers in its three factories, whereas the official employees would have another resettlement.
Fairchild will lay off 1,100 employees account for 12% of the total numberfrom:
use Translate (most links are in Chinese) http://it.hexun.com/2008-12-13/112337201.htmlAccording to foreign media reports, Fairchild (Fairchild Semiconductor) said Friday that the company would lay off 1,100 employees to cut expenses, or about 12% of the total number of employees. Fairchild said the layoff plan could bring 12 million to 16 million US dollars annual expenditure in the fourth quarter and the first quarter of next year, but it would be expected to save 33 million U.S. dollars totally.

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Hutchinson Technology to layoff 1100, cuts salary for the rest


Profits Up, Cuno Announces Layoffs


Jobs may be cut at Enfield, Stafford and Meriden plants

By Howard French

Journal Inquirer

12/15/08

Minnesota-based 3M Companies Inc., corporate parent of Connecticut’s Cuno Inc. operations, is in the middle of 1,800 layoffs — and even plant closings — around the country, although a company official declined to disclose how many jobs will be lost in Connecticut.

Company officials were to outline the restructuring plan at an investor and analyst meeting last week in New York, according to 3M spokeswoman Jacqueline Berry. But Berry said she had no immediate figures on how many, if any, of the job cuts will be in Cuno plants in Enfield, Stafford, and Meriden.

The 3M Companies laid off 63 of Cuno’s Connecticut workers in the first three months of this year. The Enfield plant lost 40 hourly and 8 salaried employees, while Cuno’s Meriden headquarters lost 15 workers. The company’s Stafford plant was not involved in the cuts. The work being done in Connecticut by the displaced workers, involving the manufacture of appliance filters, was moved to a plant in Mexico, closer to the factories producing the appliances, company officials said.

The 3M Company acquired Cuno for roughly $1.35 billion in 2005. The acquisition included Cuno plants in Enfield, where it employs about 150, and in Stafford, where it also employs roughly 150 workers.

Cuno products include filters for a variety of drinking water, healthcare, and other uses.


Core Business

In a company statement, 3M Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer George Buckley said that during the investor conference he intended to affirm 3M’s “commitment to its core businesses and to continued investments in emerging markets, such as China, India, the Middle East, and Latin America.”

He also said he would report on “aggressive cost-reduction actions in developed economies,” including the U.S.

“Clearly, the current market challenges require intense focus on cash management and on strengthening 3M’s operational execution,” Buckley said. “3M’s strong financial position, our continued investment in research and development, and our operational discipline will allow us to take advantage of market opportunities in this environment.”

Over the past three months, 3M has been identifying nearly 1,800 jobs to be cut across the company, “mainly in the developed economies of the U.S., Western Europe, and Japan,” Buckley said. The cutbacks are expected to save the company $170 million in 2009, he said, adding the company is also “rationalizing 10 manufacturing, technical, and office facilities around the world,” suggesting additional cost-cutting measures.

“We are prepared to implement additional restructuring as economic conditions dictate,” Buckley said.


Profits Up

The company adjusted downward its full-year 2008 guidance from an earlier estimate of $5.40 to $5.48 per share to a revised estimate of $5.10 to $5.15 per share, he said.

3M, which makes products ranging from Scotch tape to Post-its and optical films, in October reported third-quarter profits of $991 million, up 10 percent from $960 million a year earlier.

For the first nine months of 2008, net earnings were $4.19 per share, up 10.6 percent over 2007.

But despite the restructuring, 3M continued its acquisition spree in September, announcing an agreement to buy California-based Meguiar’s Inc., a family business that manufactures car care products.

It was the second time in a week that 3M announced a buyout, also announcing in September that it had acquired Ligacon AG, a Switzerland-based manufacturer and supplier of filtration systems and filter elements for the pharmaceutical, biotech, and general industrial markets.

Financial terms of the transactions were not disclosed. Meguiar’s is headquartered in Irvine, Calif., and employs around 115 workers.

When 3M announced its acquisition of Ligacon AG, 3M officials said that the Swiss company would become part of Connecticut-based 3M Cuno Filtration’s operation.

The company’s stock ended the trading day Wednesday at $57.52 per share. Over the past 52 weeks the stock has traded between $50.01 and $88.70 per share.

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Layoffs, program cuts to close $16 million budget gap in Yonkers


YONKERS - Facing what he called one of the toughest challenges of his administration, Yonkers Mayor Philip Amicone Friday announced several program and service cuts along with a six percent workforce reduction that will see 150 full- and part-time city workers lose their jobs as part of an effort to close a projected $16 million budget deficit for the current fiscal year.

The mid-year deficit, which amounts to nearly seven percent of the municipal budget, is so substantial that it can only be closed through workforce reductions after the city had trimmed every department to bare bones levels, the mayor said.

“We are going to be paying off 151 people; 76 are full-time employees. We are not talking about eliminating 76 positions; these are people who work for the city, and 75 part-time employees,” he said. Forty-four vacancies that have occurred this year will not be filled, the mayor said.
Amicone said that the program cuts would mainly affect quality of life services like litter patrols, youth recreation programs and curbside pickup of bulk trash items, among others.

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Saturday, December 13, 2008

Census Bureau Hiring For 2010 Census In Colorado


More layoffs in wood products industry


OC Social Workers Face Layoffs


Rio Tinto announces mass layoffs


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Layoffs, bankruptcies plague holiday season in Utah


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Unemployment Centers Struggle To Keep Up


More Layoffs For Boxwood Auto Plant


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RF Micro Devices to lay off 150


RF Micro's headquarters in Greensboro.
RF Micro's headquarters in Greensboro.

GREENSBORO - RF Micro Devices will lay off approximately 150 workers in the first quarter of next year, a company official said Friday.

Jerry Neal, executive vice president for strategic development and a cofounder of the company, said RFMD would idle one of its wafer-making facilities at 7628 Thorndike Road.

"We are not shutting it down," Neal said. "We will be able to bring it back up when demand from our customers comes back. No one knows how long that will be."

Neal said the production will be moved to another fabrication unit at the site.

The company, which makes a specialized type of microchip for cellular phones and other high-performance radio system, announced the termination of about 280 employes in Greensboro last spring.

Neal could not be specific about when the layoffs will begin.

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Pfizer To Slash 700 Jobs In France - Company


Article available at link

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Fairchild Semiconductor cuts 1,100 jobs


Silicon Graphics to layoff 225 positions or about 15% of total workforce - Update


Computing solutions and data management service provider Silicon Graphics Inc. (SGIC: News ) announced late Thursday that it would reduce its workforce by about 225 positions, representing about 15% of its workforce. The layoffs are a part of the company's revised business plan to reduce operating costs in the face of a global recession.

In a statement, chief executive officer, Robert "Bo" Ewald said, "SGI has a long history of innovation, including reinventing itself over the years. Our strategy has been and remains the right one. But the impact of the credit crisis and weakened global economy has caused SGI, along with our customers and other companies in our industry, to reduce expense levels to

reflect the current business environment."

The Sunnyvale, California-based company noted that in cutting 225 positions, it would still continue to address the customer demands for its compute, visualization and data management solutions. The layoffs would affect several executive and senior-level positions.

Further, the company is looking to focus and restructure to meet the changing customer need and to meet the financial market realities. The restructuring would also help the company retain some momentum and a stronger, sustainable business model. While fine-tuning its business model, the company would be leaner and more focused, and continue to build on the company cornerstones.

Looking ahead, Silicon Graphics would focus on delivering solutions that meet the changing need of its customers, while adapting its business plan to the current economic reality. The company also targets to replicate a more efficient and streamlined international sales and service coverage via strong channel partnerships, like it has done in Japan and Korea.

Pursuant to the restructuring, the company intends to eliminate costs and continue to invest in key future technologies, including next-generation server products, visualization software and the Industrial Strength Linux Environment.

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Mack Trucks to lay off 180 at eastern Pa. plant


ALLENTOWN, Pa.—Mack Trucks is laying of 180 employees at its factory near Allentown.

Mack spokesman John Walsh says the end of year production shutdown is extended an extra week this year because of the economic conditions.

Walsh says the layoffs will take effect at the close of production at the plant on Dec. 23 and production will resume with reduced manpower during the week of Jan. 12.

The plant employs about 680 workers.

The layoffs come just four months after the truck maker announced it would move its headquarters and testing center from Allentown to Greensboro, N.C., taking with it as many as 600 jobs.

Mack had recalled about 150 workers in October to keep pace with an increase in orders from Latin American, Middle Eastern and African countries.

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Wabash National to layoff 800 employees


Company heads hope to rehire them in
April

Last Edited: Wednesday, 10 Dec 2008, 7:53 PM EST
Created On: Wednesday, 10 Dec 2008, 6:05 PM EST

LAFAYETTE - 800 Wabash National employees will be out of a job by December 22nd when the company shuts down for the holidays. But the Chief Operating Officer Joe Zachman said he believes the layoffs will NOT be permanent.

"I would call it a temporary layoff. We're working with our sales department to bring in additional orders," Zachman said.

Zachman said employees start returning to work January 5th. Roughly 12-hundred employees will be phased back in through February. Zachman said the slow economy is the reason for the layoffs. He hopes business will pick- up by the second quarter,and allow the company to call workers back.

"We're going through a very significant economic downturn right now and the credit crunch has really impacted our business so the two added together has caused us to take these actions now," Zachman said.
The trailer manufacturer will lay off people from various classifications.

"A welder, and assembler, or a maintenance person is a classification. So within those classifications we would reduce the head count by seniority," Zachman said.

With Christmas just around the corner, Zachman said this decision comes at a very difficult time. But he said employees don't seem to surprised by it.

"Most of them are very well aware of what's going on in the economy and they've handled it very well and haven't had any feedback yet that's negative of any kind," Zachman said.

Despite the lay-offs, Zachman remains cautiously optimistic about Wabash National's future.

"There's always potential for something dramatic happening. We're doing very well relative to our industry. I think there's very little chance we'll go out of business," Zachman said.

Zachman said the company is constantly looking at ways to cut costs to maintain a viable business. We did not get a chance to talk to any Wabash National employees.

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MapInfo to layoff 128




— The financial sector’s woes are spilling over into the software sector, prompting Pitney Bowes MapInfo to layoff 128 full-time workers worldwide.

The demographic map company announced the job cuts earlier this week. About 10 percent of the layoffs will come at MapInfo’s headquarters in the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Technology Park.

The layoffs, which either took effect immediately or will happen over several months, came two years after Stamford, Conn.-based Pitney Bowes acquired MapInfo for $408 million. The cuts represent 8 percent of MapInfo’s global work force of 1,600.

MapInfo is looking to lower operating expenses by about 7 percent through the job cuts and other spending reductions. Pitney Bowes employs about 450 in North Greenbush, with MapInfo workers accounting for 300 of those jobs and back office, financial and sales staff accounting for the rest.

“[We] needed to make these changes in order to strengthen the business and address the challenging economic market conditions,” said Michael Hickey, president of MapInfo and Group 1 Software.

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Level 3 to lay off 450, hires new president/COO


By Angela Gunn, BetaNews

December 9, 2008, 5:03 PM

Fiber-and-telecom giant Level 3 will lay off around 450 employees, making up eight percent of its workforce, according to information released by the Broomfield, Colo.-based company on Tuesday.

The layoffs are expected to be confined to North American operations. The CDN (content delivery network delivery markets) groups, which handle video streaming services and the like, are not expected to take any cuts. The layoffs are starting now and should be effected by the end of December.

Monday was, by the way, the first day as Level 3president and COO for Jeff K. Storey. Storey was most recently with Leucadia National, and was president and CEO of WilTel until that firms sale to Level 3 back in December 2005.

The company's also adjusting three tender offers it made back in mid-November to buy back its outstanding 2.875% Convertible Senior Notes due in 2010, 6% Convertible Subordinated Notes due in 2010, and 6% Convertible Subordinated Notes due in 2009.

When that tender offer was announced, the company said that the considerations to be paid on the buybacks were, per $1,000 principal amount, $620, $700 and $920 respectively.

Level 3 says that a group of investors has agreed to purchase $360,124,000 (the principal) on the 2013 notes, and has deposited that large sum in escrow. The cash will be released from escrow when Level 3 is tendered and accepts payment of at least 50% of the aggregate principal on the other two notes. Fifty percent of those two notes works out to, respectively, $177,270,500 and $240,833,000.

There's a fourth set of notes in play as well, a 15% Convertible Senior Note due in 2013. Consistent with SEC requirements regarding the satisfaction or waiver of financing conditions having to do with equity-linked tender offers, Level 3 said today that it has waived the financing condition to the tender offers that Level 3 shall have sold at least $373 million aggregate principal amount of its 15% Convertible Senior Notes due 2013. No other condition is waived.

The entire assortment of tender offers expires at midnight EST on December 15, unless Level 3 extends the terms on an individual offer for whatever reason.

Level 3 reported 3Q results on October 23, presenting consolidated revenue of $1.07 billion and a net loss of $120 million or 8 cents/share. On NASDAQ today, Level 3 stock down 7.04%, to 0.75 cents/share.

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BRP to cut production, cut 98 jobs in Sturtevant


By Joel Dresang of the Journal Sentinel

BRP Inc. is eliminating 98 of the 500 positions at its Evinrude engine plant in Sturtevant as part of a global retrenchment to cope with the recession.

The Canadian recreational products company, which also makes Ski-Doo snowmobiles and Sea-Doo watercraft, is cutting production by 20% worldwide and dismissing hundreds of workers.

Pierre Pichette, a spokesman for BRP, said 78 hourly and 20 white-collar workers in Sturtevant would lose their jobs as the outboard division merges with the BRP-Rotax subsidiary in Austria, which makes engines for snowmobiles and all-terrain vehicles. The restructuring also includes combining sales and marketing forces for Ski-Doo, Sea-Doo and Evinrude.

BRP's announcement is the latest in a string of downsizings that have consumed more than 27,000 jobs in Wisconsin in the 12 months since October 2007. Metropolitan Racine has lost 1,600 jobs since October 2007, the widest year-to-year gap in 22 consecutive months of decline.

Altogether, BRP plans to get rid of 550 white-collar positions, 80% of them this month. The company also is in the process of laying off 430 production workers, including the 78 in Sturtevant, as part of a seasonal reduction. BRP made permanent cuts of 370 blue-collar jobs in the three months ended Oct. 31.

"These are very difficult decisions to make, but we must take appropriate preventive measures considering the seriousness of the situation," José Boisjoli, BRP's president and chief executive officer, said in a statement. "We believe these measures will reduce our costs and make BRP less vulnerable to drastic declines in revenues caused by events outside our control, such as the current crisis."

Pichette said the power sports market has suffered from a triple whammy of volatile financial markets, limited credit availability and plummeting consumer confidence. He said BRP's move should fortify Sturtevant's position for when the economy recovers.

"One thing is for sure is that we are in the marine business to stay," Pichette said. "It is a turbulent period, and we are reorganizing ourselves to go through it in the best way possible so we are able to get out of it stronger."

Evinrude's E-TEC technology, aimed at reducing exhaust emissions, is starting to be used in Rotax engines, Pichette said, suggesting the value of merging the two divisions. Evinrude will keep its plants in Sturtevant and China, and Rotax will keep its operations in Austria and Mexico.

"Sometimes in tough times, there is an opportunity that we want to seize, and what we're doing there is to create a closer synergy between these two, because it's giving very good results," Pichette said. "We're hopeful that the move that we're doing today, even though it's costing some jobs short term, is going to give us the possibility to come out of there stronger."

BRP will continue to run research-and-development facilities in Waukegan, Ill., Pichette said. BRP's former parent acquired the Waukegan site when it took over the bankrupt Outboard Marine Corp., through which it acquired the Evinrude and Johnson outboard motor lines.

BRP is celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Evinrude.

The company has been the steadiest employer to occupy a plant built 10 years ago as part of a plan to save Golden Books, the former Racine-based publisher and printer of classic children's books. After Golden Books failed, a Montreal-based commercial printer, Artech Printing, ran it briefly. BRP's former parent, Bombardier, took over in 2001.

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Sony to layoff 16,000 employees, loses charm among consumers


Is Sony losing its charm?

The world’s second-biggest consumer electronics maker plans to eliminate 16,000 jobs — making it the largest reduction announced by a Japanese company since the credit crunch spurred a global recession, according to the Bloomberg wire.

According to the report, Sony will curb investments, outsource production and move away from unprofitable businesses by March 2010 to save more than 100 billion yen (approx. $1.1 billion) a year, the company said in a statement today.

The cuts include 8,000 full-time employees, or roughly 5 percent of the company’s electronics workforce, and another 8,000 part-time and seasonal workers, Sony said. The job reductions beyond full-time employees will affect subcontractors, seasonal workers and people hired on a daily, weekly or monthly basis, according to company spokeswoman Mami Imada. Temporary workers typically don’t get the same benefits Sony’s full-time workers receive, she said.

Such measures have been taken by Sony before: In 2005, when the company projected its first annual loss in more than a decade, Sony announced plans to eliminate 10,000 workers.

Sony said it may revise its profit targets as well, and that it will announce the financial effect of the measures in January when it reports fiscal third-quarter results.

ZDNet editor-in-chief Larry Dignan says the changes won’t really fix most of the company’s woes.

On Oct. 23, Sony said that net income will probably drop 59 percent in the year ending March 31, reducing the outlook by 38 percent as the stronger yen and slumping demand undermine sales of its electronics including Bravia televisions.

Sony faces no problem with cash flow, and plans to invest 30 percent less in its electronics business than planned under its mid-term strategy, without giving figures. It will also cut its 57 manufacturing sites by 10 percent by the end of next fiscal year, and postpone investment plans at its Nitra plant in Slovakia that assembles LCD televisions for the European market.

Andrew J. Nusca is an assistant editor for ZDNet.com. See his full profile anddisclosure of his industry affiliations.

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Web site that helps people find jobs has layoff


TONY NATALE, TRIBUNE

More than 300 employees of the nation’s largest online center that helps locate jobs for the unemployed - CareerBuilder.com - have been laid off, including 20 from the firm’s Scottsdale office.

Most of the laid-off workers are from the Chicago corporate headquarters. However, some have also been let go from the Atlanta offices.

The company’s public information office in Chicago refused to answer questions about the layoffs, although a telephone call by the East Valley Tribune to a branch office near O’Hare Airport confirmed the layoffs were made Friday morning.

Also a former employee from the Scottsdale office who asked not to be identified said he was laid off along with others from the office in Old Town Scottsdale.

The layoffs also were a topic of conversation at Cheezhead.com, an information and chat Web site related to careers and employment. The Web site first reported rumors of the layoffs Thursday, noting that, unlike smaller layoffs by CareerBuilder.com earlier this year, this batch includes some higher-paid executives.

CareerBuilder.com has more than 1,500 employees nationwide and more globally. It was started in 1995 and is jointly owned by Gannett Co., Knight Ridder, the Chicago Tribune and Microsoft.

Last year the company reported it posted more than two million jobs on its Web sites and received more than 24 million hits. Its Web site said that in 2008 the company had a pool of more than 100 million potential employees in 38 countries.

Christi Berciago, an employee at the O’Hare office, said she and several other employees learned about the layoffs Friday morning.

“We were told the economy was not going so well,” said Berciago.

The Scottsdale employee said he and other workers were gathered in two groups Friday morning, one group representing those who were being laid off and the others who were still employed.

“We were told we were having a reduction in force and that we would be given severance packages,” said the employee. “We were packing our things and walking out the door by lunchtime.”

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Australia employment falls as expected in Nov


For details of this report, follow the link to the copywritten article

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IT Employment Drops Markedly in November


Finally Succumbing to Broader Market Trends

After appearing to be largely resilient to the macroeconomic trends that has devastated the broader employment market through much of the year, IT employment finally succumbed to the inevitable.

In November, IT employment dropped by almost 34,000 jobs or .87% - the most significant one month drop in over 3 years. With the decline, IT employment stands at 3,876,200. Despite the precipitous one month drop, IT employment was still up 2.1 percent over the past year (Nov. 2007 - Nov. 2008) - continuing to outperform the general employment marketplace on a year-over-year basis.

“Given the continued deterioration of broad swaths of the economy, the marked drop in IT employment was not surprising. While IT employment continues to outperform the general employment marketplace on year-over-year basis, that is small consolation for those companies and individuals affected,” commented Mark Roberts, CEO of NACCB.

“While the drop appears to have affected a wide range of industries such as financial services, telcom, and manufacturing, the computer systems and design services sector seems to have bucked the trend. It managed to eke out a small gain (.19%) during the month.”

The IT employment index is published by the National Association of Computer Consultant Businesses (NACCB), the national trade association representing IT staffing and solutions firms. For complete IT Index please visit: www.naccb.org/employment-index/index.cfm

Technical note: NACCB’s IT Employment Index is the first specific measurement of IT employment. This unique measurement of total IT employment is created monthly by studying the ongoing staffing patterns of a dozen IT and computer related occupations in 16 industries and industry sectors employing significant numbers of IT workers including the manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade, financial, information services, business and professional services, and education and health industries. The monthly IT Employment Index is based on U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data, which is subject to monthly revisions, with concomitant revisions to the Index. The IT Employment Index is also subject to annual revisions of BLS data. The IT Index was rebenchmarked in February 2008 with the publication of the BLS January 2008 employment report, reflecting significant revisions of employment data from the past several years.

Source: National Association of Computer Consultant Businesses

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